Mexico City, January 14 (RHC)-- Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) is requesting a civilian head to lead the country's National Guard.
Responding to popular demand, AMLO changed his initial project for the National Guard, a new security body intended to combat violence in Mexico. However, the training and the structure will be based on a military institution.
"Alfonso Durazo (the secretary of Public Safety and Citizen Protection) says President Andrés Manuel López Obrador respectfully requests the Chamber of Deputies that the command of the National Guard is civil," tweeted Mario Delgado Carrillo, federal lawmaker representing AMLO's Morena party.
During a hearing in the lower chamber, at which Army and Navy commanders were present, Durazo said the president asked to make the necessary changes so that the head of the organization could be a civilian and not a military person.
"(AMLO) conveys through my channel the need to rethink the terms of the original design proposed for the National Guard, through the constitutional amendments that this Chamber of Lawmakers deems pertinent," Durazo said.
Originally, the plan was that the National Guard would comprise agents of the Army, Navy and Federal Police under military control via the Secretary of National Defense (Sedena).
AMLO said the National Guard is needed "to guarantee public safety," because until now the special operations of the Army and Navy were aimed at confronting organized crime "and did not protect the citizen."
Mexican president requests civilian head for National Guard
![Mexican President AMLO is giving the top position in the new National Guard to a civilian rather than a military official. Photo: Reuters](https://www.radiohc.cu/articles/9750-mexico_president_amlo_request_civil_head.jpg)
Related Articles
Commentaries
MAKE A COMMENT
All fields requiredMore Views
- Cuban beach volleyball duo successfully debuts in Paris 2024
- The Washington Post says sanctions on Venezuela have caused crises three times worse than Great Depression of 1930's
- McDonald's hit by first sales drop since 2020 amid boycott campaign over genocidal war against Gaza
- Caricom reiterates call for the U.S. to lift blockade on Cuba
- WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange reappears in smiling beachside family photo