Mexico president launches campaign to get guns off streets

Mexico president formally launches campaign to get guns off streets

/ 07:46 AM January 11, 2025

Mexico president formally launches campaign to get guns off streets

Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum (L) talks with Secretary for Defense, General Ricardo Trevilla Trejo, during the launch of the “Yes to Disarmament, Yes to Peace” program in Mexico City on January 10, 2025. The program encourages Mexican citizens to hand in their weapons, ammunition, or explosives in exchange for payment. (Photo by Carl de Souza / Agence France-Presse)

MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Friday officially launched a campaign to crack down on the number of weapons on the country’s violence-wracked streets.

The plan, called “Yes to Disarmament, Yes to Peace,” will offer cash to those who anonymously leave weapons at designated drop-off locations, including churches.

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Gun owners will get 8,700 pesos ($430) for a revolver, 25,000 pesos ($1,200) for an AK-47 rifle, and 26,450 pesos ($1,300) for a machine gun. The firearms are then to be destroyed.

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The disarmament plan is part of the government’s “integral strategy” for fighting crime.

“Why must we teach our children anything about violence?” Sheinbaum said at a launch event, which featured the symbolic destruction of a weapon by soldiers.

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Children attending the event with their parents were able to trade in toy guns for other toys.

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The scheme, first floated last month, was published in the country’s official government gazette earlier this week.

It has existed in Mexico City since 2019, but now will apply nationwide, and be carried out by the defense, interior and public safety ministries, with support from Mexican religious authorities.

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READ: Mexico City offers exchange of cash, toys for guns

Mexico is plagued by violent crime linked to the multibillion-dollar illegal drug trade.

In 2023, the country recorded 31,062 homicides, 70 percent of which were caused by firearms, according to preliminary data from the national statistics institute.

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Mexico tightly controls gun sales, making them practically impossible to obtain legally, and has repeatedly urged Washington to tackle arms trafficking across the border from the United States.

TAGS: Guns, Mexico, Violence

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