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<b>Sony Warns It May Leave Mexico</b>
<p>Filed at 3:44 p.m. EDT
<p>By The Associated Press
<p>MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Crime is causing major companies to reconsider
<br>investments in Mexico, the head of Sony Mexico has warned in a meeting
<br>attended by President Ernesto Zedillo.
<p>``The situation with respect to public security is so critical that
it is
<br>starting to give sufficient reasons for the company to decide to diminish
<br>its investment or move its installations to a more secure country,''
said
<br>Shin Takagi, quoted by several Mexican newspapers Tuesday.
<p>Takagi spoke as the representative of Japanese assembly plants in Mexico
<br>during a meeting Monday at the presidential residence, Los Pinos.
<p>Sony has four assembly plants, known as maquiladoras, near the U.S.
border
<br>at Tijuana, Mexicali and Nuevo Laredo, employing 13,000 people.
<p>``At this moment, we do not have plans to move to other countries,''
the
<br>newspaper El Universal quoted Takagi as saying. But he added that ``if
there
<br>is no change ... we would have to seriously consider these things.''
<p>Major border states such as Tijuana and Chihuahua have been plagued
in
<br>recent years by violence linked to the illegal drug trafficking. Kidnappings
<br>are a problem in some regions. Many companies complain that their shipments
<br>are also being targeted.
<p>Takagi said Sony doubled its spending on security measures last year
to $1
<br>million. A shipment of 250 television sets was hijacked at a plant
entry
<br>last week, he said.
<p>In comments to the group, Zedillo praised the booming growth of the
assembly
<br>plants -- which have helped make Mexico a global export power -- but
did not
<br>refer directly to the complaints about security.
<p>The newspaper Reforma said Interior Secretary Diodoro Carraso that the
<br>problem was largely one of perception because crime rates are already
<br>falling. ``We have a long way to go, but the important part of this
effort
<br>... in social perception,'' he was quoted as saying.
<p>On Monday, police in the central state of Morelos detained a sixth suspect
<br>in connection with the kidnapping of the 8-year-old daughter of Tan
<br>Jochimuro, a Japanese businessman, in April.
<p>The suspect, Alberto Blaz Ramirez, is a former employee of the private
<br>security company that guarded the Firestone tire factory in Cuernavaca.
<br>Jochimuro, a shareholder in the factory, reportedly paid a $2 million
ransom
<br>for the girl's return. Five other suspects were detained Friday.
<p>Last year, gunmen shot to death Japanese businessman Jido Sazayama in
<br>central Tijuana. In 1996, the president of Sanyo Video Inc. America,
Mammoru
<br>Kono, was kidnapped in Tijuana. He was later released.
<br>
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