Pubdate: Thu, 19 Aug 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited. Author: Miguel Angel Gutierrez MEXICO UNVEILS NEW FEDERAL POLICE FORCE MEXICO CITY - Mexico unveiled a new federal police force Wednesday, responding to citizens' clamor for more protection from kidnappings, highway robberies and other crimes plaguing the nation. The so-called Federal Preventive Police (PFP), a force of more than 14,000 officers including 5,000 military police, will also work to crack down on illegal immigration, unlawful arms possession and drug trafficking, officials said. Those sorts of offenses increasingly have terrorized Mexicans, who enjoyed a relatively low crime rate until a 1995 economic crisis threw a million Mexicans out of work and ushered in a new era of violence. "It's obvious that we Mexicans are in total paranoia over crime," Javier Ibarrola, an independent analyst specializing in security matters, told Reuters. "The worse part is that we're getting used to it and see it as natural." The Federal Preventive Police will support "preventive" polices forces at the local level, whose main job is to patrol the streets and curtail crime as it happens. Mexican states and the federal government also have detective forces that work for the various attorneys general whose main tasks are to investigate. "The new police structure encompasses federal highways, ports and borders," PFP Commissioner Wilfredo Robledo told a ceremony launching the new force. Robledo said 700 agents would form the intelligence unit and that 8,500 would safeguard the highways, borders, airports and seaports. Another 5,000 military police would remain in their barracks except when needed for anti-terrorist operations and "crisis management," Robledo said. But despite concern over crime, in which citizens' anti-crime groups have launched street protests and some towns have formed their own vigilante forces, about half of Mexicans oppose using the army for police work, according to a poll released on Wednesday. The MORI polling firm surveyed 2,155 adults from Aug. 1-14 and reported that 34 percent "strongly oppose" using the military as part of the police force in Mexico while 16 percent "relatively oppose" such an army role. Yet 21 percent "strongly support" and 23 percent "relatively support" the idea. The poll had a margin of error of 2.2 percent. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea