MEXICO-DRUGS
OCTOBER 27 2008 22:15h
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The two officials are now in prison and some 30 other members of the anti-drug unit known as SIEDO have been fired.
The two men received between $150,000 and $450,000 a month for informing the Beltran Leyva drug gang about police operations including safe house raids and arrest targets.
"They handed over secret information and details of operations against the Beltran Leyva criminal organization," Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora told a news conference.
The two officials are now in prison and some 30 other members of the anti-drug unit known as SIEDO have been fired.
President Felipe Calderon has made cleansing Mexico's notoriously corrupt police forces a priority in his fight against drug gangs smuggling narcotics to the United States.
But low wages, shoddy equipment and rising insecurity amid the drug war that has killed more than 3,725 people this year have made that task increasingly difficult.
Calderon has sent more than 40,000 troops across Mexico to fight the drug gangs but despite capturing several drug lords, narco violence continues to spiral.
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