Mayor wants Mexican troops to keep fighting drug lords

By Maria Sanminiatelli

Associated Press

Published: Wednesday, May 6 2009 12:00 a.m. MDT

NEW YORK — The mayor of one of Mexico's most troubled border towns said Tuesday he expects to keep army troops in place to fight drug violence even after a revamped police department resumes its duties.

About 5,000 troops moved into Ciudad Juarez in March and took over police operations in the violence-scarred town across the border from El Paso, Texas. It is part of a larger move by the government of President Felipe Calderon to send 45,000 troops to patrol territories long ruled by narcotraffickers.

Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz said in an interview with The Associated Press that he expects about 2,000 army troops to remain in Juarez permanently "so that the army can maintain a presence against organized crime."

Drug-cartel violence claimed more than 6,000 lives in Mexico in 2008 alone. Of those, 1,600 were killed in Juarez, the city of 1.3 million people that is a major center for much of the violence, Reyes Ferriz said.

Mayor for a year and a half, Reyes Ferriz said he has worked with the Mexican government to clean up a corrupt and understaffed police force, where more than half the officers quit, retired or were fired last year alone, and to recruit new ones.

"At the end of the year we will have a robust police department with at least 3,000 officers," Reyes Ferriz said. He said the city needs a total of 4,000 officers, noting that organized crime preys on towns along the U.S.-Mexico border.

The mayor said moves to root out police corruption in Juarez include annual polygraph tests for police officers and a new command structure run by active duty military officers "that will help us maintain a police department that is acting within the law."

The city also has stepped up recruiting, increasing the police officers' salaries with bonuses — they now earn more than the city's district attorneys — and guaranteeing their bank loans so they can get new homes when they start as police officers, the mayor said.

The mayor said crime is down 90 percent since the army arrived in March. But, tensions flared early on as army troops showed clear distrust for the police force — especially after three police cars were discovered filled with drugs, Reyes Ferriz said.

Calderon, who became president in 2006, launched a campaign against the organized crime gangs that move cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana and heroin to a vast U.S. market.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS