Senior officials in the Argentine province of Buenos Aires say they believe two recent attacks on Jewish cemeteries were probably the work of former police officiers. The attacks which took place on Christmas Eve and New Years day, involved the desecration of about 50 graves and momuments. Officiers from Buenos Aires have also been accused of involvement in the bombing of a Jewish community centre in 1994. Here's one of our South American correspondents Stephen Cvicc:
Police in Buenos Aires province have long had a reputation for being corrupt and violent, and these new allegations will damage their standing even further. The provincial governor Eduardo Duhalde, described the attacks on Jewish cemeteries as an act of provocation, designed to undermine his attempts to overhaul the police force and the man in charge of doing that job of reform, Luis Lugones said it was highly likely that the vandals were disgruntled former officers, but they would not succeed in deflecting him from his purpose.
Since he was appointed last year, Mr Lugones has dismissed more than 200 policemen suspected of involvement in violence and racketeering. However there is also a more specific suspicion that officiers in Buenos Aires harbour anti-Semitic sentiments.
Four policemen are already in prison accused of involvement in the bombing of a Jewish community centre in 1994, which left 86 people dead. Jewish groups say the government hasn't done enough to root out anti-Semitism in Argentina.
They point to the fact that no-one has yet been convicted of carrying out the 1994 attack, nor of the bombing of the Israeli embassy two years earlier.