12/16/2020 5:24 PM
Clarín.com
Politics
Updated 12/16/2020 5:24 PM
Although the expositions are repeated and the discussion about abortion in Congress seems to be a kind of
déjà vu
of the one that took place in 2018, there are exposed arguments that generate imprescriptible controversies.
And the mere mention of policies linked to Nazism is one, which ignited the second day of debates in the Senate this afternoon, when a speaker crossed paths with two K senators after mentioning the extermination policies of the Third Reich.
The scandal was unleashed when the geneticist doctor
Graciela Moya
described, in the midst of positions opposed to abortion, a Nazi law "that deliberately eliminated people with disabilities."
It was then that
Beatriz Mirkin
of the Front of All of Tucumán put a brake on it.
"
I am not going to allow it
. It affects me personally. You are proposing that those of us who are in favor of a position are assimilated to that. What are you using it for? I am Jewish.
It has already gone from the thread,"
he told the screams and requested the intervention of the president of the session, while the doctor said "no" with her head.
Another one who could not hold out and came out to attack her was
Silvia Sapag from
Neuquén
, who asked her to address "in other terms."
"He cannot speak like that. He is in an area that is Congress,
he cannot address himself as at a coffee table or at home
," he also asked the president.
"Take care of your language and tone, please," he then told Moya, who was leading the virtual meeting.
But the doctor insisted that she was referring to "
historical events
, where there was legislation that allowed the extermination of people with disabilities."
Mirkin and Sapag yesterday were two of the most active green senators who participated in the exchange with the speakers.
Moreover, the Tucuman starred in a strong cross with José Mayans, head of his block, because the Formose, flag of the celestial senators, said that she disrespected the exhibitors by interrupting them.
Look also
Legal abortion: crosses with exhibitors who speak of murders, fetuses that cry and girls prepared to be mothers
Abortion: a senator from Catamarca who in 2018 voted "celestial" now doubts and proposes a national plebiscite