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Colombia admits high-level military corruption

2007-07-31 05:44:59

By Hugh BronsteinMon Jul 30, 3:50 PM ET

Cocaine smugglers and leftist rebels have infiltrated senior levels of the

Colombian army, impeding efforts at defeating the guerrillas and fighting

drugs, Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos said on Monday.

Colombia's largest rebel force and the country's main cocaine cartel have

bribed officials "at a high level" into sharing information that has helped

bosses of both illegal groups avoid capture, Santos told reporters.

Colombia remains the world's biggest exporter of cocaine despite billions of

dollars in mostly military aid from Washington aimed at stamping out the trade.

"Unfortunately, the infiltration has impeded us from capturing some of the big

fish we had been investigating," Santos said.

Some military officials have been captured in the case and more arrests were

expected, he said.

Earlier this month, the army discovered classified military information in

computer files of guerrillas from the FARC rebel group who died in combat with

state security forces. The information could only have come from a mole placed

highly in the military hierarchy, officials say.

Also implicated in the scandal is Diego Montoya, head of the Norte del Valle

cartel. Featured on the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted" list, Montoya is accused of

exporting hundreds of tonnes of cocaine to the United States.

Investigators say he recruited army officers to provide him with protection and

help plan the breakout of his brother, Eugenio Montoya, who has been in a

high-security prison since the start of the year.

This Andean country is regularly jolted by revelations involving its

multibillion-dollar cocaine trade.

Last year, 10 anti-narcotics police were gunned down by Colombian soldiers in

the pay of drug traffickers near the western town of Jamundi, prosecutors

charge.

President Alvaro Uribe's international standing has been damaged by

investigations showing some of his closest allies in Congress were in the pay

of drug-running paramilitary militias formed in the 1980s to help rich

Colombians fight the rebels.

He remains popular at home for reducing urban crime and sparking economic

growth with his tough security policies.