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NEWS > 17 January 2007 |
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11 Mexican agents charged in t
MEXICO CITY - Eleven Mexican federal agents have been charged in connection with the kidnapping and likely murder of four men whose final interrogation was captured on a homemade video, the country's top drug enforcement official said Thursday.
The 11 agents of the Federal Investigation Agency were allegedly in the employ of the so-called "Sinaloa Cartel" in May when they captured the four men, believed to be paid killers for another drug-smuggling organization, said Jose Luis Santiago Vasconcelos, a Mexican deputy attorney general.
In the video, the four bound men detail... Read more
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Article sourced from |
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AllAfrica.com - Washington,USA 17 January 2007
This article appeared in the above title/site. To view it in its entirity click this link.
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Rwanda: Police Wages War Again
The Rwanda National Police (RNP) have stepped up a campaign against corruption among its personnel, at a time of increasing reports of corruption in the force.
Speaking to The New Times on Friday Police Spokesperson, Willy Marcel Higiro, said the institution was continuing its war against corruption among its officers and men. He however acknowledged that corruption reports in the force continue to flow in despite the efforts against the vice.
"It is true. We are continuing to get reports that some of our police personnel extort money from members of the public. This is illegal and must stop," he told The New Times.
He said it was shocking that some police officers and men are not willing to honour the ethics of their profession. Higiro explained that the practice is a breach of the force's professional ethics.
"All our personnel are aware of how corrupt members are dealt with in the police and there is no excuse for those that are noncompliant," he noted. He said RNP is committed to bring the culprits to book.
However, Higiro also took a swipe at members of the general public who he said spread malicious reports of corruption in the force. "That is blackmail and we highly condemn it."
He observed that some reports of police connection with indiscipline and corruption scandal were being peddled with intentions to tarnish the image of the institution.
Higiro said that: "Although some reports turn out to be genuine, other people simply enjoy peddling false rumours about the police with intentions of either failing individuals or threatening our interests and objectives nothing else."
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