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By Richard N.
Baldwin T. /HispanicVista.com
Human Rights and
Impunity
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Amnesty International (AI) has submitted, at the
beginning of June, its yearly report of human rights progress in
México. José Luis Soberanes, President of the National Human
Rights Commission (CNDH) rapidly issued a rebuttal to AI stating
that it adds nothing new and repeats reports and situations that
are well known. In fact, Soberanes said that the AI report was a
"refrito", a refry or rehash. And, in fact, Soberanes was
correct. Not only was there nothing really new, but it is well
known and on top of that it does not address the real problems
in this whole matter.
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Human rights abuse is but a symptom of a much larger Mexican
problem and a much more difficult problem to resolve. But we
have to go to the roots of the problem to understand it. The
key words are impunity and endemic corruption of a
systematic nature.
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Before getting in to the meat here, let us recognize that
México, shortly after the beginning of the Calderón
administration, undertook and passed a sweeping judicial
reform that is turning our judicial system upside down. This
required constitutional amendments that also required nation
wide ratification. All of this was to address such
fundamental things such as the presumption of innocence, the
right of cross-examining witnesses, and that trials are open
to the public. And it will probably take another 4 years to
fully implement these changes. Such as completely retraining
prosecutors and defense lawyers who don't even know the
concept of cross-examination, mush less presenting their
case in public.
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As for human rights, it should be mentioned that México has
signed on to the UN international anti torturing treaty.
But, in fact, the enforcement of this internally is spotty
to say the least.
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But getting to basics, remember that the Republic of México, as defined, is party oriented, as
opposed to a "people oriented" republic as found in most of
the Western world. Constitutionally, no one can run for
elected office as an independent, reaffirmed by our Supreme
Court only a few years ago. In addition, 30% of the Senate
and 40% of the House seats in México are given out as
"proportional" appointments. Each party submits a list for
their appointees before the election. After the election,
say a party has received 25% of the popular vote. Then that
party is given the number of that percentage of the
proportional seats from their submitted list. And so on for
each party in both House and Senate. And, of course, these
proportional appointees have absolutely no duty to the
voting public. It was the party that put them into power.
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Add this to the fact that there is no reelection for elected
officials in México. One term and that's it. For the
politician who wants to have a career in politics, he looks
not to the voters, but his party to continue his career.
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Now consider this; elected officials are by law immune from
prosecution of any type while in office. In other words,
official systematized impunity. A noteworthy case involving
a high union official in the Mexican PEMEX scandal was
indicted in the case and an arrest warrant was issued. He
fled México and in the meantime it was established that he
also was a member of the House of Representatives. Therefore
he was impugn. And he, to this day, is still impugn because
his party keeps him high on the proportional lists for one
office after another. And the law cannot touch him.
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And we can have officials ordering and participating in
human rights issues that are untouchable. Like one governor
who is regarded as the fair headed nominee for his parties'
choice for the next presidential election. He oversaw a
grand official rape and pillage event that happened a couple
of years ago in a village near
México City. Impugn. Or another
governor who set up a false arrest and an organized rape of
a famous author who exposed a pedophilia ring in his state
which was operating with state officials turning their
heads. The gang rape was foiled thankfully, but no official
was even investigated because of official impunity.
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These are noteworthy cases presented to illustrate the
deeper problem of rooting out corruption that is spawned by
our very basic political system. This not only involves
human rights issues but also a much broader vista of endemic
corruption. It is built into the system. But the bottom line
is that human rights issues remain unresolved and not
prosecuted along with "confessions" gained by torture
accepted for these reasons. And Mexicans complain about
Guantanimo?
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Rectifying these problems is far from easy. Because it is
the party driven politicians themselves that must change the
system. And offhand, it seems to be an impossibility.
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The
United States has milder
systemic problems in its legislatures involving ethics
issues and financial accountability. And they are having
problems in trying to resolve these issues also. México's
problems are much bigger and are much more difficult to
resolve. But in the US, at least
some of the corrupted go to jail.
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But this is nothing for México to accept in the long run.
México has to solve these problems if it is to fully join
the "civilized" world. And it up to México, alone, to do
this. No outside "help" will work.
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The how to remains.
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