sábado, 14 de febrero de 2015

FW: El suicidado

Puro fuego de artificio!  van a fracazar...YA FRACAZARON.   VIVA CRISTINA!!  VIVA  SIRIA!!  VIVA IRÁN!! A LA CHINGADA EL SIONISMO!!
Saludos desde Jalisco!

PD .  Cuando hacen una campaña similar contra Peña Nieto, Calderón, Fox o Salinas?  son tus consentidos verdad inge?

Imputan a Cristina Kirchner por la denuncia que Alberto Nisman presentó antes de morir

La presidenta Cristina Kirchner fue imputada por la denuncia que presentó Nisman antes de morir

 

lanacion.com - La presidenta Cristina Kirchner fue imputada por la denuncia que presentó Nisman antes de morir

La presidenta Cristina Kirchner quedó hoy formalmente imputada por el supuesto encubrimiento de iraníes en la investigación sobre el atentado a la AMIA. La jefa de Estado había sido denunciada en la Justicia por el fiscal Alberto Nisman cuatro días antes de que fuera hallado muerto.

La imputación de la Presidenta se conoció este mediodía por decisión del fiscal Gerardo Pollicita, quien analizó la presentación de Nisman, de casi 300 páginas. El funcionario judicial, titular de la Fiscalía Nacional en lo Criminal y Correccional Federal N°11, firmó un requerimiento para que se tomen varias decenas de medidas de prueba. El dictamen quedó en el juzgado federal N° 3, Daniel Rafecas.

En la causa también quedaron implicados el canciller, Héctor Timerman, el diputado Andrés Larroque, el dirigente Luis D'Elía y el líder de Quebracho, Fernando Esteche. Todos ellos, según Nisman, siguieron un plan operado por Cristina Kirchner para encubrir a un grupo de iraníes y desviar la investigación por la voladura de la mutual judía.


(AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)(AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

El miércoles 14 de enero, Nisman, quien era el titular de la Unidad Fiscal AMIA, presentó su denuncia por "la existencia de un plan delictivo destinado a dotar de impunidad a los imputados de nacionalidad iraní acusados en dicha causa [AMIA], para que eludan la investigación y se sustraigan de la acción de la justicia argentina, con competencia en el caso".

"La decisión deliberada de encubrir a los imputados de origen iraní (...) fue tomada por la cabeza del Poder Ejecutivo Nacional, la Dra. Cristina Elisabeth Fernández de Kirchner e instrumentada principalmente por el ministro de Relaciones Exteriores y Culto de la Nación, Sr. Héctor Marcos Timerman", había escrito Nisman.

"Imputar a la Presidenta sería una maniobra de desestabilización democrática", dijo hoy Aníbal Fernández

Cuatro días después, horas antes de presentarse en el Congreso Nacional para dar detalles de la denuncia, Nisman fue encontrado muerto en su departamento con un balazo en la cabeza.

Sabiendo las consecuencias que tendría la imputación de Cristina Kirchner, desde el Gobierno salieron a defender su gestión. "Sería una maniobra de desestabilización democrática", afirmó esta mañana el secretario general de la Presidencia, Aníbal Fernández. Y consideró que la imputación "no tiene ningún valor, ni importancia" en términos judiciales, pero que provocaría "estrépito" en la sociedad.

La denuncia de Nisman

La operatoria que develó Nisman consistía en que la Presidenta hablaba con un agente de la ex SIDE de su confianza o con "el Cuervo" Larroque y que éstos ponían en conocimiento de D'Elía o Esteche esas órdenes. Y D'Elía las comunicaba al supuesto agente iraní Alejandro Yussuf Khalil, que llamaba por teléfono a Irán a Mohsen Rabbani, uno de los prófugos del ataque.

Nisman escribió que Cristina negoció levantar las acusaciones contra Teherán para poder comprarle petróleo barato a cambio de granos y para eso acordó montar una pista falsa en la que se acusara a grupos "fachos locales", de modo de fabricar la inocencia de Irán. Incluso se habló de que Irán comprara armas. En la denuncia, se señala que "la confabulación criminal fue decidida por Cristina Kirchner y puesta en funcionamiento por Timerman".

El fiscal sostuvo que se buscó un acuerdo comercial antes de la firma del memorándum con Irán, supeditado a que se levantaran los pedidos de captura internacional contra el ex ministro de Inteligencia Ali Fallahijan; el ex jefe de la Guardia Revolucionaria Mohsen Rezai; el ex jefe de la fuerza Al Quds y ex ministro de Defensa Ahmad Vahidi; el ex agregado cultural de la embajada iraní en la Argentina Mohsen Rabbani y el ex tercer secretario de la embajada Ahmad Reza Asghari.

"El plan criminal se activó en enero de 2011, cuando Timerman viajó a la ciudad siria de Aleppo y secretamente se reunió con su par iraní, Ali Akbar Salehi, a quien le hizo saber que las autoridades argentinas estaban dispuestas a renunciar a la investigación del caso AMIA y a cualquier reclamo de cooperación y justicia, con tal de provocar un acercamiento y restablecer plenas relaciones comerciales entre ambos Estados."

El acuerdo se plasmó en el memorándum, pero se interrumpió ante la negativa de dar de baja las circulares rojas. Decayó entonces el interés de Irán en el pacto.




Date: Sat, 14 Feb 2015 15:44:35 +0000
To: eljuglardeloscaminos48@hotmail.com
Subject: El suicidado
From: rjalonso@terra.com.mx

   Otro fiscal con tanates , Gerardo Pollicita, toma el caso contra Cretina Fdz. de Kirchner que dejo el "suicidado" fiscal Alberto Nisman.

Prosecutor Puts Leader of Argentina on Defensive

Photo
Investigators at the building where Alberto Nisman was found dead. Another prosecutor is seeking to pursue accusations Mr. Nisman had leveled. Credit Enrique Marcarian/Reuters

BUENOS AIRES — A federal prosecutor in Argentina on Friday revived the explosive accusations leveled by Alberto Nisman, the prosecutor whose mysterious death has gripped the country, by seeking to charge President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner with shielding Iranians from responsibility over a 1994 bombing.

Putting Mrs. Kirchner on the defensive, the move by the prosecutor, Gerardo Pollicita, prevents the 289-page criminal complaint that Mr. Nisman had filed against Mrs. Kirchner before his death last month from languishing in Argentina's legal system.

Mr. Pollicita is also seeking to charge the foreign minister and other political supporters of Mrs. Kirchner, continuing the case Mr. Nisman had begun.

Jorge Capitanich, Mrs. Kirchner's cabinet chief, called the move "judicial putschism" and "an active strategy of destabilization."

The angry reactions to the charges reflect the rising tension between Mrs. Kirchner's government and parts of the judiciary. A group of prosecutors are planning a march here on Feb. 18 in Mr. Nisman's honor at a time when many Argentines are claiming that the president is meddling in the inquiry into Mr. Nisman's death.

Continue reading the main story

The Mysterious Death of Alberto Nisman

A prosecutor in Argentina accuses the president of attempting to cover up a secret deal to shield terrorists. Days later, the prosecutor is found dead and the president alleges a conspiracy. An overview of key developments in the case.

"This is going to make things worse; it's like a snowball," said Sergio Berensztein, a political analyst, referring to the tensions. "The government doesn't accept the legitimacy of the cases against it; they see a judicial coup," he said, referring to separate corruption investigations shrouding Mrs. Kirchner and her vice president.

Mr. Nisman, the lead investigator of the 1994 attack on a Jewish center, which left 85 people dead, had described in his criminal complaint a complex web of back-channel negotiations, accusing Argentina's president of directing an effort to reduce pressure on Iranians wanted in connection with the bombing in exchange for trade benefits.

The Treasury Attorney-General's Office, which represents the state in legal disputes, filed a defense on Friday, saying it wished to "show the unfounded nature of the complaint." Mr. Nisman was found dead with a gunshot wound to the head in his apartment the day before he was scheduled to speak before Congress about his claims. While investigators are seeking to determine if his death was a suicide or a murder, Mrs. Kirchner and senior officials have cast suspicion on others, including an aide to Mr. Nisman and an ousted spy chief from Argentina's main intelligence agency.

Mr. Pollicita, who was assigned to review Mr. Nisman's case against Mrs. Kirchner, could have decided that the complaint was not worth pursuing. But while Mr. Nisman had acknowledged in his complaint that the secret deal had not materialized, Mr. Pollicita believed that the evidence was sufficient for the case to progress.

A judge, Daniel Rafecas, will now begin the process of requesting evidence and setting up investigative inquiries, and can decide whether the case should be dismissed or proceed to involve a trial, said Susana Ciruzzi, a professor of criminal law at the University of Buenos Aires.


Still, Professor Ciruzzi emphasized that the case was unlikely to be resolved soon because of the complexity of the evidence and because the defendants' lawyers may seek to "muddy the playing field."

Aníbal Fernández, Mrs. Kirchner's chief of staff, said that "the charges have no legal value."

Challenging a central premise of Mr. Nisman's complaint, Mrs. Kirchner's government has previously pointed out that Interpol had confirmed that the foreign minister, Héctor Timerman, had not tried to lift warrants for the arrest of the Iranian officials wanted in connection with the bombing.

Francisco Resnicoff, a political analyst at the Cefeidas Group, an international advisory firm, said it remained to be seen how the judge would view the prosecutor's move. "It is based on evidence that has a big media impact ahead of the Feb. 18 march but may not necessarily overcome the legal test," he said of the decision to seek charges.

Laura Alonso, an opposition lawmaker, called for an impartial investigation into the accusations made by Mr. Nisman. "Now we have to let the judge and the prosecutor work without pressure or interferences," she told the DyN news agency.

Referring to the upheaval in Argentina's political establishment after Mr. Nisman's death, Julio Cobos, an opposition party leader, told the local news media, "It's not normal for a country to have its vice president indicted and a request for the president to be charged," referring to the prosecutor's move on Friday and the indictment last year of Amado Boudou, the vice president, in a corruption case involving the easing of a printing company out of bankruptcy.

Beyond the uproar over reviving Mr. Nisman's accusations against Mrs. Kirchner, the attorney general, Alejandra Gils Carbó, on Friday named a team of four prosecutors that will take over Mr. Nisman's separate investigation into the bombing of the Jewish center, which he had been leading for a decade.

Mr. Nisman had accused Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite movement, of carrying out the attack and Iranian officials of planning and financing it, but the case has not been solved.

Three prosecutors — Sabrina Namer, Roberto Salum and Patricio Sabadini — will now work under a coordinating prosecutor, Juan Murray. "The search for the truth is not an easy task," Ms. Gils Carbó said about the investigation they will pursue, which has been mired by setbacks. "But nor is it impossible."

Jonathan Gilbert reported from Buenos Aires, and Simon Romero from Rio de Janeiro. Charles Newbery contributed reporting from Buenos Aires.

A version of this article appears in print on February 14, 2015, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: Prosecutor Puts Leader of Argentina on Defensive. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe

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