B"H
Jewish Tours
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Friday, August 7th 2015 - 07:38 UTC
Argentina's worst terrorist (AMIA, 1994)
attack trial takes off
Argentina's Cabinet Chief Anibal Fernández hoped the
AMIA cover-up trial that began on Thursday in Buenos Aires enables to find a
“hint on the local connection” that paved the way for Argentina’s worst
terrorist attack to take place 21 years ago.
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“For once and for all, we need this to be cleared; it is a matter that has taken
a long time. If not, it seems it was been left to be forgotten” said Fernandez
“For once and for all, we need this to be cleared; it is a matter that has taken
a long time. If not, it seems it was been left to be forgotten” said Fernandez
Former president Carlos Menem who should have been sitting in the dock was
absent on medical prescription
Former president Carlos Menem who should have
been sitting in the dock was absent on medical prescription
The first judge
to conduct AMIA investigation, Galeano, ousted in 2005 for “improper
performance” will have to give account for a bribe of US$400,000
The first
judge to conduct AMIA investigation, Galeano, ousted in 2005 for “improper
performance” will have to give account for a bribe of US$400,000
The 1994
bombing of the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires killed 85 people and
left hundreds injured.
The 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish community center
in Buenos Aires killed 85 people and left hundreds injured.
“For once
and for all, we need this to be cleared; it is a matter that has taken a long
time. If not, it seems it was been left to be forgotten,” the head of ministers
said during his daily contact with the press at the government house.
Among
those who will be sitting in the dock are former president Carlos Menem,
ex-intelligence services head Hugo Anzorreguy, then police inspector Jorge
Palacios and two deputies, accused of covering up the 1994 bombing of the AMIA
Jewish community center in Buenos Aires City that killed 85 people.
Furthermore, the first judge to conduct the AMIA investigation, Juan José
Galeano, who was ousted in 2005 for “improper performance” of his duties, will
have to give account for a bribe of US$400,000 allegedly paid to lawyer Carlos
Telleldín so that he incriminated Buenos Aires province police agents and
covered the so called “Syria track,” connecting Syrian business leaders that had
close ties with the Menem family with the attack.
However the trial
investigating the cover-up of the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish community
center finally opened with statements from prosecutors in the case, but without
the attendance of former president Menem or his Intelligence chief Anzorreguy.
The hearing began just after 10.30 a.m with prosecutors reading the list of
accusations against the defendants, related to the alleged 400,000 dollars bribe
paid to former accused Carlos Telledín to give false testimony over the events
surrounding the bombing.
A recess was called at 1 p.m, and proceedings
restarted an hour later as the plaintiff's prosecutors made statements.
The
lawyer of Carlos Menem had presented a medical report claiming he was suffering
from high blood pressure, depression, osteoarthritis and diabetes, by way of his
explaining his absence, but despite the court rejecting the petition the
ex-president was nowhere to be seen on the first day of the trial.
Members of
the Federal Oral Court No.2 (TOF 2) — in charge of judging the cover-up - said
the report was “illegible,” with judges ordering a follow up on Menem’s health
condition. They later ordered the trial to be resumed.
Anzorreguy is in
hospital as a result of an infection contracted after undergoing surgery. The
ex-spy chief followed proceedings via a video link set up from the Otamendi
hospital.
Former judge Juan José Galeano along with former prosecutors Eamon
Mullen and José Barbaccia — in charge of probing the attack — are fellow
defendants in the case as is former Federal Police (PFA) inspector Jorge “Fino”
Palacios.
Telleldín — who was acquitted in the 2001-2004 trial — will also
have to explain his role in the attack this time.
Former DAIA head Rubén
Beraja was accused of being involved in a maneuver that sought to blame a group
of Buenos Aires provincial police officers for the deadliest attack suffered in
Argentina.
The Executive will act as a plaintiff in the trial, represented by
lawyer Luciano Hazan.
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