Pubdate: Sun, 13 Sep 1998 Source: Reuters MENEM WANTS ``ZERO TOLERANCE'' FOR ARGENTINE CRIME BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - President Carlos Menem in a newspaper interview published Sunday threatened a crack down on violent crime in Argentina, dismissing possible human rights concerns. ``Zero tolerance. A hard hand. There's no other way ... Some human rights organizations may protest, but I believe that a criminal has more protection here than a police officer or the people,'' he told Clarin newspaper. Argentina's federal police have responded to concern at rising crime in the capital by putting more police on the streets in an operation code-named ``Urban Spiral.'' Menem said that would mean 5,000 more officers on the streets. He blamed the rise in crime on organized gangs, which he said had more sophisticated arms and communications than the police. He compared the crime wave with the leftist guerrilla activity of the 1970s and the spiral of violence that led to the military coup of 1976. Asked about Argentina's history of police brutality, not only during the military regime of 1976-83 but in recent years too, Menem responded: ``We can't blame the police for everything.'' Argentina has been largely spared the drug and guerrilla violence of many other countries in Latin America, as well as the urban crime and violence of neighboring Brazil. But a sharp rise in unemployment to 13.2 percent is considered by church leaders and the opposition to have contributed to an increase in violent robberies. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry