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Julio De Vido now attacked Felipe Solá: "You were governor when the Buenos Aires killed Kosteki and Santillán"

2020-02-08T19:13:34.458Z


The arrested former minister of Cristina Kirchner crossed over to the chancellor for ratifying that "there are no political prisoners", despite allegations of hard Kirchnerism.


02/08/2020 - 15:50

  • Clarín.com
  • Politics

The arrested former minister Julio De Vido continued this Saturday with his harsh criticism against officials of the national government and now pointed to Foreign Minister Felipe Solá, who warned: "You were governor when the Buenos Aires killed Kosteki and Santillán , a crime that is unpunished politically".

"We all have a companion history, we respect Cristina (Kirchner) and all the persecuted and political prisoners since they do not free us from the macrista yoke, at least, respect us," De Vido demanded.

We all have a companion history, we respect Cristina and all the persecuted and political prisoners since they do not free us from the macrista yoke, at least, respect us.

- Julio De Vido (@JulioDeVido) February 8, 2020

The former official serving a house arrest questioned Solá for ratifying that in Argentina "there are no political prisoners" and defending what was recently expressed by the chief of staff, Santiago Cafiero.

Late Cafierismo !!!! Mr. Secretary of Agriculture of Menem, I remind you, dear Felipe, that you were governor of Buenos Aires when the Buenos Aires killed Kostecki and Santillan, a crime that is politically unpunished.

- Julio De Vido (@JulioDeVido) February 8, 2020

"Late Cafierismo !!!! Mr. Secretary of Agriculture of Menem, I remind you, dear Felipe, that you were governor of Buenos Aires when the Buenos Aires killed Kosteki and Santillán, a crime that is politically unpunished," de Vido whipped.

The former Kirchnerist minister sought to attribute political responsibilities to Solá for the crime of the militants of the Unemployed Workers Movement (MTD) Maximiliano Kosteki and Darío Santillán, perpetrated by police officers of the province of Buenos Aires, on June 26, 2002.

De Vido thus reheated the internal crisis in Peronism, which this week resumed its dimension based on the statements made by Santiago Cafiero to ratify the government's position vis-à-vis the former Kirchnerists and leaders arrested.

" For us there are no political prisoners in Argentina , what there are are arbitrary detentions . If we understand that all these issues, in the framework of the procedures that already exist and that are already with resources presented, Justice must determine them," said the Chief of Ministers

Cafiero retorted the position that President Alberto Fernández himself expressed after the proposals of the Kirchnerist groups that demand for the immediate release of leaders such as former Vice President Amado Boudou and the reference of the Túpac Amaru Milagro Sala movement.

The manifestations of Cafiero not only caused the discomfort of De Vido, but also the Minister of Gender Minister Elizabeth Gómez Alcorta came to differentiate herself from the official position by noting that "in the dictatorship there were many detainees with arbitrary judicial processes and no one doubted call them political prisoners. "

The public statements of Minister Alcorta caused anger in the leadership of the national government and therefore the order was lowered to the members of the Cabinet not to make public statements regarding that debate.

Source: clarin

All news articles on 2020-02-08

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