Office of the Inspector General of Colombia explained

Office of the Inspector General of Colombia should not be confused with Office of the Attorney General of Colombia.

Office of the Inspector / Solicitor General
Native Name:Spanish; Castilian: Procuraduría General de la Nación
Headquarters:Carrera 5ª № 15-60
Bogotá, D.C., Colombia
Budget:COP$541.314.589.000 (2016)[1]
Chief1 Name:Margarita Cabello
Chief1 Position:Inspector General
Chief2 Name:Antonio Emiro Thomas Arias
Chief2 Position:Vicesolicitor General
Child1 Agency:Ombudsman's Office of Colombia

The Office of the Inspector General of Colombia (Spanish; Castilian: Procuraduría General de Colombia) is a Colombian independent public institution overseeing the public conduct of those in authority or in charge of exercising a public office, and of overseeing the correct functioning of other government institutions and agencies. The Office of the Inspector General of Colombia is not a judicial institution; it is one of the Colombian Control Institutions, alongside the Office of the Controller General. The Inspector General is also charged with safeguarding the rights of the people, guaranteeing human rights protection and intervening in the name of the people in the defence of the public's interest.

Functions

According to the Colombian Constitution of 1991, one of the main purposes of the Inspector General is to prevent, intervene and start disciplinary actions. It prevents before having to take action; it is charged with overseeing public officials' performance and warns of any violation to the current norms.[2] It intervenes in the different jurisdictions in defence of the legal order, public funds and fundamental rights and freedoms. The Inspector General is in charge of initiating, developing and ruling investigations against public officials in accordance with the Unique Disciplinary Code.[3]

Criticism

In July 2022, then president-elect Gustavo Petro claimed that he would promote the removal of the Office of the Inspector General, with the purpose of "listening to the judgment of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and in the process respecting the American Convention."[4] [5] He added that the apparatus's funding would be spent in "strengthening" judiciary power, and establishing "the great Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office."[6]

Colombian politicians like Juan Manuel Galán Pachón and Piedad Córdoba have supported this change, calling the institution a "monarchical, old, expensive institution" and a "tool of persecution of the extreme right —a biased body that protects political clans," respectively.[7]

In an interview with El Tiempo, lawyers Juan Carlos Ospina and Silvia Serrano stated that "the proposal for the elimination or complete transformation of the Attorney General's Office goes beyond what was ordered by the Inter-American Court" and that "the ruling of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights did not order the elimination of the control body or the transferring of its functions to the judiciary but to adapt the domestic system so that the Attorney General's Office does not have the power to dismiss or disqualify popularly elected officials."[8]

List of officeholders

No.PortraitNameTook officeLeft office
1Mario Aramburu[9] 19671970Carlos Lleras Restrepo
2Jesús Bernal[10] 19711974Misael Pastrana Borrero
3Jaime Serrano[11] 19741978Alfonso López Michelsen
4Guillermo González[12] 19781982Julio César Turbay Ayala
5Carlos Jiménez Gómez[13] 19821986Belisario Betancur
6Carlos Mauro Hoyos September 17, 1986January 25, 1988Virgilio Barco
-Horacio Serpa19881989
7Alfonso Gómez Méndez19891900César Gaviria
8Carlos Gustavo Arrieta19901994
9Orlando VásquezSeptember 1, 1994November 28, 1996Ernesto Samper
10Jaime BernalDecember 12, 1996January 1, 2001Andrés Pastrana
11Edgardo MayaJanuary 12, 2001January 13, 2009Álvaro Uribe
12Alejandro OrdóñezJanuary 16, 2009September 8, 2016Juan Manuel Santos
13Fernando CarrilloJanuary 17, 2016August 27, 2020Iván Duque
14Margarita CabelloAugust 27, 2020IncumbentGustavo Petro

Notes and References

  1. Ley 1420 de 2010. Diario Oficial. 13 December 2010. 47,922. 6 May 2013. Colombia, Congress of. Congress of Colombia. 24. Bogotá. es. 0122-2112. 500057889.
  2. Web site: Información institucional. Office of the Inspector General of Colombia. es. 2008-11-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20081121153431/http://www.procuraduria.gov.co/html/infoinstitucional/infoinst_quehacemos.htm. 2008-11-21. dead.
  3. Law 734 of 2002
  4. Web site: Cedeño . María Fernanda . 2022-07-06 . Fin de la Procuraduría en Colombia: por qué Petro ha decidido eliminarla y cuándo será . 2022-07-29 . Diario AS . es-co.
  5. Web site: Ramírez . Sandra Patricia Vargas . 2022-07-05 . Gustavo Petro impulsará la eliminación de la Procuraduría General de la Nación . 2022-07-29 . W Radio . es.
  6. Web site: Semana . 2022-07-09 . Si la Procuraduría es eliminada en el gobierno de Gustavo Petro, ¿quiénes serían los afectados? . 2022-07-29 . Semana.com Últimas Noticias de Colombia y el Mundo . spanish.
  7. Web site: Semana . 2022-07-05 . "La Procuraduría terminó siendo un escampadero de políticos": Piedad Córdoba . 2022-07-29 . Semana.com Últimas Noticias de Colombia y el Mundo . spanish.
  8. Web site: Tiempo . Casa Editorial El . 2022-07-05 . ¿Qué tan viable es eliminar la Procuraduría como propuso Gustavo Petro? . 2022-07-29 . El Tiempo . spanish.
  9. News: El procurador Aramburo Restrepo. April 6, 2023. November 28, 2010. Madrigal. Lorenzo. elespectador.com.
  10. Web site: Procuradora o procurador. November 14, 2016. September 12, 2016. elnuevosiglo.com.co.
  11. Web site: Murió el exregistrador Jaime Serrano Rueda. July 12, 2018. June 29, 1991. eltiempo.com.
  12. Web site: Procuraduría General de la Nación lamenta la muerte del exprocurador Guillermo González Charry y ofrece las más sentidas condolencias a sus familiares. March 27, 2014. March 25, 2014. procuraduria.gov.co.
  13. Web site: Carlos Jiménez Gómez: Un Procurador histórico. February 12, 2024. January 23, 2021. blogs.elespectador.com.