Tehran – In response to an article titled “Amier Case: When the Roles of the Murderers and Victims Reversals,” Argentine President Javier Mirei took to Social Media X to repost a message from two representatives of the victims of the Amia bombing.
Milei also wrote:
President Miley speaks of Argentina’s judicial procedures. He speaks as if he doesn’t completely know how the judiciary handled the AMIA case. It destroys evidence and disrupts investigations so that the truth does not appear. Before calling on Iranian citizens to go to trial in Argentina, he should first prove the integrity and fairness of his country’s judicial system.
The long absence from President Mairi’s political life over the past 30 years may explain why the Argentine intelligence agency (side) has not been aware that it has given Jon Jose Galeano $400,000. Diplomat. That testimony led to Officer Juan Jose Riberi and his colleagues spending 115 months in prison.
Bribery occurred with full knowledge of then President Carlos Menem and the then aspect of Hugo Anzorreggie. Furthermore, during the trial for the cover-up of the Amia bombing, Judge Galeano proved that under political pressure he deliberately destroyed a member of Menem’s family of documents that may have connection to Syrian roots. He abandoned the lead involving Syrian people and instead focused solely on blaming Iran.
If President Miley is sincere in his quest for justice, then we should not demand that Argentine Intelligence Agency reveal the fate of 19 audio cassettes from the day of the bombing.
Has President Miley forgot last year that the cover-up of the Amia case led to the convictions of Justice Galeano and prosecutors Muren and Barbaccia, and that the court confirmed the existence of systemic corruption in handling the case? During the trial, it was proven that these judicial authorities conspired with political actors and intelligence agency to derail the investigation and to truly protect those responsible. These actions were described as serious human rights violations.
Does President Mairi have the courage to resume the incident regarding the harassment and pressure imposed on the families of Amia victims? Are there any measurements aimed at silenceting them and preventing them from participating in legal proceedings?
Is he willing to declassify surveillance audio from the Iranian embassy and cultural offices before and after the bombing?
Will he go until Argentine Intelligence Reporting Agency demands that it release the first CIA report on the AMIA explosion?
And above all, is there anyone in the Argentine government bold enough to acknowledge the possibility that the explosion had originated from within the building, and neither Iranian nor Lebanese involved? Was this the case for internal political score setling? Perhaps that’s why the footage from the moment of the explosion conveniently disappeared.
The scope of corruption surrounding the AMIA investigation has expanded beyond Justice Galeano and the prosecutors. Former President Carlos Menem and former Dia (Jewish umbrella organization) Principal Reuben Belaja were also criticised, but were spared from prosecution due to political interference. These individuals were accused of applying illegal pressure on the judiciary to manipulate the case and further exposing the corrupt network that permeated Argentina’s legal and political institutions.
The judicial manipulation was praised for destroying evidence, forgery of testimony, bribery and coordinated disinformation campaigns (alongside and even diar) for organizing specific suspects and distracting the public from the truth. These actions have seriously damaged the credibility of the Argentine judicial system.
So graves were illegal and held liability by the American Human Rights Court over control of Argentine’s judiciary and government and not conducting proper investigations. The court accused Argentine judges and prosecutors of not only negligence but actively tampering with cases to protect those responsible.
Given all this, can President Mairi offer that future defendants in Amia cases not face a miscarriage of the same judicial? Does he expect Iran to hand over its citizens to the judiciary? It’s full of corruption, so is it that their country’s judges and prosecutors tampering with the investigation into the country’s most deadly terrorist attacks to bring them to justice?
Is Argentina willing to work with Iranian judiciary to ultimately uncover the full truth?
Wasn’t Argentina unilaterally withdrawing from the 2013 memorandum with Iran, intentionally closing the doors of legal cooperation, and delaying the possibility of progress?
Instead of having Iranians appear in Argentine courts, President Mailey should focus on tackling corruption within his own judicial system.
Did you know that President Mairi summoned Argentine judges, government officials, lawmakers and others involved in taking into account Iranian people’s arbitrary detention? And if they do not appear in Iranian courts, could they soon be brought to trial with absenteeism?
Do Iranian citizens who have been harassed and tortured by Argentine police and judicial hopes one day they will stand up to the head of the Tehran court?
These are questions that the Argentine president must answer before demanding moral highs on justice and cooperation from others.
