Lawmakers in Ecuador's Chamber of Deputies applaud the approval of the Municipal Security Law empowering inspectors with tasers, screen shows key powers.
Lawmakers in Ecuador's Chamber of Deputies applaud the approval of the Municipal Security Law empowering inspectors with tasers, screen shows key powers.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Congress approves municipal security law allowing tasers for inspectors

Picha iliyoundwa na AI

The Chamber of Deputies approved the Municipal Security Law on Tuesday, strengthening municipalities' preventive role and granting new powers to inspectors, such as using tasers and seizing street vending. Security Minister Luis Cordero emphasized that the law sets standards without creating a municipal police. Mayors celebrated the approval as a win for municipalism.

The Municipal Security Law bill, introduced in May 2023, was dispatched by the Chamber of Deputies in its third constitutional process on Tuesday, December 9, 2025, after over two years of deliberation. The initiative amends Law No. 18.695 on municipalities to bolster the institutional framework for public security and crime prevention, recognizing inspectors as police auxiliaries without forming a municipal police force.

Security Minister Luis Cordero stated: 'What this bill does is regularize and establish a set of standards for the functioning of municipalities in municipal security matters, both in prevention and in auxiliary competencies with the police.' Undersecretary of Crime Prevention Carolina Leitao added that 'it is very important to recognize the preventive role that municipalities play in security matters.'

Key features include creating the Operational Security Committee led by the mayor, involving Carabineros, PDI, and the Public Ministry. It strengthens the Municipal Security Director position and updates the Communal Public Security Council and Plan. Municipalities can now hire security personnel under the Labor Code, and municipal associations can do so for preventive functions.

Inspectors will have autonomous duties such as preventive patrols, identity checks, seizure of street vending, victim assistance, and flagrant arrests. In collaboration with police, they will conduct joint patrols and monitor public alcohol consumption. They can use protective gear like bulletproof vests, pepper spray, and tasers, regulated by an executive decree. Firearms are prohibited.

The law incorporates Senate amendments, such as mandatory drug tests for mayors and council members, with job loss for unjustified positives. Surveillance systems are regulated to capture only images, not sounds.

Funding includes $5.1 billion from the Undersecretary of Crime Prevention for security equipment over three years, plus $208 million for a data platform. Mining royalties will supplement the Common Municipal Fund with billions annually until 2034. Mayors like Gustavo Alessandri, president of the Chilean Association of Municipalities, celebrated: 'Today Chile wins and municipalism wins.'

The Republican Party requested separate votes on articles about training and director distinctions, abstaining or voting against some, but all passed.

Watu wanasema nini

Reactions on X to the Congressional approval of the Municipal Security Law are predominantly positive among mayors and local officials, who view it as a vital legal framework enhancing inspectors' preventive roles with tools like tasers and seizure powers, while stressing the need for swift regulations and equitable implementation across communes. Some right-leaning users express skepticism, attributing the approval to pre-election pressures rather than genuine consensus.

Makala yanayohusiana

Brazilian deputies applauding the overwhelming approval of the Public Security PEC (461-14) in the Chamber of Deputies chamber at night.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Chamber approves Public Security PEC in two rounds

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Public Security Constitutional Amendment Proposal on the night of March 4, 2026, with 461 votes in favor and 14 against in the second round. The text, which provides funding through bets and the pre-salt social fund, heads to the Senate after negotiations that removed a plebiscite on reducing the age of criminal majority. The approval reflects dialogue between the government, the rapporteur, and the House president.

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies is set to vote on Wednesday (March 4) on the Public Security PEC, but faces government resistance to including the reduction of the age of criminal majority to 16 years. Relator Mendonça Filho proposes a 2028 plebiscite on the issue, dividing the allied base and opposition. The Lula government opposes the measure, prioritizing focus on organizing the security system.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Continuing his transition consultations, president-elect José Antonio Kast met with leaders from Chile's main municipal associations at his 'La Moneda chica' office to discuss priorities in security, public management, and education. The groups presented a unified 'State Urgencies' agenda and committed to drafting a Municipal Security Law within the first 100 days of his government. Participants hailed the meeting as a positive step toward collaboration.

President Lula announced plans to recreate the Ministry of Public Security, separating it from Justice, following Minister Ricardo Lewandowski's departure. Deputy Adriana Accorsi (PT-GO), a candidate for the role, states the measure is not electorally motivated and aims to correct a previous government's mistake. The initiative hinges on Congress approving the Public Security PEC.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Saint-Denis's socialist mayor has created France's most aggressive municipal police, sometimes exceeding public tranquility duties. Three months before the 2026 municipal elections, this force represents a key security issue. Armed agents patrol and actively intervene in commercial streets.

Cabinet Chief Manuel Adorni presented the final report of the Consejo de Mayo, promoted by Javier Milei's Government. The document outlines changes to the Expropriations Law, rural land regime, and educational reform with greater provincial autonomy. These proposals will form the basis of bills for Congress in 2026 and extraordinary sessions.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Federal police conducted searches against parliamentary assessor Mariângela Fialek on Friday (12), probing irregularities in emenda allocations. Lawmakers from various political spectrums united to protect her, fearing compromising revelations. The case highlights structural issues in the emenda system, linked to figures like Arthur Lira and Ciro Nogueira.

Jumatano, 1. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 15:51:58

Chilean law allows metal detectors in schools with multiple approvals

Jumanne, 31. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 11:50:33

Government prepares bills against school violence for next week

Jumanne, 24. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 08:20:47

Government proposes $72 billion cut in security budget

Jumatatu, 16. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 21:58:51

Kast government sets first legislative urgencies on security

Ijumaa, 20. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 05:29:20

Deputies approve Milei's labor reform with 135 votes in favor

Jumamosi, 14. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 05:40:09

Deputy denounces Sáenz Peña mayor over high-risk investments with municipal funds

Jumanne, 16. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 20:56:34

Government announces reform to restructure gendarmería after corruption network

Jumanne, 16. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 12:36:20

Chile's comptroller uncovers public security irregularities

Jumanne, 16. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 06:29:57

Senate unanimously approves constitutional reform for judges council

Jumatatu, 10. Mwezi wa kumi na moja 2025, 05:23:59

Federal police criticizes derrite's report on anti-faction bill

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa