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South American Reality #5

...coming to a town near you
069778808

SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 5055

Offered September 15, 2006

Memorializing the Congress of the United States to take such constitutional
action as may be necessary to prevent the Executive Branch of the federal
government from unilaterally implementing the NAFTA Superhighway System.

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Patron-- Reynolds

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Referred to Committee on Rules

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WHEREAS, the safety of Virginia's highways is a prime responsibility of the
Virginia General Assembly that cannot be delegated to any other entity; and

WHEREAS, a NAFTA Superhighway System from the west coast of Mexico through
the United States and into Canada is now being implemented by the Bush
administration; and

WHEREAS, the system includes multiple connections with Virginia's already
heavily traveled roads, and is being implemented without any action by the United
States Congress; and

WHEREAS, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters has warned, in its August
2006 national magazine, that the NAFTA Superhighway will result in U.S.
trucks being replaced by Mexican, more unsafe rigs being operated on American
roads, and more drivers relying on drugs for making their long hauls; and

WHEREAS, maintenance of Mexican truck brakes and tires falls far below United
States standards; and

WHEREAS, Mexican drivers are compelled by companies that employ them to drive
an excessive 25 days a month and to drive 4,500 kilometers alone over the
course of five or six nights without sleep, requiring them to resort to cocaine
and crystal methamphetamine to stay awake; and

WHEREAS, the national Teamster magazine, in interviewing a sample of Mexican
drivers, found no one who had not killed persons in highway accidents; and

WHEREAS, the NAFTA Superhighway System will therefore bring onto U.S. soil a
new army of driver who is particularly likely to cause accidents on our roads;
and

WHEREAS, given the generally acknowledged corruption of business in Mexico,
it will be particularly difficult, if not impossible, for Virginians, as well
as other Americans, to collect insurance claims against Mexican companies that
employ Mexican drivers who cause accidents here, and insurance rates for
Virginians and others are therefore likely to undergo a sharp increase; and

WHEREAS, an initial portion of the NAFTA Superhighway System already under
way in Texas involves a pattern contract with the state by a Spanish-U.S.
Cinta-Zachry consortium that, in return for a single lump payment to the state by
Cinta, grants that foreign company the right to levy for years tolls that cannot
be regulated by the state and will greatly increase the cost of driving for
all motorists; and

WHEREAS, neither taxpayers nor U.S. banks are willing to provide the multiple
billions of dollars required to construct the extremely large NAFTA
Superhighway System, and the needed funds are expected to be provided only by foreign
consortiums; the result will be that the arterial U.S. highway system will be
under foreign management and financial control; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED by the Senate, the House of Delegates concurring, That the Virginia
General Assembly hereby declare its formal opposition to allowing components
of the Interstate Highway System in Virginia to become part of the NAFTA
Superhighway System; and, be it

RESOLVED FURTHER, That the Congress of the United States be urged to prevent
the implementing of the NAFTA Superhighway System; and, be it

RESOLVED FURTHER, That the Congress of the United States be memorialized to
take such constitutional action as may be necessary to prevent the Executive
Branch of the federal government from unilaterally implementing the NAFTA
Superhighway System; and, be it

RESOLVED FINALLY, That the Clerk of the Senate transmit copies of this
resolution to the President of the United States Senate, the Speaker of the United
States House of Representatives, and the members of the Virginia Congressional
Delegation so that they may be apprised of the sense of the General Assembly
of Virginia in this matter.

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world without borders

www.rigint.blogspot.com/

It's such a blinding embarassment of weirdness out there, it's hard to know where to look these days. But we need to keep looking at Mexico. Its loose threads may help us tie up things elsewhere.
Of course there's the staggered rebellion of the disenfrachised, belittled or ignored by the same media that lionized and tub-thumped Ukraine's "Orange Revolution." But there are also some curious developments, seemingly out of the blue, in the case of the Ciudad Juárez ritual killings of hundreds of women that may lead us into the black.
Last Thursday in Mexico City, coincident with the delivery of John Karr into the embrace of Homeland Security, came the crowing announcement from the US Embassy that a Mexican citizen was being held in the United States on suspicion of the rape and killing of at least 10 of the women. By another coincidence, Edgar Alvarez Cruz was arrested in Denver, Colorado.
There have since been two more arrests on American soil, one in West Virginia and the other in Sierra Blanca, Texas. The three are being held in El Paso, and are expected to be handed into the care of Mexican authorities some time this week, at least several of whom would appear to be less than grateful:
Some Mexican authorities said privately that they were caught off guard by what they called U.S. Ambassador Tony Garza's "premature announcement" Thursday of the first arrest. Mr. Garza called the arrest of Mr. Álvarez a "major break" in the investigation. But a Mexican law-enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the announcement could "jeopardize the ongoing investigation."
Have we heard something like that recently? Though to be truthful, there doesn't appear to have been much of an investigation ongoing: just three weeks ago a headline in The Independent read "Human rights groups attack decision to close Juarez murders investigation."
These aren't the first arrests in the case, though the consensus of victims' families is that none of the men previously arrested had anything to do with the murders. Two died in custody, one had his conviction overturned, and two of their attorneys were shot to death.
"This case is the most symbolic of everything that has gone wrong in Juarez," Laurie Freeman, a Mexico specialist with the Washington Office on Latin America, told the Denver Post. "It's the one that makes me believe that there is some sort of official complicity in some of the killings."
When I saw that quote several days ago, I thought it might be a good idea to copy the body of the article and not just make note of the link. It was a good idea: the article has since been updated, and the only change I can see is that Freeman's reference to official complicity has been deleted.
Diana Washington Valdez, an investigative reporter for the El Paso Times and author of Harvest of Women, isn't so shy:
The best information we have is that these men are committing crimes simply for the sport of it.... We know of people who've told stories about escaping from certain parties, orgies, which some of these people were present -- they were recognizable people from Juarez society, from Mexican society.
The authorities know who the killers are, and nothing's being done about it. We have two issues here: people who are getting away with murder, and... authorities who have become accomplices, and so this has become crimes of the state.
But those are the Mexican elites and Mexican parties of Mexican high society, protected by Mexican authority. Such things, of course, are inconceivable across the Rio Grande.

-------------------------------------

DHS, DOJ seeking to deliver informant to House of Death's door

By Bill Conroy,
Posted on Mon Aug 14th, 2006 at 09:55:10 PM EST

The informant in the House of Death mass murder case is now facing the consequences of his Faustian bargain with the U.S. government.

In exchange for taking the government’s gold, some $200,000, and participating in torture and murder to help advance a big drug case for U.S. prosecutors, the informant now finds himself in the devil’s court, with his life hanging in the balance.

Narco News recently tracked down legal pleadings filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eight Circuit by the informant’s attorney. The litigation reveals that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which employed the informant to narc on high-level players in the drug-trafficking netherworld, is now seeking to send the informant back into that netherworld, with his identity exposed, to face the very people he ratted out.

The appeals court pleadings trace the path of the informant’s efforts to avoid deportation to Mexico, where his deeds as an informant were carried out against a ruthless narco-trafficking organization.

DHS, which is implicated in the cover-up of their agents’ complicity in the House of Death murders, initiated the deportation proceedings against the informant, the appeals court pleadings show. DHS is arguing that the informant faces no danger in Mexico despite the fact that he betrayed powerful members of the Vicente Carrillo Fuentes Juárez drug organization.

This is a curious position for DHS officials to take, given that the informant could expose the full extent of the role played by DHS agents in the House of Death murders — so it could be argued that DHS might have a motive to see the informant out of the picture, permanently.

However, according to the court records, the immigration judge in the informant’s case disagreed with DHS’ contention and granted him relief from deportation under Article III of the United Nations Convention Against Torture — after concluding that the informant would likely be tortured and murdered by the narco-traffickers he betrayed while working for DHS if he was returned to Mexico.

DHS was not happy with that outcome and appealed the judge’s decision to the Board of Immigration Appeals, which is part of the Department of Justice (DOJ). The DOJ, too, has been implicated in the House of Death cover-up. An Assistant U.S. Attorney in El Paso, Juanita Fielden, and the U.S. Attorney in San Antonio, Johnny Sutton, have been accused of turning a blind eye to the informant’s participation in the House of Death murders because they were more interested in making a drug case against the Carrillo Fuentes organization.

The Board of Immigration Appeals, perhaps predictably, overturned the immigration judge’s ruling, which forced the informant to take his case to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in an effort to forestall his deportation.

This informant, Guillermo Eduardo Ramirez Peyro (also known as “Lalo” and by the alias Jesus Contreras) had infiltrated a narco-trafficking organization in Ciudád Juárez that was overseen by Heriberto Santillan-Tabares, whom U.S. prosecutors claim was a top lieutenant in Carrillo Fuentes organization. Between August 2003 and mid-January 2004, while under the watch of DHS agents, Ramirez helped to operated a House of Death in a residential neighborhood in Juárez where a dozen people were tortured and murdered by Mexican police who were working under the direction of Santillan.

Murder machine

The murder machine was exposed publicly in mid-January 2004 after a DEA agent and his family were nearly abducted by Santillan’s thugs. In the wake of that incident, DEA was forced to evacuate its personnel from Juarez.

Santillan was later indicted on murder and narco-trafficking charges. However, the fact that the U.S. government’s own informant, Ramirez, was complicit in those murders — with the knowledge of his DHS handlers — gave Santillan’s defense team the leverage it needed to negotiate a sweetheart plea deal with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Antonio — which included dropping the murder charges. (Ramirez’ handlers were federal agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which is part of DHS.)

The plea deal with Santillan was announced on April 19, 2005. Three days later, according to the appeals court pleadings obtained by Narco News, Ramirez emerged from U.S. government protective custody to turn himself in to U.S. immigration officials in order to seek protection — because he feared DHS was about to send him back to a certain death in Mexico at the hands of the narco-traffickers he double-crossed.

“… Heriberto Santillan pled guilty before trial. Mr. Ramirez, of no further use to United States law enforcement agencies in an informant’s role, was compelled to seek protection in the United States,” states Ramirez’ attorney, Jodi Goodwin, in the pleadings filed in the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.

A couple weeks later, DHS began deportation proceedings against Ramirez.

From the appeals court pleadings:

Removal Proceedings [against Ramirez] began with issuance of a Notice to Appear, (NTA), on May 9, 2005. The NTA alleges Mr. Ramirez is not a citizen of the United States but a citizen of Mexico who was not in possession of a valid entry document when he presented himself for admission to the United States on April 22, 2005 … At a hearing before the [the immigration judge] on June 9, 2005, Mr. Ramirez admitted the truth of the factual allegations, conceded inadmissibility as alleged, and requested relief in the forms of Asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the CAT [United Nations Convention Against Torture]. Mr. Ramirez subsequently stipulated in his pre-hearing brief that his involvement in drug trafficking rendered him ineligible for asylum and withholding of removal.

Mr. Ramírez testified he entered the Mexican drug trafficking industry after he left the Mexican federal highway police. His first job was as a distribution manager in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico. He became a United States government informant in 2000 and subsequently made contact with the Carrillo Fuentes Organization, (CFO), in Ciudád Juárez. His performance as an informant is extensively documented in the record. Mr. Ramirez explained he was tasked with infiltrating groups of organized criminals as a means to effectuate the arrest and prosecution of high-level participants.

Mr. Ramirez testified he was present when individuals who were involved with CFO in drug trafficking or whom CFO members believed were a threat were assassinated by two Mexican police officers in Ciudad Juarez. Mr. Ramirez submitted payment records
confirming he was paid over $200,000. The record details over fifty persons were successfully prosecuted and are serving prison sentences as a result of his cooperation. Mr. Ramirez was taken into custody as a material witness when Heriberto Santillan was arrested. Mr. Ramirez was placed into protective custody after death threats upon his life came to the attention of the United States Attorney.

Ramirez, though, was far more than “present” when “CFO members” tortured and killed people at the House of Death. According to records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, he actually participated in the first murder at the House of Death in early August 2003.

Ramirez’ ICE handlers later debriefed him about the murder, which also was recorded on tape, according to law enforcement sources. Rather than shut down the drug sting at that point, Ramirez’ ICE handlers allowed him to return to the House of Death to pay a gravedigger for burying the body, FOIA records show.

In addition, Ramirez was allowed to continue his work in the House of Death murder machine — which was responsible for at least 11 more homicides over the ensuing four months.

A gravedigger who assisted Ramirez at the House of Death confirmed that Ramirez was physically present for at least five of the murders, according to timeline of events developed by the DEA in the days immediately following the evacuation of its personnel from Juárez.

After Sandalio Gonzalez, the DEA chief in El Paso at the time, objected to this outrage by writing a letter in February 2004 to U.S. Attorney Sutton, rather than investigate Gonzalez’ charges, Sutton used his pull within DOJ to retaliate against Gonzalez in order to silence him, according to FOIA documents obtained by Narco News. Sutton claimed, the FOIA records show, that Gonzalez’ letter contained “discovery material” that could threaten the drug case against Santillan.

Convention Against Torture

Based, in part, on a report prepared by a federal asylum officer as well as reports from other government agencies, the immigration judge in Ramirez’ deportation case granted him relief under the UN Convention Against Torture, the U.S. appeals court pleadings state. That ruling was based on evidence showing there was a high probability that Ramirez would be tortured and killed by narco-traffickers, or by Mexican law enforcers who worked with the narco-traffickers, should he be deported to Mexico.

From the appeals court pleadings:

Mr. Ramirez is a 35-year-old married male. He is a native and citizen of Mexico. Mr. Ramirez was a police officer in the Mexican state of Guerrero until 1995. He became involved in drug trafficking when he left the police force. Between 1995 and 1998, he coordinated transshipments of narcotics within Mexico and from the Mexican interior to the U.S. Mexico border.

As an informant for United States Customs, redesignated the Bureau of Customs and Immigration Enforcement, (ICE), pursuant to the Homeland Security Act of 2003, Mr. Ramirez provided information to the Drug Enforcement Administration, (DEA), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, (ATF), the Federal Bureau of Investigation, (FBI), and the United States Secret Service. Mr. Ramirez successfully infiltrated the CFO in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua. Ciudad Juarez is directly opposite El Paso, Texas, and CFO transports drugs through El Paso to distribution points throughout the United States.

... The Asylum Officer stated: "[Ramirez] infiltrated a drug smuggling Mexican cartel and became an informant for ICE, which resulted in multiple arrests. Since that time two separate attempts were made on [Ramirez’] life by the Cartel and [Ramirez] now believes that if he returns to Mexico he will be killed by the Cartel because of his actions as an informant."

… Asylum Officer Jack Berger interviewed Mr. Ramirez concerning his fear of returning to Mexico on May 1, 2005, approximately one week prior to the initiation of removal proceedings. Relying on a report by the United States Department of State issued in 2004, Officer Berger found Mr. Ramirez had a credible fear of the Mexican government. Supervisory Asylum Officer Helen Mireles reviewed the credible fear proceedings and concurred with Officer Berger.

The [immigration judge] found that the record presents various aspects of police involvement in Mexican drug trafficking, and in combination with [Ramirez’] credible testimony, he had established a probability of torture by drug traffickers and law enforcement in Mexico if he were forced to return. Mr. Ramirez substantiated his credible testimony by presenting documents prepared by agencies of the United States government, including the Office of the United States Attorney and the DEA.

The DHS appealed the immigration judge’s ruling to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), which is under the oversight of U.S. Attorney Alberto Gonzales — who, along with Sutton, has deep ties to the Bush Administration that date back to George W. Bush’s tenure as governor of Texas.

The BIA sided with DHS and overruled the immigration judge, setting Ramirez up for deportation to Mexico. (Again, it is important to note that the BIA is part of DOJ, which is overseen by Sutton’s boss, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who has the power to appoint the board’s members and overrule or modify its decisions.)

From the appeals court pleadings:

The Department of Homeland Security, (DHS), disapproves of the findings of fact and the conclusion of the [immigration judge] and insists the record contains no evidence that Mr. Ramirez would be tortured by Mexican law enforcement while acting in their official capacity. The DHS also contends the record does not support a finding that Mr. Ramirez would be tortured by Mexican drug traffickers with the acquiescence of Mexican law enforcement.

The BIA concentrated on documentary evidence and concluded that the Mexican government is strengthening drug enforcement laws and is now more effective in eliminating organized drug traffickers such as those against whom Mr. Ramirez informed. The BIA paid special attention to testimony and record evidence concerning an offer of immunity from the Mexican government and stated it’s opinion that because most drug trafficking organizations operate in northern Mexico, the petitioner would remain safe if he relocated to a different part of the country.

Immunity?

The short mention of the Mexican government’s offer of immunity to Ramirez should not be overlooked. The Mexican government, under President Vicente Fox, has been conspicuously silent on the House of Death case, considering that most of the murder victims were Mexican citizens. The fact that a U.S. government informant was complicit in those homicides, with the knowledge of U.S. federal agents and prosecutors, should have prompted cries of protest from the Mexican government. Instead, according to the appeals court pleadings, the Mexican government is willing to provide the informant Ramirez with “immunity.”

You, the reader, will have to decide why that course was pursued — and whether some type of deal was struck between U.S. and Mexican government officials to export the House of Death cover-up to the Mexican side of the border as well.

In any event, Ramirez clearly doesn’t trust the word of either the U.S. or Mexican government, which is what prompted him to appeal the BIA decision to the U.S. Eighth Circuit in mid-June of this year. That appeal is still pending a decision.

Ramirez’ pleadings before the Eight Circuit state:

The [immigration judge’s] decision granting [Ramirez’] application for relief under Article III of the United Nations Convention Against Torture was improperly overturned by the BIA in the face of sufficiently corroborated evidence demonstrating that petitioner has a well-founded fear of torture at the hands of agents of the Mexican government in the event of his return to Mexico.

… The DHS asserts in it’s brief, ‘There is no objective proof that the Mexican government would do anything to [Ramirez] other than protect [Ramirez]. If Mr. Ramirez had any confidence in the promises of the Mexican government to protect him, he would have freely returned to Mexico.

DHS’ contention that Ramirez would have nothing to fear from the narco-traffickers he betrayed if returned to Mexico is a fantasy that might fly in a corrupted legal system, but for anyone with an understanding of how the narco-trafficking world really works, it is an argument that lacks any credibility — like the drug war itself.

The informant Ramirez certainly is not a poster child for the cause of justice, but his return to Mexico is certain to serve the interests of U.S. officials who have blood on their hands in the House of Death mass murder.

Because, as we all know, dead men can’t talk.

To view the informant’s legal pleadings before the Eight Circuit Court of Appeals, go to this link.

For more information on this story, go to the following link:
DHS informant implicated in House of Death mass murder is still in U.S., attorney confirms

-------------------

Latin Kings Leaders in Florida Arrested
Source: TBO / APNews
URL Source: hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/G/GANG_ARRESTS? SITE=FLTAM&SECTION=US
Published: Aug 21, 2006
Author: MITCH STACY
Post Date: 2006-08-21 17:22:22 by r-u-n-n o-f-t
1 Comments

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- After a 14-month investigation, law enforcement officers raided a high-level meeting at a rented club and arrested every known leader of the violent Latin Kings gang in Florida, authorities said Monday.

The Sunday afternoon raid netted the arrests of 39 alleged gang leaders on charges of conspiracy to commit racketeering, Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee said.

The gang has been involved in major crimes ranging from drug dealing to attempted murder, Gee said. Prosecutors say additional charges could be filed.

Gee said the "extremely violent" gang has been active in the area for at least 20 years and may have ties to gangs in New York and Chicago. The Chicago Crime Commission now estimates that there are more than 20,000 Latin Kings in the Chicago area alone.

Those arrested Saturday ranged in age from 16 to 39, according to the sheriff's office. They all appeared in court Monday morning, State Attorney Mark Ober said.

Among them was the alleged statewide leader of the Latin Kings, Samuel David Alvarado, 29, also known as "King Sam," who lives in Lake Worth, the sheriff's office said. He was ordered held without bail, according to jail records.

Around 100 local officers and federal agents participated in the raid, including the Tampa police; the FBI; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; and Immigration and Customs Enforcement and local prosecutors.

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Activist Disappeared in Argentina

24 Sep 2006
 
our elderly companero Julio Lopez, key witness in the trial of the chief of police under the dictatorship (recently sentenced to life in prison) and survivor of a detention camp in the seventies, disappeared monday morning right before etchecolatz's sentence was read.

witnesses received many death threats during the trial, so we fear the worst. after four days, finally the government launched an investigation and offers the equivalent of 60,000 dollars for news on his whereabouts.

in the past, international pressure made a difference in the treatment of
detainees. we are certain that it will put pressure on the government to find our companero now. (for more info and a photo of Julio see below)

please send a message to aedd (at) exdesaparecidos.org.ar and cc
autonomista1 (at) aol.com, or cut and paste the following message:

I am extremely concerned with the disappearance of Julio Lopez. Witnesses such as Julio are key to bring the military and police officers who committed crimes against humanity to justice. It is the responsibility of the government to protect such witnesses. I urge the government to employ all its resources to find him, alive and intact. I stand in solidarity with the companeros and companeras who are searching for Julio and hope for his
immediate safe return.

Name, profession, organization, nationality here.

send messages to association of ex-detainess/disappeared
aedd (at) exdesaparecidos.org.ar and cc autonomista1 (at) aol.com.

in solidarity,
graciela



Boletín Electrónico de noticias y actividades de la AEDD nro 249
Asociación de ex Detenidos Desaparecidos
Buenos Aires, Argentina

URGENTE
COMUNICADO DE PRENSA
PASAN LAS HORAS Y JULIO NO APARECE
CONFERENCIA DE PRENSA
JUEVES 21 DE SEPTIEMBRE A LAS 12 HS
en la sede de la
ASOCIACIÓN DE EX DETENIDOS-DESAPARECIDOS
Carlos Calvo 1780 Primer piso Timbre 26

Nuestro compañero Julio López, ex detenido-desaparecido, testigo y
querellante en el juicio oral contra el genocida Miguel Osvaldo Etchecolatz, se
encuentra desaparecido desde el lunes por la mañana.
Julio tiene 76 años, testimonió sobre su secuestro, sucedido en octubre de
1976, llevado a cabo por una "patota" que integraban, entre otros, Etchecolatz.
Estuvo detenido-desaparecido en los centros clandestinos Destacamento
policial de Arana, "Pozo de Arana", y Comisaría Quinta de La Plata.

Debía presentarse el lunes 18/09 para presenciar los alegatos de las
querellas contra el represor en el edificio de la Municipalidad de La Plata, y al no
comparecer se descubrió su ausencia desde muy tempranas horas.
Ante esta situación, que se prolongó durante todo el día, se realizó el
mismo día lunes la presentación de un Habeas Corpus ante la Justicia, y se está
llevando a cabo una ardua búsqueda en la ciudad de La Plata desde ese día.
El día martes 19/09 se realizó la denuncia ante el Ministerio de Seguridad
bonaerense, la Secretaría de DDHH de la Nación, y en diferentes organismos
estatales y medios de comunicación.

Hoy, miércoles 20 de septiembre, tuvimos una entrevista con el Ministro de
Seguridad de la Provincia., León Arslanián, y a pesar de haber gestionado
durante todo el día una entrevista de forma URGENTE con el Ministro del Interior,
Aníbal Fernández, aún no nos recibió.
HOY MIÉRCOLES están reunidos Organismos de DDHH, sociales, gremiales,
estudiantiles, políticos de La Plata EN EL CENTRO ZARAGOZA 53 e/4 y 5, en la ciudad
de La Plata, para resolver urgentemente esta situación.
Teniendo en cuenta las situaciones intimidatorias y las amenazas sufridas
por numerosos compañeros durante el transcurso del juicio al genocida
Etchecolatz, CONSIDERAMOS QUE ESTA GRAVE SITUACIÓN DEBE SER RESUELTA DE MANERA
INMEDIATA!
Es por ello que:
SOLICITAMOS LA MAYOR DIFUSIÓN DEL PRESENTE COMUNICADO
Exigimos al Gobierno

LA PUBLICACIÓN Y DIFUSIÓN DE LA FOTO DE NUESTRO COMPAÑERO EN AFICHES, EN
TODOS LOS DIARIOS Y CANALES DE TELEVISIÓN
y que implemente a través de todos los mecanismos necesarios la búsqueda de
nuestro compañero asegurando su aparición con vida y en perfectas condiciones
YA!

ASOCIACIÓN DE EX DETENIDOS-DESAPARECIDOS
Asociación Anahí
COMISION POR LOS DERECHOS HUMANOS DE TRENQUE LAUQUEN
CORREPI
CeProDH
FIDELA
H.I.J.O.S. Regional Zona Oeste
Instituto de Relaciones Ecuménicas IRE
Liberpueblo
Liga argentina `por los derechos del hombre
MEDHSiguen firmas...
Ante cualquier información, rogamos se comuniquen inmediatamente a los
teléfonos:

Nilda Eloy: (0221) 453-3136
Luciano Sívori: (0221) (15) 561-0248
Guadalupe Godoy: (011) (15) 5113-1589
enviar firmas a:
aedd (at) exdesaparecidos.org.ar

Los invitamos a visitar nuestro sitio web:
www.exdesaparecidos.org.ar
 
 
 

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