Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts

Friday, February 13, 2015

Argentine Judiciary to Pursue Case Against President

Accused of Covering Up Alleged Iranian Involvement in 1994 Bombing
The investigation into accusations that Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner tried to cover up Iran’s alleged involvement in a 1994 Buenos Aires bombing of the city’s Jewish center will go forward despite the death or murder last month of the prosecutor on the case; Argentine authorities announced today. (Reuters, 13 February)

“An investigation will be initiated with an eye toward substantiating the accusations and whether those responsible can be held criminally responsible,” wrote state prosecutor Gerardo Pollicita in a document published today. Pollicita replaced the late Alberto Nisman as the prosecutor on the case.

Nisman’s body was found in his apartment on 18 January, a day before presenting a 289-page complaint against the president and her foreign minister, Hector Timerman, to the parliament.

By accepting Nisman’s accusations, the new prosecutor is now formally charging the president and her aides of shielding Iranian officials from prosecution over the bombing, which left many dead and injured. President Kirchner claims that Nisman was murdered by rouge elements of a state intelligence unit. She calls the conspiracy charges against her “absurd,” saying she never made an agreement with Iran over the case.

The Nisman scandal has shocked Argentina eight months ahead of October’s presidential election. Kirchner is constitutionally barred from running for a third consecutive term.

File photo: Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner; 5 February 2015 (AFP)

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Before His Death, Argentine Prosecutor Had Drafted Arrest Warrant against Country’s President

Accusing Kirchner of Secreat Deal with Iran to Cover Up the 1994 Bombing
Before his death, Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman had drafted an arrest warrant for the country’s president in connection with an alleged secret deal with Iran to cover up the bombing of a Jewish community center two decades ago, Argentina’s chief investigator of Nisman’s death said today. (USA Today, 3 February)

Nisman was found dead in his apartment with a gunshot wound to the head on 18 January, one day before he was to present details of the case to Argentina’s Congress about his accusations against President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and Foreign Minister Hector Timmerman.

The 26-page arrest warrant naming Kirchner, Timmerman and other members of her government was found in Nisman’s apartment after his body was found, said prosecutor Viviana Fein.

In 2006, Nisman had accused Iran and the Lebanese Hezbollah of having masterminded the 1994 bombing in Buenos Aires that killed 85 people, and had issued eight arrest warrants against Iranian and Lebanese suspects.

File photo: The late Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman  (AFP/Getty Image/NYTimes)


Monday, January 19, 2015

Argentine Special Prosecutor on Terrorism Found Dead in Home

Led Investigations into Possible Cover-up of Iranian Involvement in 1994 Buenos Aires Bombing
 
Alberto Nisman, a special prosecutor who had accused Argentine President Cristina Fernandez and other government officials of shielding Iranian suspects in the 1994 bombing of a Buenos Aires Israeli-Argentine center, which killed 85 people and injured more than 200, was found dead late Sunday.

Federal police said Nisman’s body was found at his Buenos Aires home with a gun next to it. Authorities have not elaborated on the investigation.

Nisman was appointed 10 years ago to revive the investigation into the bombing. Last week, he accused Fernandez and other senior officials of agreeing not to punish two former Iranian officials in the case, probably to receive oil at favorable prices from Iran. Argentina is in a severe recession, and the country has defaulted on debt payments.


Photo credit: A screen capture of Alberto Nisman’s interview with Argentine TN channel 3 days before his death. (Twitter/TN)

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Iran to Face Argentina in Crucial Group F Match

UPDATE: Argentina Defeats Iran 1-0
Iran will face Argentina today in a crucial Group F match. Iran opened its 2014 World Cup match in a 0-0 draw against Nigeria on Monday, while Argentina defeated Bosnia-Herzegovina. Iran coach Carlos Queiroz said on Friday the match with Argentina will be the “biggest in Iran’s history.”

UPDATE: Iran played very well against Argentina but lost 1-0 in overtime.


Photo: Iran and Argentina stars: Javad Nekounam (l.) and Lionel Messi (fifa2014worldcuponline.com)

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The Disappeared

 By Paul Iddon

What the Argentine Dirty War and the massacre of Iranian prisoners of conscience in 1988 warn us about dictatorial caprice and paranoia.

Argentine memorial of the
'desaparecidos' -- disappeared.
The 30th anniversary of the Falklands War went by a few weeks ago. Amidst the present ongoing dispute regarding the rightful ownership of those small sparsely populated islands public interest in that question and on that war briefly flared as a result of the historically significant anniversary.

One however cannot aptly and properly reflect upon that period without appreciating the gravity of the Dirty War and the affect it had on Argentina. When one does appreciate this it puts a lot of things into perspective, particularly the manner in which the General Galteri dictatorship felt it needed to in a sense dignify itself by invading the islands under the pretext of reasserting national pride, which had been lost as the nerve racked country had tangibly “lost” some 30,000 of its citizens who were subsequently dubbed as “the disappeared.” The actual invasions of the islands and the subsequent war (which was later described very brilliantly by the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges as being the equivalent of “a fight between two bald men over a comb”) was the juntas attempt of 'saving face' in the midst of its terrorizing of Argentine society and plunging the country into an economic recession.

The legacy of that horrific period in recent South American history has its origins in the subversion of democracy in Chile and the imposition of the ghastly military regime of Augusto Pinochet by the same U.S. Secretary of State who had helped Richard Nixon win the 1968 U.S. Presidential Election -- by sabotaging the Johnson Administrations peace agreement and thus prolonging the ongoing war in Vietnam -- and was by Gerald Ford's side when the Shah of Iran effectively stabbed the Iraqi Kurds in the back after prepping them up against the Baathist government there. I am of course talking about Henry Kissinger whose Cold War overture to China -- which was a bid by the U.S. to capitalize on the then recent Sino-Soviet split -- is an episode in 20th century history which Flynt Leverett constantly trumpets as the perfect model for U.S. Rapprochement with the Iranian regime in the present post Cold War world.

Reminiscent of the Argentine juntas cruelty during those years was the Iranian regimes massacre and crime against humanity which it executed in and around the time of Operation Mersad – a PMOI incursion into Iran near the end of the depleting Iran-Iraq War -- in 1988.

It's still unknown by international human rights organizations exactly how many were killed in this massacre which saw the Khomeini's then successor Montazari being forced to resign after writing letters condemning these heinous crimes. Montazari perfectly summed up the gravely horrendous injustice these mass executions represented when he stated very aptly that these actions violated “Islam by executing repenters and minor offenders who in a proper court of law would have received a mere reprimand.”

Even though he had been put forth by the Council of Experts Montazari was forced to resign. Criticism and self-evaluation was clearly not something that the regime took kindly to (and still doesn't). That is in a sense the point in time when the Islamic Republic ceased being anything that represented the masses of Iranians whom had fought in earnest to topple the Shahs autocratic regime. Having a free hand under the cover of that long war to crush dissent the regime felt the need to abolish all political opposition to its tight-knit ruling elite. Khomeini who had sacrificed hundreds of thousands of young men and boys with a clumsy and inept strategy then turned his hand to authorizing a religious decree to murder more Iranians.

However, instead of actually having trials for the various prisoners accused of treasonous action and/or membership with the PMOI Khomeini opted to make it a theological issue, painting thousands political prisoners of all different affiliations with the same brush he proclaimed them apostates of Islam (Salman Rushdie would give him the mother of all diversions the next year after his publishing of The Satanic Verses prompted Khomeini to capitalize on the resentment expressed by many inflamed Muslims who viewed the book as blasphemous. This affair was a political coup for Khomeini as it meant he could continue to instil radicalism within Iran and slyly divert attention away from the fact he had lost the six year counter offensive against Iraq).

That bloodbath also saw the hard liners do their utmost to squeeze out the moderates, the most prominent being Montazari who arguably could have substantially reformed the system and actually maintained a tangible legitimate Islamic Republic rather than the 'in name only' Islamic Republic that exists today.

That massacre was described as “an act of violence unprecedented in Iranian history - unprecedented in form, content, and intensity.” The exact number killed is still unknown, families whose loved ones were executed were prohibited from holding funerals for a year and were forbidden to show any signs of mourning in public. It was a warning of sorts for how cruel and capricious the regime can be and how when its unmentionable policies and actions are challenged (even verbally) it is readily willing to resort to sadistic violence within the blink of an eye.

The negation of elementary and fundamental human rights amongst people in Iran and the wider region isn't something that should be relativized, or excused as the internal conduct of the theocracies ignoble “justice system”. The Dirty War in Argentina is thankfully now part of history, this however doesn't mean the sense of loss and pain in those whom lost loved ones during that dark time does not still painfully linger on to this day. 

One of the most severe instances of violence to occur in Argentina following the Dirty War took the form of two heinous terrorist attacks against Israeli diplomatic institutions within the country, Iran in cahoots with Hezbollah are the prime suspects in these two respective attacks, a named high ranking member in the Iranian government is thought to have been a culprit in the latter one. Those attacks left approximately a hundred Argentine civilians dead.

These episodes from history are a grim reminder of why the abolishment of human rights in civilized countries like Iran must not be relativized, exculpating the oppressors, the human rights violators, torturers and the killers by explaining away such horrendous crimes against humanity is certainly no way for an International Community with a mere semblance of civility to conduct itself.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Iran's defense minister arrives in Afghanistan

Defense Minister IRGC Brig. Gen. Vahidi
From PressTV:

Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier-General Ahmad Vahidi says the Islamic Republic seeks the restoration of stability and security in Afghanistan.

“[The development of] sustained stability and security is Iran's strategic policy toward the brother and friend nation of Afghanistan,” Vahidi told reporters upon his arrival in the Afghan capital, Kabul, on Saturday, IRNA reported.

He pointed out that Tehran is ready to expand relations with Kabul in various areas, including campaign against drugs and terrorism as well as defense cooperation.

Vahidi went on to say that the security of neighboring Afghanistan is of high significance to Iran, adding that the Islamic Republic will spare no effort to help the restoration of lasting security in its eastern neighbor.

The Iranian minister is in on an official visit to Afghanistan at the invitation of his Afghan counterpart Abdul Rahim Wardak.

Vahidi is expected to meet with Afghanistan's top political and military officials, including President Hamid Karzai, Interior Minister Hanif Atmar and his Afghan counterpart to discuss issues of bilateral interests as well as the latest regional and international developments.

This is the first visit of an Iranian defense minister to Afghanistan since the 1979 victory of the Islamic Revolution in Iran.

This is an extraordinary visit by Defense Minister Vahidi, a Revolutionary Guard brigadier general, while Afghanistan is currently under a NATO/ISAF military occupation. Vahidi himself has been on an Interpol "red notice" since November 2007 over a controversial investigation into a bombing attack that took place in Argentina in 1994. In addition, the United States has listed Iran's Revolutionary Guards as a "terrorist organization;" from time to time accusing it of providing limited aid to the Taliban insurgency.

The visit takes place at a time when President Karzai has announced during a speech at the presidential palace that his government and the U.S. have begun preliminary negotiations with the Taliban aimed at ending the conflict.

Iran's defense minister invited to Afghanistan

From IRNA:

Minister of Defense and Logistics of Armed Forces will pay a visit to Afghanistan upon an invitation of his Afghan counterpart.

Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi, upon an official invitation of Field Marshal Abdulrahim Vardak, Afghanistan Defense Minister, will pay a visit to Kabul heading a high ranking defense delegation next week.

General Vahidi is to meet with Afghanistan high ranking political and defense officials and discuss bilateral, regional and international issues.

It will be the first ever visit of an Iranian defense minister to Afghanistan after the victory of Islamic revolution in Iran.

Also it would be the first ever visit of an Iranian defense minister to Afghanistan since 92 years ago.

Quite amazing if this is actually pulled off. IRGC Brigadier General Vahidi has been on an Interpol "red notice" since November 2007 over a highly curious investigation into a bombing attack that took place in Argentina in 1994. That this trip could possibly take place to Afghanistan while under a NATO military occupation would prove nothing short of remarkable.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Iran Defense Minister Visits Bolivia, Causing Controversy

Iran’s Defense Minister Brig. Gen. Ahmad Vahidi today visited Bolivia to inaugurate a military academy that was built with Iran's help. The Bolivian government soon received a notice from Argentina that the general was wanted by that country for being the alleged mastermind of the 1994 bombing of a Jewish center in Buenos Aires and was subject to an Interpol red notice issued in 2007. The Bolivian Foreign Minister David Choquehuanca told reporters that he informed his Argentine counterpart that at the request of the Bolivian government the Iranian defense minister cut his trip short and has since left Bolivia.

"I want to express in the name of the Government of Bolivia my deepest apologies (to Argentina)," said Choquehuanca in a letter sent to the Argentine foreign minister and published by news agencies [AP, 31 May]. "As a result of this regrettable situation, the government of Bolivia has taken the corresponding provisions to see to it that Ahmad Vahidi immediately leaves Bolivian territory," the letter said.