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forest444

(5,902 posts)
Mon Jul 4, 2016, 02:15 PM Jul 2016

Offices of Tiempo Argentino, a Buenos Aires newspaper critical of Macri, ransacked.

The production offices of Tiempo Argentino, a Buenos Aires newspaper critical of the right-wing Mauricio Macri administration, and its companion radio station, Radio América, were ransacked early on Monday morning. Furniture, fixtures, computers, server, documents, and communications equipment were destroyed.

The attack took place at around 12:30 a.m. at the newspaper's sole location, a small office building in the largely residential Palermo section of Buenos Aires. Several men in ski masks broke into the office through the entrance to the radio station and forced the three newspaper employees sleeping inside out onto the sidewalk before vandalizing the premises.

Founded in 2010, its 125 employees formed a workers' self-management cooperative after its previous owner, Matías Garfunkel, sold the newspaper in February. They took turns guarding the production office at night as a result of both reiterated threats and a dispute with the buyer, Mariano Martínez Rojas, who according to employees has carried out asset stripping at the newspaper with the goal of closing it.

Martínez Rojas was present at the time of the attack, which according to employees was allowed to take place by police in their refusal to intervene or to allow employees to intervene. Police eventually mediated an exit with the vandals; but not before considerable damage had been inflicted. Police were later filmed escorting a number of vandals out without issuing arrests and without removing their ski masks. Martínez Rojas escaped without arrest.

Police refused to comment; but the assistant manager of the city's Social Communications Office, pro-Macri propagandist Yamil Santoro, dismissed the incident as "a problem between two private parties." While he described Martínez Rojas' use of vandals as "illegal," Santoro defended the decision not to arrest them, calling the vandalism "not flagrant."

The president of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Hebe de Bonafini, spoke in support of the newspaper's employees and tied the attack to the Macri administration, whom she likened "to the last dictatorship, with the exception the thy're not killing people - yet." The attack, she said, "was exactly like those that took place during the dictatorship, when they'd force their way into homes and offices and destroy everything." Bonafini lost two sons and a daughter-in-law during the Dirty War in 1977, and co-founded the world-renowned human rights organization she still heads.

The attack came the day after Tiempo Argentino revealed that Shell Argentina profited by $100 million after Energy Minister Juan José Aranguren decided to import natural gas from a Chilean company purchased by Shell Argentina just months before the newly-elected Macri appointed Aranguren Energy Minister. The purchase resulted in higher prices for consumers in Argentina, where it's now winter, because gas from Bolivia (the country's normal supplier) is 56% cheaper.

Speaking at a press conference hosted by the Buenos Aires Journalists Union (SIPREBA) the following morning, the president of the Más Tiempo cooperative, Javier Borelli, described the incident as a "violation of our rights by both management and the state, of which we expect that our security be guaranteed."

Borelli explained that Martínez Rojas was able to elude arrest by showing police a false lease agreement when, according to Borelli, "no current lease agreement exists between Martínez Rojas and building's owners."

"The damage was inflicted with the goal of stopping the publication of Tiempo Argentino," Borelli said. "We were about to improve our daily online edition, and this complicates that as well as our weekly newsprint edition distributed every Sunday."

Borelli, however, assured that publication will continue. A special newsprint edition is being prepared for Tuesday, July 5.

At: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.diarioregistrado.com%2Fsociedad%2F-el-dano-fue-para-impedir-que-tiempo-pueda-seguir-saliendo-_a577a673dcfe4c87c72d757be
______________________________________

Tiempo Argentino's Facebook page (if you'd like something translated, please ask): https://www.facebook.com/DiarioTiempoArgentino/?fref=ts
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Offices of Tiempo Argentino, a Buenos Aires newspaper critical of Macri, ransacked. (Original Post) forest444 Jul 2016 OP
Clearly Macri has support from some very determined fascists. No way to avoid the meaning here. Judi Lynn Jul 2016 #1
No doubt about it. If this had been the other way around, WSJ shills would be screaming "censorship" forest444 Jul 2016 #2
These Argentinian fascists are notably flagrant about the staging of their acts of terrorism, Judi Lynn Jul 2016 #3

Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
1. Clearly Macri has support from some very determined fascists. No way to avoid the meaning here.
Mon Jul 4, 2016, 07:35 PM
Jul 2016

This is a warning it's going to get worse if others try to tell the truth about what is happening in Argentina at the hands of the new dictator.

Seeing employees were already sleeping overnight in the office tells anyone all he/she needs to know about what the situation has been.

[center]

The buyer, Mariano Martínez Rojas [/center]

You may remember this was happening repeatedly in Honduras, when a few independent papers, tv and radio stations dared to report the actual information about what was happening to people immediately after their US-supported coup. At least one radio station got hit twice, the second time coming after the owner had scraped together enough money to buy new broadcast equipment, etc., and they got it all again.

The next step IS, of course, people will start getting killed.

In Bolivia, during Evo Morales' presidency, the white fascists in the Santa Cruz area started raiding state radio stations, and they brutally murdered a station manager in his office.

Brazil had a radio show host killed during his show last August, with 3 other radio show hosts also killed, some tortured, by last August.

If anyone had to guess about which side it is which murders, tortures, terrorizes, is it the side of people living in fear, already being persecuted and abused by fascists, or is it the people everyone knows does the murders, torture, terrorizing, which side would he guess might be responsible for this evil? Hmmmm? Let's see......

This raid happened immediately before they intended to expand their services. Someone was keeping a very close eye on them.

[center]

President of the Más Tiempo cooperative, Javier Borelli

Side note:

Does Mariano Martínez Rojas look like Joe Giudice, possible mobster from New Jersey?

[/center]

forest444

(5,902 posts)
2. No doubt about it. If this had been the other way around, WSJ shills would be screaming "censorship"
Mon Jul 4, 2016, 08:02 PM
Jul 2016

As you pointed out, it fits a clear pattern not only in Argentina but in the entire region.

This case is particularly obvious. I neglected to mention that the (Macri-controlled) police "negotiated an exit" with the vandals only after newspaper employees came in through a separate entrance and confronted them. The police, you'll recall, had refused to intervene in the least even though everyone there - including neighbors who had been woken up by the noise - heard the destruction going on inside.

The timing, as you also remarked on, is also pretty flagrant, given their recent website improvements and of course their report just the day before on the fact that Shell Argentina made $100 million off Energy Minister Aranguren's unethical deal with the Chilean gas company they themselves owned (as did Aranguren, a large shareholder therein).

When reading up on the story I noticed that one of the items destroyed by the vandals was a portrait of Rodolfo Walsh, the noted Argentine writer and journalist who was killed after publishing his famed Open Letter to the Junta on the first anniversary of same.

A good metaphor if there ever was one. Thank you as always for your research and insight Judi.

Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
3. These Argentinian fascists are notably flagrant about the staging of their acts of terrorism,
Tue Jul 5, 2016, 04:41 AM
Jul 2016

aren't they?

I went to see who was involved in assassinating Rodolfo Walsh, and it named the following:

Alfredo Astiz, Jorge "Tigre" Acosta, Pablo García Velasco, Jorge Radice, Juan Carlos Rolón, Antonio Pernías, Julio César Coronel, Ernesto Frimon Weber and Carlos Orlando Generoso.

The very first name, Alfredo Astiz, always stands out as he is the "Blond Angel of Death" who infiltrated Las Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, and had some of them kidnapped, tortured, and murdered, including the two French nuns, may his rotten soul burn in hell.

So he was there to torture and murder good, decent people in multiple situations. He's such a narcissist it's hard to imagine he was part of a "team" who went out to hunt down Rodolfo Walsh to destroy him. He's not really a team player, at least he's not really part of the human race team.

The criminality involved in turning down Bolivia's fuel, at a much cheaper price to switch to a far more expensive replacement, and make enormous profits for Macri donors should have brought Macri down, already.

Surely hope the people of Argentina are doing a slow burn, and won't allow Macri to drag the country back to the gutter where it was under the filthy dictatorship not that long ago.

Your posts here are absolutely helpful to readers in this country, especially. Anyone would expect our actual right-wing politics adore fascists presidents in as many places as possible, especially big countries like Argentina.

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