Cleaning up Sonora’s municipal police forces is just the beginning: Durazo

The federal government plans to initiate a nationwide campaign to identify and dismiss municipal police officers with links to organized crime.

Speaking  in Hermosillo, Sonora, on Monday after an announcement that five municipal forces in that state will be purged of corrupt officers, Security Secretary Alfonso Durazo said the government has already identified the municipalities where intervention is required.

He described the cleaning up of police forces in Sonora as a “pilot program” that will be evaluated after three months before it is implemented in other states.

“Intelligence work indicates that there is complicity, links, penetration of organized crime in some security forces . . .” the secretary said.

Durazo explained that officers who fail to pass control and confidence tests will be dismissed and replaced temporarily with armed forces personnel so that municipalities are not left without an adequate local police force.

“. . . Personnel that do meet the requirements will be trained or re-trained. In other words, [it’s a matter of] getting them to adequate standards of professionalization in order to be able to provide security services,” the security secretary said.

Durazo said that while the purging process is taking place, municipal forces will be placed under military command.

“Why a navy command, a military command? Because if we’re going to purge [officers], we need complete confidence in the people in charge of the security forces. Once they are professionalized, the security forces will return to local command,” he said.

Durazo said that criminal gangs across the country attempt to infiltrate police forces.

“All the organized crime groups make an effort to get into security forces but the president has made it very clear that there will be a very clear line that separates organized crime from the uniformed forces. There will be no uniformed crime, we’ll purge the security forces . . .”

In Sonora, where homicides increased by more than 50% in the first seven months of the year, state Security Secretary David Anaya Cooley said the presence of federal security forces is needed to “weaken” organized crime groups.

Official statistics show that there were 679 victims of intentional homicide in Sonora between January and July, a figure that includes 17 police officers.

“The deaths of these police officers are still under investigation,” Anaya said before asserting that some of the slayings were “without a doubt” linked to police complicity with organized crime.

Source: Milenio (sp), Excélsior (sp), Reforma (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
vegetables

A decline in inflation prompts Mexico’s central bank to cut its key interest rate

0
The central bank once again showed its willingness to cut its interest rate even as inflation remains above the 3% target, but this time it indicated that no more such cuts are likely this year.
Todd Blanche

US AG: More charges against Mexican politicians are coming

12
"We've already indicted multiple government officials out of Mexico ... And so that's something that will continue," acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a NewsNation interview on Wednesday.
A sea turtle digs into a sandy beach

Tamaulipas reports a strong nesting season for the world’s rarest sea turtle

2
Authorities in Tamaulipas have counted over 207,000 eggs across 2,307 nests for far this year — an encouraging early tally for the world's most endangered sea turtle.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity