22-02-2009, 12:24 PM
No kidding. Really. The Colombian police are corrupt.
Colombia police in wiretap probe
By Jeremy McDermott
BBC News, Medellin
Colombia's secret police is under investigation over claims rogue agents may have intercepted phone calls and passed on information to criminals.
Magistrates, politicians, officials and journalists may have had phones tapped.
It is the latest scandal to hit the Department of Administrative Security - or DAS, as the secret police are known - under President Alvaro Uribe.
One ex-DAS director is accused of giving right-wing death squads the names of suspected rebel sympathisers.
Felipe Munoz has been the DAS director for just a month, and is now in the the middle of a scandal even worse than that which cost the job of his predecessor - although not quite as bad as one that put another former director in prison.
Too corrupt to reform?
A special squad has been set up to investigate the wire-tapping allegations.
The DAS has been at the centre of corruption scandals since Mr Uribe took over in 2002 and appointed Jorge Noguera, one of his campaign managers and a man with no intelligence experience, as director.
Mr Noguera resigned in 2005 amid accusations he was working with right-wing paramilitary death squads.
He has been imprisoned and the case is awaiting trial.
Maria Pilar Hurtado was forced to resign as director last October after it was revealed the DAS was spying on opponents of the president.
There have been calls for the DAS to be disbanded. A Ministry of Defence source said that the organisation was so corrupt that it could not be reformed.
Colombia police in wiretap probe
By Jeremy McDermott
BBC News, Medellin
Colombia's secret police is under investigation over claims rogue agents may have intercepted phone calls and passed on information to criminals.
Magistrates, politicians, officials and journalists may have had phones tapped.
It is the latest scandal to hit the Department of Administrative Security - or DAS, as the secret police are known - under President Alvaro Uribe.
One ex-DAS director is accused of giving right-wing death squads the names of suspected rebel sympathisers.
Felipe Munoz has been the DAS director for just a month, and is now in the the middle of a scandal even worse than that which cost the job of his predecessor - although not quite as bad as one that put another former director in prison.
Too corrupt to reform?
A special squad has been set up to investigate the wire-tapping allegations.
The DAS has been at the centre of corruption scandals since Mr Uribe took over in 2002 and appointed Jorge Noguera, one of his campaign managers and a man with no intelligence experience, as director.
Mr Noguera resigned in 2005 amid accusations he was working with right-wing paramilitary death squads.
He has been imprisoned and the case is awaiting trial.
Maria Pilar Hurtado was forced to resign as director last October after it was revealed the DAS was spying on opponents of the president.
There have been calls for the DAS to be disbanded. A Ministry of Defence source said that the organisation was so corrupt that it could not be reformed.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14