Mexico. In 95% of progress is the installation of the 1,300 new video surveillance cameras that will have the municipalities of Torreón and Saltillo belonging to the state of Coahuila.
This was confirmed by the governor of this Mexican state, Miguel Riquelme Solís, who stressed that these cameras will be operated by police elements with the capacity to react. "Very soon we will enter into functions with the operations coordinated through the video surveillance cameras. They are recruiting and conducting the control and confidence exams, in addition to receiving training for the technology that will be used by the police elements that have the capacity to react," he said.
He explained that before the second report that will be made on December 2, he will be visiting the Video Surveillance Center in the Comarca Lagunera and will be connected to the cameras of the municipality. They project that the 1,300 video surveillance cameras will be operating in Coahuila in the month of February, in the municipalities of Torreón and Saltillo they work at 95 percent, they are about to start operating "They must also know, that there is not a single space in which a vehicle or person can be hidden when it leaves the entity because they will be monitored, who entered to commit a crime will have to leave on the one hand and that will be in videographic evidence. We will be able to have the capacity for investigation, reaction, persecution and flagrante delicto even the commanders themselves will monitor and in case of any reaction, they may be directing the elements from abroad in some situation," he said.
On November 3, he told Milenio Laguna that he will present to the Local Congress, an Initiative to Reform the Criminal Code and the modification of the State Security Law aimed at the operation of video surveillance cameras that will begin operations in November, in order to prosecute high-impact crimes and common jurisdiction taking as evidence their images and videos.
Source: Milenio.


