B"H
Jewish Tours
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Thursday, August 13, 2015
AMIA cover-up trial resumed,
Menem again absent
A file picture of former president of Argentina Carlos
Saúl Menem involved in the trial into the cover-up of the 1994 bombing of the
AMIA Jewish community center.
The second public hearing in the trial
investigating the alleged cover-up of the AMIA bombing began this morning with
former president Carlos Saúl Menem allowed to miss court and follow the process
via teleconference.
The Federal Criminal Court No. 2 (TOF 2) authorized
87-year-old Menem to stay home and follow the hearing via teleconference
following grounds on the senator’s poor health state.
Menem was absent last
week, when the trial against him and 12 other defendants started in the Comodoro
Py courthouse. Following his absence,the tribunal led by Jorge Gorini ordered a
medical doctor to check whether Menem was physically fit to take part in the
hearings.
Judicial sources explained to the Herald that as the TOF 2 does not
have the results of the medical test, the judges decided to allow Menem to be
absent. Today, the TOF 2 will have to explain to the parties why they allowed
Menem not to attend the hearings. Other judicial sources speculated that the
decision may be temporal and that it would not put Menem’s participation in the
trial at risk.
Menem’s lawyer filed a medical certificate before the TOF 2
saying that the former president should be exempted from taking part in the
first hearing of the trial as he suffered from diabetes, high blood pressure and
sclerosis. The former president is 85 years old and currently holds a seat in
the Upper House of Congress.
One of the groups of plaintiffs, Memoria Activa
(Active Memory) was considering filing an impeachment request so that he is
removed from the Upper House. Senators cannot be arrested or forced to appear
before courts. Plaintiffs have accused Menem of seeking to avoid being
photographed in the dock along with the other suspects, such as Galeano, former
prosecutors José Barbaccia and Eamon Müllen and former DAIA head Rubén Beraja.
Menem is accused of pressing Judge Juan José Galeano to drop the so-called
Syrian line of investigation that implicated Alberto Kanoore Edul, an
acquaintance of the president. The father of the suspect met with the president
on August 1, 1994 — days after the worst-ever terrorist attack suffered by the
country — and the head of state reportedly ordered his brother, Munir Menem to
phone Galeano to suspend a series of raids targeting Edul.
Menem and his
Intelligence chief, Hugo Anzorreguy, are also accused of greenlighting the
payment of US$400,000 to one of the AMIA suspects to implicate Buenos Aires
provincial police officers in the bombing that killed 85 people. Anzorreguy was
hospitalized last week and listened to the first hearing via videoconference
from the Otamendi private hospital. According to the state-run news agency, the
former State Intelligence Secretariat (SIDE) will be present today.
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