Narconews: Colombia's Secret Narco-Police
Colombia's Secret Narco-Police
April 29, 2006
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Though it has barely registered in the U.S. press, a national scandal is currently unfolding in Colombia, where a jailed high official of the Administrative Department for Security (DAS) has been speaking freely with journalists about the extensive collaboration between the secret police agency and right-wing paramilitary groups.
Rafael García lost his post as DAS' information technology chief after being charged with taking bribes from rightwing paramilitaries and narcos (often, one and the same). He now claims that DAS has been working for years, at least since Uribe's 2002 election, in conjunction with the "paras" and their narco allies, sharing documents and intelligence to help kill and intimidate activists and unionists, help powerful drug traffickers avoid prosecution and murder informants. And investigative journalists in Colombia have verified and shed more light on a number of these claims.
Sound familiar? Narco News for the past four months has been uncovering a web of corruption linking the U.S.'s own DEA agents and other law enforcement personnel with drug traffickers and paramilitaries in Colombia. The new allegations about paramilitary and narco infiltration of the DAS make the "Kent Memo" (the internal Justice Department document claiming corruption in the DEA's Bogotá office) all the more believable. They give a picture of a war on "drugs and terror" in Colombia that is corrupt to the core, and in which the most powerful narcos are seasoned experts at working with the same law enforcement entities charged with bringing them down.
Read a full report here, in The Narco News Bulletin:
http://www.narconews.com/Issue41/article1747.html
From somewhere in a country called América,
Dan
Feder
Managing Editor
The Narco News Bulletin
http://www.narconews.com