MEXICO CITY (AP) β Mexicoβs president acknowledged Tuesday that the armed forces have taken over yet another civilian role: fixing the nationβs highways.
Filling potholes has now been added to a long list of projects ranging from planes, trains and policing that the armed forces now control.
President AndrΓ©s Manuel LΓ³pez Obrador said highway maintenance in southern Mexico had been transferred away from the government's Transportation Department.
The department usually gave private companies contracts for road maintenance but LΓ³pez Obrador claimed those contracts were too expensive and riddled with corruption.
βThere are very few serious construction companies, because they were all rotten with corruption,β the president said.
LΓ³pez Obrador has given the armed forces the leading role in law enforcement, including the quasi-military National Guard, and entrusted them with far more duties than his predecessors.
Late last year, LΓ³pez Obrador put the army in charge of the government's new state-owned airline. He also said the army would run a passenger train service, in addition to building everything from bank offices to airports.
LΓ³pez Obrador claims the military is more honest and efficient.
Unlike many militaries in Latin America, Mexico's armed forces have for almost a century kept out of politics and avoided taking a leading, public role.
Critics say LΓ³pez Obrador's measures threaten to break that tradition and militarize the country.
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