L.A. TIMES -- Sunday, April 25, 1999

A STAIN SPREADS ACROSS LATIN AMERICA

Crime:  Irrefutable numbers show big increases. Stronger institutions,
open democracy can reverse the trend.

By SERGIO MUNOZ

Complaining to a Venezuelan friend of mine on how crime has soared in
Mexico, I was shocked to hear her insist things were much worse in
Venezuela. "Everyone I know there has been mugged," she said, "and
that includes me. They put a gun to my temple and demanded a few
bucks."

Similar things have happened whenever I chat with friends from other
Latin American countries. It is as if each one wants to take credit
for the worst crime horror stories. And if personal experiences aren't
enough, they can add dreadful persona testimony from friends and
relatives who have also been mugged or kidnapped.

Unfortunately, this perception that the quality of life in Latin
America has seriously deteriorated in terms of public safety is
accurate. There is more violent crime in Latin America than in any
other region in the world and double the number of homicides than in
the United States.

In Mexico, for example, where the vast majority of crimes go
unreported, the number of crimes reported to the police grew 36% from
1994 to 1995 and 14% more in 1996. In Buenos Aires, crime grew a
whopping 41% between 1994 and 1996, and violence in some tough
neighborhoods is so rampant that cops don't dare venture in them. "It
is a violent ecological cleansing of the criminal fauna," says a top
cop in the city.

According to a report issued by the Colombian Senate in 1997, "85% of
all murders in Colombia are attributable to common criminals, while
armed conflict is responsible for 14% of the violent deaths." In Lima,
Peru, statistics indicate violent crime has tripled since 1992.

While all this is happening in Latin America, statistics compiled by
the FBI indicate that crime in the United States has declined 17%
since 1991.

One may argue that statistics do not tell the whole story and that is
certainly true. But the testimonials of people who have suffered the
consequences of crime are hard to refute. I know hundreds of people
who live in Latin America who have either been victims of crime or
have a friend or a relative who has.  I've lived in Los Angeles for 21
years and I don't know anyone who has been mugged or kidnapped.

Trying to understand the disparity in the trends, I talked to David
Ronfeldt, a Rand Corp. expert on both Latin America and communications
in the computer age. Ronfeldt believes the problem of public safety in
Latin America is related to the transition from an authoritarian
regime to more democratic governments and the widespread expansion of
Latin America's adoption of free market economies.

"In the past, the cops knew who the criminals were, where they were
and how to control them. Also there was a lot of criminal police
protection under the old authoritarian regime.  Now the lid has been
taken off," Ronfelft said.

I suspect Ronfeldt is right, at least in Mexico, the Latin American
country I know best. The bands of thugs that were trained and
sponsored by government officials to repress students and union
leaders back in the 1970s became the soldiers of the drug dealers in
the '80s. Now, in the '90s, many of them head sophisticated criminal
organizations that rob banks, kidnap for ransom and mug people.

In most cases, these gangs work with police officers.

He is convinced that criminal organizations have developed
communication systems across borders that are much more sophisticated
than those of many states in Latin American.

I suspect this is also correct.  Organized crime is a transnational
phenomenon and its networks are hemispheric.  While some countries
have had some firm internal controls, like Brazil and Argentina after
the military regimes of the '70s and '80s, collectively the Latin
American states have not been able to establish a hemispheric police
force that could compete with international criminal mafias.

The failure of the states to win the war on crime is also a reflection
of the tremendous institutional weaknesses in Latin America. No war
can be won where judiciary systems are obsolete, inefficient or
corrupt; where the legislative powers are either blindly subservient
to executive branches or radically opposed to them; or where economies
favor the haves, leading to widespread poverty.

There is no short-term solution to the crime problem, but the
long-term remedy seems obvious: The region must strengthen its
institutions as well as push for observing the rule of law and having
an open, democratic society. Raising the level of professionalism in
the police forces wouldn't hurt either.

                      Sergio Munoz Is a Times Editorial Writer

Copyright L.A. Times
 
To foil spammers, the address in this post is disquised. To reply via e-mail, change the 'x' in the address to an 'e.' Antispam laws went into effect Jan 1, 1999.  Violators may be liable for both fines AND jail time for spamming this account.

Responder a