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Chihuahua City now a model for cleaning up Mexico's
police A
three-month-old program that allows human rights workers 24-hour access to
live images of prison life is the newest effort toward transparency for
Chihuahua's lauded police department
Chihuahua city, Mexico - There is nothing extraordinary inside the municipal
jail in Chihuahua City: Half a dozen men kill time – some sleeping, others
pacing – their languid motions caught on TV monitors outside their cells. But
the cameras aren't just to aid the guards. Across town, Chihuahua's state
human rights office is viewing the same scene on a TV screen that shows
images from cameras set up throughout two city jails. The
three-month-old program, which allows human rights workers 24-hour access,
is the newest effort toward transparency in Chihuahua's police department.
And in a country where the police rank among the least respected
institutions, Chihuahua's moves toward accountability are garnering its
police a rare reputation for honesty and competency that experts hope can be
implemented elsewhere. "I
dare to say that they are the best municipal police in Mexico," says Juan
Salgado, a police reform expert in Mexico City who is compiling a report on
the best practices in Chihuahua, to be distributed to police departments
across the country. The
force's most visible sign of accomplishment to date hangs outside the
municipal police department in Chihuahua city: a banner boasting of the May
2007 certification given by the Virginia-based Commission on Accreditation
for Law Enforcement Agencies (Calea).
Police force in a league of its own The force was the first – and is still the only –
municipal force in Mexico to be accredited by Calea. It means they meet 459
standards ranging from procedure codes to ensuring higher levels of training
for cops. Many other forces in the country are now seeking to follow suit. It
was a huge feat, but it is innovations in transparency and accountability
that Mr. Salgado says have made a bigger difference. On
a recent day, a young man in Chihuahua's municipal jail gets cuffed and
carted off to federal authorities after getting caught selling cocaine on
the street the night before. The cameras above him record every action. Ernesto Garnica, who is in charge of public security at
Chihuahua's human rights office, says that he does not view every such
incident, but cameras modify behavior. "It's an accountability tool, but
also a preventive measure," Mr. Garnica says, pointing to the images on the
TV placed in front of his desk. He says it's working: Last year they
registered 103 complaints, slightly higher than this year's 96 complaints to
date.
Citizens work to keep cops honest The 1,000-member force in Chihuahua has also opened
itself to public scrutiny. All complaints that the state human rights
department receives, for example, are posted on the Internet. Citizens have
also formed a committee consisting of more than 50 organizations, such as
universities and business associations, divided into seven commissions.
Citizen review boards are common in the US but are a rarity in Mexico, says
Antia Mendoza, a police reform researcher at the Institute for Security and
Democracy (Insyde) in Mexico City. The
commissions, all volunteer, organize training for police, give them access
to credit for cars and homes – often difficult for officers to gain – and
even have a say in the promotion of police officers.
When citizens started participating in police matters four years ago, it was
revolutionary, says Ignacio Manjarrez, the operational president of the
citizen's committee, which is housed under the local chapter of Coparmex, an
employers' union. "But times are changing, and the participation of citizens
is every day more important." The police chief of Chihuahua City, Lazaro Gaytan, calls
transparency a "personal conviction." But it has a practical appeal, too.
"The citizens help me do my job; they help me supervise," he says during in
an interview in his office.
Some of these measures can be repeated in other municipal departments, says
Ms. Mendoza, who specializes in citizen participation. Others are harder to
copy, but Chihuahua still provides valuable lessons, most importantly in
political will, she says. Where most incoming mayors, elected to three-year terms,
appoint their own officials, in Chihuahua only two men have overseen the
police department in a 10-year period, says Daniel Sabet, a visiting
associate professor at Georgetown University who does comparative analyses
of police departments in Mexico, including Chihuahua City. In other
departments, he says, police chiefs have made huge strides, only to have
their programs dismantled with incoming administrations. "Citizen committees
can further ensure this type of continuity," Mr. Sabet says.
Police resisted this degree of transparency at first, says Captain Mauricio
Escobar. "It's human nature, for all of us, to fear the citizens will use it
in a political way," Mr. Escobar says. But on the contrary, it's been a way
for citizens to vent frustrations and, as such, improved the relationship
between the community and cops. Mr.
Gaytan also says police acceptance is practical: If they don't adapt, they
won't move forward.
This does not mean that the local police are immune to criticism. The
reputation they enjoy in police reform circles is not always shared by the
community at large. Miguel Angel Perez, who sells candy and cigarettes on a
corner in Chihuahua City, says he and other vendors have been shaken down so
many times he cannot even count. "They are rats with badges," he says. As
drug violence finds its way to Chihuahua City, a place that residents boast
is one where they used to leave their keys in their cars at supermarkets and
their doors open at night, the reputation of the police department faces new
challenges. The
corruptive forces that afflict so many other municipal police forces – some
of which have been disarmed and demoted by the military, which is leading
the effort against organized crime – have been the exception here so far. In
arms checks carried out by the military this year, for example, no cop was
arrested, says Gaytan. But when the municipality has tested its officers for
drug use, some officers have refused and resigned. One officer resigned and
nine months later was murdered, allegedly at the hands of drug traffickers.
"There is always the possibility that someone is involved," Gaytan says.
"You can never be complacent."
Gaytan says they have taken measures beyond accountability to prevent
corruptive influences. They have raised salaries by 28 percent this year, he
says, to an average of $750 a month for the lowest-ranked officers. And
where the national average for training to become an officer is four months,
here they receive nine months. They have also earmarked money for
technology. Currently 100 police officers have laptops and 400 Palm Pilots
are on the way. The force even has its own helicopter. That compares with
some municipal police units that don't even have bulletproof vests.
Citizens say they can play a role in corruption prevention too, particularly
in education and by emphasizing community policing. "If you know someone, it
creates empathy," Mr. Manjarrez says. "You are not going to go and bribe
them."
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