20-year-old woman becomes top cop in violent Mexican municipality
By Arthur Brice, CNN
October 20, 2010 1:52 p.m. EDT
Marisol Valles Garcia, a criminology student, became the police chief of Praxedis G. Guerrero, Chihuahua, Mexico.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Marisol Valles Garcia, a criminology student, is the only person who accepted the job
- She says she stepped up because she is tired of people living in fear
- The police force will not carry weapons, she said
 -- Some headlines are hailing her as the  bravest woman in Mexico. Marisol Valles Garcia, all of 20 years old,  says she's just tired of everyone being afraid.
Valles Garcia, a  criminology student, became the police chief this week of Praxedis G.  Guerrero, one of the most violent municipalities in the border state of  Chihuahua. She was the only person who accepted the top job in a police  force whose officers have been abducted and even killed.
"Yes,  there is fear," Valles Garcia said Wednesday in an interview with CNN en  Español. "It's like all human beings. There will always be fear, but  what we want to achieve in our municipality is tranquility and  security."
There's good reason for the fear. Just this past  weekend, a 59-year-old local mayor, Rito Grado Serrano, and his  37-year-old son, Rogoberto Grado Villa, were killed in a house in which  they they were hiding in nearby Ciudad Juarez. Another area mayor was  killed in June.
Juarez is the bloodiest city in Mexico, with a  reported 2,500 people killed in drug violence this year. Praxedis G.  Guerrero is located about 35 miles southeast of Ciudad Juarez. Both are  in the state of Chihuahua, which borders Texas.
Nationwide, the  federal government says, more than 28,000 people have lost their lives  since Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared war on the drug cartels  after taking office in December 2006.
Valles Garcia sees a non-violent role for her 13-member force, which will be mostly female and unarmed.
"The  weapons we have are principles and values, which are the best weapons  for prevention," she told CNN en Español. "Our work will be pure  prevention. We are not going to be doing anything else other than  prevention."
Valles Garcia said she aims to establish programs in  neighborhoods and schools, to win back security in public spaces and to  foster greater cooperation among neighbors so they can form watch  committees.
She has recruited three other women to join the force  in the small municipality of 8,500 people, the government-run Notimex  news agency said this week. 
Valles Garcia said Wednesday she  gladly accepted when Mayor Jose Luis Guerrero offered her the job. The  first couple of days have gone smoothly, she said.
"Truthfully,  we have been very tranquil," she said. "The people have received us very  well. They have even supported us. They say it's a great project and  they will be with us 100 percent."
Still, the notion of a largely  female police force being helmed by a woman -- and a young one at that  -- does not seem to sit well with some people in a country that still  retains vestiges of machismo.
"Are there no men in Chihuahua?" read a headline on a blog on the Periodista Digital website.
But Valles Garcia believes what the job may need is a woman's touch.
"We  are simply going to talk with them, with the people, with the families,  giving them confidence so they will quit being afraid, so they can  leave their houses," she told CNN en Español.
"We have hope that we are going to exchange fear for tranquility and security."