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Summary Ninety-five million people in Mexico own a cell phone today.
Mexicos interior minister suggested that a mobile software app could help crack down on the countrys crippling drug-related crime.Speaking at a conference hosted by search giant Google in California, Alejandro Poire said the new government was determined to get a grip on the violence wracking Mexico, and technology could help.These are a powerful tools that can help us get information, obtain it from images, he said at the conference in Thousand Oaks, northwest of Los Angeles.What if we could develop a system that uses this technology and actually went not just to the people in the call center, but to citizen watchdogs that would allow us and help us to monitor criminals, he asked. He continued: We could probably produce a simple, practical, very basic software that would allow us to increase our capabilities of reporting crime to police.Poire, Mexicos fifth interior minister since 2006, noted that the countrys murder rate last year was 22 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants, nearly twice as high as only eight years ago.Former Mexican President Felipe Calderon named Poire as interior chief last November, after the previous post holder Francisco Blake died in a helicopter crash.
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