Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jan 2011 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2011 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: John Paul Rathbone, in London MEXICO GOVERNOR CALLS FOR NEW FOCUS IN DRUGS WAR Mexico needs to refocus its war on drugs away from enforcement and concentrate instead on fighting money-laundering and tackling the causes of violence, a leading opposition politician who is widely tipped to win the country's 2012 presidential elections said. More than 30,000 people have died since President Felipe Calderon launched an army-led offensive on Mexico's drug cartels four years ago, an approach that has led to growing criticism at home. Writing for the Financial Times' emerging markets website, beyondbrics, Enrique Pena Nieto, governor of the state of Mexico, said the country needed to find ways to prevent violence from occurring in the first place. Mexico must "implement a National Strategy to Reduce Violence with one clear aim: to bring down the number of murders, kidnappings and extortions significantly", said Mr Pena Nieto, whose charisma and movie star looks have made him a rising star in the country's once-dominant Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). Although yet to formally put himself forward as a candidate, recent newspaper polls show that 44-year-old Mr Pena Nieto is far and away the leading choice for the presidential nomination of his party, which ruled the country for several decades before it was defeated in 2000. He is also streets ahead of any potential contender from the ruling National Action party (PAN). Mr Pena Nieto said Mexico needed to improve its education system via higher government spending, which would boost students' chances in job markets; increase levels of formal employment via a social security reform, which would reduce the size of the cash-based informal economy; and modernise the country's judiciary and police forces. "The current administration has started to do this, but much more is required," he added. Ironically, while Mr Pena Nieto's approach is very similar to Mr Calderon's original drugs strategy, some of the president's initiatives, such as a bill to rationalise Mexico's dispersed police forces into more effective and consolidated units, have got bogged down by the opposition in Congress. Strikingly, Mr Pena Nieto made no reference to the possibility of legalising drugs, nor did he criticise the US for being the leading supplier of assault weapons to the drug cartels. Mr Pena Nieto's life was dramatically touched by drug violence in 2007 when his three children were on holiday in Veracruz and four of their bodyguards were shot dead. Shortly before, Mr Pena Nieto became a widower when his wife, Monica Pretelini, died of a heart condition. He recently married Angelica Rivera, a top Mexican soap opera star. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D