Pubdate: Sun, 28 Mar 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Section: Outlook Page: C1 Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Sam Quinones YEARLY U.S. ANGER NO HELP TO MEXICO MEXICO CITY -- Mexico, drugs and corruption are again on the agenda, this being March, when Congress debates Mexico's annual certification as an ally in the war on drugs. As usual, some U.S. politicians are calling Mexico corrupt and unworthy of being certified. But they overlook the causes of Mexican corruption and the real solutions. Mexico is a weak drug-war ally not simply because it is corrupt, but also because it lacks strong local institutions that could form a front against drug trafficking. Members of Congress throw up their hands when it comes to Mexico. Their message is always the same: Mexico must "do something about corruption" -- as if Mexican officials are too simple or nefarious to know they ought to fire dirty police commanders. Mexico has been certified every year since the process began in 1986, largely because America's second-largest trading partner would be in crisis otherwise. If that happened, Mexico's government would do even less to fight the corrosive effects of drug trafficking than it does today. But Mexico's critics are right: Its government is corrupt from top to bottom. It is a bad ally. The certification debate does nothing to change that. It provokes only cosmetic changes -- the firing of an officer here, the arrest of a drug lord there. But it could be used to encourage Mexico to make deep structural reforms that might allow local institutions to thrive. In Mexico, endemic corruption and anemic political institutions are inextricably linked. The reason has to do with the nature of the Mexican regime, led by the Institutional Revolutionary Party or PRI, which, at 70, is the world's oldest authoritarian government. Key to its longevity is its understanding of human nature. The PRI has never had an ideology. Rather, the PRI has simply bought people's loyalty like a nationwide Tammany Hall. Its members have been allowed to wallow in the public trough and break the law with impunity. So, for instance, thousands of street vendors clog downtown Mexico City sidewalks because, over the years, the PRI has allowed them to set up illegally on public property. Instead of paying a permit fee, the vendors are expected to vote PRI, attend PRI rallies and be a bloc of support. In Mexico, corruption is the political lifeblood and part of the political culture. Annual threats from the U.S. Congress won't change that. Meanwhile, the PRI-government -- until recently the two were indistinguishable -- has done everything for the people. Some people call it Papa Gobierno -- Father Government. So if poor schoolchildren need free lunches, the food is prepared in Mexico City and flown or trucked to far-off provinces. Such measures ensure that only the PRI-government commands loyalty. In doing so, the PRI-government systematically has denuded Mexico of any institutions that could check its power. And thus, today, every institution that could form a bulwark against the agile and powerful drug cartels is crippled or inexperienced. Only the central government has the resources to fight traffickers, but incompetence and corruption have made it thoroughly ineffective. Municipal governments, for example, have been underfunded for decades. They received 4 percent of tax revenues, while the states received 16 percent and the central government retained 80 percent. That formula improved in 1997, but only slightly. Thus, most Mexican city governments are paupers. Moreover, they lack expertise. Each city's administration changes every three years. There is no civil service. By law, a mayor cannot be re-elected, and traditionally all his staff leaves with him. All of this breeds corruption and incompetence. Nezahualcoyotl, a massive working-class suburb of Mexico City, is a case in point. PRI ran the city for decades. When the first opposition-party mayor, Valentin Gonzalez, took over in 1997, he found that of the 3,000 city workers, 500 did nothing but collect paychecks. They had been put on the payroll by one local PRI leader or another to buy their loyalty. (These ghost employees are so common in Mexico that they have a name: aviadores, aviators, who fly in every two weeks for their checks.) The water system hadn't been repaired in 25 years, and roughly half the city's residents paid no taxes. I recently visited Jorge Cruz, the police chief of Navolato, in the Pacific Coast state of Sinaloa. Last year Cruz was a high school chemistry teacher. His 210 officers have 111 pistols and 13 working patrol cars among them. They are rationed eight bullets a day. Stories like these are routine. Local governments that cannot pave or patrol their streets, or plan strategies to attract industry and jobs, will never become strong allies in fighting drug traffickers. A narco-culture flourishes in northern Mexico precisely because of such governmental incompetence. In many areas, the drug runner is the great social hero. Young children yearn to run drugs, seeing it as the only route to riches and glory. Meanwhile, the government is often viewed as a corrupt do-nothing. It's no surprise that some drug lords, such as Rafael Caro Quintero in Sinaloa, ingratiate themselves with the local population by stepping into this vacuum and building roads, health clinics, churches and basketball courts. PRI paternalism has also withered the civic muscles of Mexico's business class. In the United States, business executives routinely volunteer their expertise and connections to raise money for, say, a new hospital wing or computers in schools. In Mexico, the government has discouraged business people from civic involvement, wanting to keep that role for itself. After years of unaccountable single-party rule, the list of arthritic Mexican institutions includes the judiciary, prosecutors, the Congress, state legislatures, the media, charities, grass-roots groups, unions and the Catholic Church, which was illegal for decades and is only now finding its social role. Each could be a dike against the tide of drug smuggling, but isn't. The list of wasted allies in the drug war should also include the Mexican people, who have learned to expect solutions only from the government. Mexico is moving toward modernity and democracy. The United States should help it along, and not just because it needs Mexico in the drug war. In the post-Cold War era, Mexico is becoming our England -- our most important economic ally. It is becoming the brawn to our brain. As the world divides into economic blocs, we discover that a key member of ours has local governments that must ration street lights and bullets. One solution would be for the PRI to lose the presidency in 2000. For years, the United States supported the PRI because it guaranteed tranquillity -- which Americans prized in Latin America during the Cold War. But the party has bequeathed monumental governmental deficiencies to Mexico that now also affect the United States. Mexicans must do what's necessary to reduce corruption and strengthen local institutions. But U.S. officials can help. Above all, they need to find a way of speaking to Mexico that focuses on solutions. They might shift the debate to talk of strengthening local Mexican governments and devolving powers to municipalities. They might find ways to visit and help Mexican cities experimenting with new ideas in local governance. Many of those cities, not coincidentally, are in northern Mexico, where the influence of the U.S. example is great. The United States ought to use that example to better effect. U.S. officials might discuss the need to change Mexican law to allow re-election -- especially for the Mexican Congress -- as necessary to fighting the drug war and modernizing government. There will never be oversight of the sprawling and corrupt federal anti-drug police forces until Mexico's Congress members have the power and accountability that comes with re-election. U.S. officials might spend more time talking to opposition parties. They should get to know Mexican federal and state legislators. The U.S. Congress still deals with Mexico as if it were a world away. Key legislators from both countries should be on a first-name basis. U.S. officials might look beyond the central government and talk with business grass-roots groups and churches to look for ways to help strengthen them. These must be lasting efforts -- not just taken up every March -- because they will take a long time to accomplish. Mexico needs more than annual American tantrums. To fight the battles of the 21st century together, both countries need Mexico to make its system accountable and modern by reviving its local institutions. Working for that goal would be a real first step toward doing something about Mexican corruption. Quinones, a free-lance journalist based in Mexico City, was a 1998 recipient of an Alicia Patterson fellowship. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry