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Related: About this forumMexico passes law to compensate victims of crime
Mexico passes law to compensate victims of crime
National registry of victims will be set up and compensation funded in part by the assets seized from organised crime
Associated Press in Mexico City
guardian.co.uk, Monday 30 April 2012 22.58 EDT
Mexico's congress has passed a law to recognise and protect the rights of crime victims, a longstanding demand in a country where more than 47,500 people have died in five years of drug-related violence, and thousands more have disappeared.
The law covers the dead, wounded, kidnapped or missing whether they are ordinary civilians or are members of drug cartels and other crime gangs. It also would cover victims of other crimes, like extortion.
The measure has now been approved by both houses of congress and must be signed into law by the president, who supports the move.
The law passed will establish a national registry of victims and set aside funds to compensate them, funded in part by the assets seized from organised crime groups. The compensation payments could reach as high as 1 million pesos ($77,000) apiece.
More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/01/mexico-law-compensate-crime-victims1
napoleon_in_rags
(3,992 posts)I say, put it in a separate deduction from our paychecks, so everybody can see the cost of crime, and corruption. I would love if there was something like that for welfare fraud. Let everybody see how the criminals cost us all.
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)who it appears used their money to buy their way into more favorable positions in the Mexican market place by bribing officials. Should not the businesses and individuals affected by those actions also be compensated?
