Mexican president vows to clean up corruption


Published/Last Modified on Tuesday, December 2, 2008 3:15 PM MST


MEXICO CITY (AP) — President Felipe Calderon pledged Sunday to clean up corruption within his administration and vowed that his government would never negotiate with drug lords.


Promising to continue the battle against organized crime, no matter how violent it gets, Calderon said he would push President-elect Barack Obama to do his part north of the border. Calderon has long said the U.S. must do more to fight drug consumption and stop the illegal flow of weapons south into Mexico. Obama has said he will do both.

Calderon acknowledged public frustration with the increasingly violent battle against drugs.

“We know that the results are far from what society demands, but that’s why we’ll keep fighting these criminals across the country,” he told a meeting marking his first two years in office.

Calderon’s sweeping crackdown on powerful drug cartels has in recent weeks been shaken by a nationwide corruption scandal.

The government revealed that top officials within the army, federal Attorney General’s office, and federal police had been allegedly bought off by Mexico’s most powerful drug gang, the Sinaloa cartel.

On Thursday, officials said that almost half of Mexican police officers examined this year had failed background and security checks, a figure that rises to nearly 9 of 10 cops in the violent border state of Baja California, home to Tijuana.

But Calderon insisted he won’t back down, promising to weed out corruption within his administration, and said officials are working to create a “new generation of police.”

“It’s clear that the federal government has not negotiated, nor we will negotiate, with any organized crime,” he said. “We will fight anyone who tries to threaten the life, security or peace of mind of all Mexicans.”

Since taking office on Dec. 1, 2006, Calderon has sent more than 20,000 soldiers to battle drug trafficking across Mexico, helping to seize of 70 tons of cocaine and 3,700 tons of marijuana, he said.

Cartels have responded with a bloody terror campaign, dumping beheaded bodies on public streets and tossing grenades into a crowd of Independence Day revelers in September. More than 4,000 people have died so far this year in drug-related violence.

Addressing the global financial crisis, Calderon said Mexico would boost spending on infrastructure and tourism programs to battle a slowing economy.

He said the government would also ease access to credit for homeowners, in an effort to encourage the country’s housing boom..

 The sector includes very few subprime mortgages, and hasn’t suffered the same scale of defaults or foreclosures seen in the U.S.

 

Comments

    poncho villa wrote on Dec 3, 2008 7:52 PM:

    " Here is someone who was educated in the USA and looks at what make a country work and prosper. Sure there are things that are in the past and may stay there for now.People in mexico are living with changing condition daily as the people in the USA. The drugs and the killings are very serious for the people who see and know people who are being killed i for one are one of those people as of last week and i saw it. the problem is on the consumption without a customer there is no business, Musolini said it "

    Antonio wrote on Dec 2, 2008 8:30 PM:

    " Finaly Un Presidente that cares about the progress of Mexico Y El pueblo. Buen echo Presidente Calderon. "

    Michael Molero wrote on Dec 2, 2008 6:26 PM:

    " It is amazing how Mexican president Felipe Calderon never talked about resolving another isssue related to the drug cartels: the 1985 kidnapping, torture, and murder of DEA agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena. Alot of the suspects who committed this crime 23 years ago are still walking free and have not been arrested or even extradited to the United States to face justice. Therefore, I think that this case should be reopened and the prime suspects should all be arrested so only then can we talk about further cooperating with Mexico in taking on the current drug problem. "

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