A news item - and Aljazeera America video
A rate of 22 per 100,000 is still five times what it is in the U.S.
MEXICO CITY (AP) Mexico's homicide rate dropped slightly to 22 per
100,000 people last year from 24 per 100,000 in 2011, according to new
estimates by the country's National Statistics and Geography Institute.
Experts
said Tuesday the drop was uneven, with some of Mexico's most violent
states posting big declines and others showing big increases.
For
example, both the northern border state of Chihuahua and the southern
Pacific coast state of Guerrero recorded 77 homicides per 100,000
inhabitants in 2012.
Yet Chihuahua, home to the violent border
city of Ciudad Juarez, has seen the number of homicides fall from 6,407
in 2010, when it began a stepped-up policing effort, to 2,783 killings
in 2012. Guerrero, home to the resort city of Acapulco, had homicides
jump from 1,555 to 2,684 during those years.
Bloodshed also
worsened in the border state of Coahuila, where homicides rose from 730
to 1,158. But Baja California, home to the once-violent border city of
Tijuana, had homicides fall sharply, from 1,528 to 584.
The
institute said in a statement late Monday that a total of 26,037
homicides were recorded last year across Mexico, a country whose
population is now estimated at 117.3 million.
No comments:
Post a Comment