Local September 8, 2015 - 11:01 am

Top traffic cop threatens agents even after assaults, abuse

Santo Domingo.- MetropolitanTransit Authority (AMET) agents engaged in misconduct leading to loss of trustand respect from citizens or who accept gifts from motorists who violatetraffic law will be punished and fired, warned its director Frener Bello on Tuesday

The measure comes inthe heels of several incidents in which the traffic cops have been insulted andeven injured by mid level and senior officials, the most recent in Puerto Platalast week, where Industry and Commercedeputy minister Alfonso Crisostomo called them “beggars of chump change.”

"We won’ttolerate wrongdoing by any member to cause irreversible damage to the image ofthe AMET family, and I observe this situation with concern," the officialsaid.

He stressed that the agentsunder his command must act boldly, firmly, with decorum and without prejudiceto human and individual rights of citizens, "because our main mission as AMETmembers is to enforce law 241-67, in our capacity as true guardians of order, moralityand ethics."

COVID-19

May 17, 2024 - 9:22 am

CEMDOE expands services, reinforcing commitment to quality and safety in healthcare

May 16, 2024 - 8:43 am

WHO greenlights Japanese vaccine for Dengue prevention

May 14, 2024 - 10:25 am

Médico Express and Caribbean Health TPA foster medical tourism

May 13, 2024 - 9:34 am

Residents protest thermoelectric vessels in Azua

MOST READ

Tourism

Dominican airline breaks passenger transit record

Local

President Abinader explores semiconductor industry potential with World Bank president

Economy

CNUS president pushes for monotributo system in the Dominican Republic

Local

After complaints from residents, the SDE Mayor’s Office carries out a cleaning and waste collection day

MORE NEWS

Economy

Being the logistics hub of the region is a goal that Dominican Republic will achieve

Tourism

American Airlines returns to La Romana with a daily flight from Miami

Tourism

Frontier threatens to displace JetBlue in the Caribbean

Economy

In two years, Dominican National Brewery has managed to collect 5.4 million pounds of plastic