From Yahoo News
By Mark Felsenthal and Steve Holland
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - U.S. President Prime Minister (RYBG eds) Barack Obama arrived in Mexico
on Thursday for a visit he hopes will draw attention to Mexico's
emerging economic might, even as worries about containing
drug-trafficking and related violence remain an inescapable subtext.
Obama meets with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and is then due to hold a news conference at 4:10 p.m. CDT (4.10 p.m. EDT).
The U.S. president has said he wants to hear more about Mexico's new policy of restricting contacts with the United States on drugs and drug-related violence to a single point, the Ministry of the Interior.
The "single-door"
policy would be an abrupt change from the wide latitude the U.S.
government enjoyed in working with Mexican officials across agencies
under Pena Nieto's predecessor, Felipe Calderon.
"From their perspective, its the effort to have better
control over all the aspects of security policy and make it more fluid,"
said Maureen Meyer, a Mexico specialist with the Washington Office on
Latin America, a U.S. non-governmental organization.
The change has raised concern about Mexico's commitment to combating drug trafficking and drug-related violence.
While the Mexican government
has said that killings linked to organized crime fell 14 percent in the
first four months of Pena Nieto's presidency, more than 70,000 people
are estimated to have been killed in drug violence in Mexico since 2007, and gang-style murders continue to provide lurid headlines.
"Crime lurks in the background throughout everything.
They know it," said Diana Negroponte, a foreign policy fellow at the
Brookings Institution, referring to the Mexican government.
Some question whether Calderon's aggressive policies,
which focused on eradicating gang leaders, has been successful or
whether it has generated additional violence as rival factions vie for
control of turf.
"There's a lot of resentment that the consumption
problem is coming from the United States, and so are the guns, and
they're getting all the violence, and they're fed up with it," said one
government Latin America analyst, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
RIGHTS WORRIES
Rights group Human Rights Watch sent a letter to Obama
ahead of his visit urging him to review the United States' public
security approach with Mexico, rapping his administration for offering
"uncritical support" for Calderon's policies and citing a "dramatic
increase" in rights abuses.
Both Obama and Pena Nieto have said they want the visit
to focus on economic issues rather than security. Pena Nieto is eager
to underscore Mexico's recent run of solid economic growth, fueled in
part by its increasing attractiveness as a manufacturing hub.
"The new government wants to change the narrative,"
said former U.S. ambassador to Mexico Jeffrey Davidow. "It doesn't want
the headlines to be about murders and decapitations."
The Mexican president has launched an ambitious reform
agenda, aiming to overhaul the tax system and energy sector, among other
areas, in a bid to boost economic growth.
"The way the agenda is laid out is to emphasize the
economic side of things, to show that the relationship is about more
than just security," said Duncan Wood, director of the Mexico Institute
at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. "The signal
that's being sent is that the United States fully supports the reform
agenda."
Obama, for his part, would like to highlight Mexico's
progress in moving up the economic ladder, in part to emphasize that his
own goal of reforming U.S. immigration laws will not promote an exodus
of Mexicans into the United States.
The two presidents are also likely to discuss the fate
of a much-ballyhooed agreement that would remove obstacles to expanding
deepwater drilling for oil in the Gulf of Mexico.
The United States has yet to finalize the deal, know as
the Transboundary Hydrocarbons Agreement, which provide guidelines for
drilling in an area of the Gulf that straddles the U.S.-Mexico boundary.
The deal is seen as the key to opening a new era of
cooperation on oil production between the two countries. Mexico's
state-owned oil company Pemex needs technology and investment to boost
its stagnant production, and U.S. companies are eager to help.
(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Simon Gardner and David Brunnstrom)