Representatives of Human Rights organizations in Argentina once again expressed their rejection of the Decree of Necessity imposed by President Javier Milei. More details with our correspondent Carolina Silvestre. teleSUR
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00 Representative of the Human Rights Organization Argentina rejected once again the necessity
00:05 and urgency decree that disregulates the economy of the South American country and considers
00:11 unacceptable articles of the law based on certain points for the freedom of the Argentines,
00:16 and sent Maria Executive to the Parliament.
00:19 I got a response in Buenos Aires, Carolina Silvestre with the story.
00:28 According to the Center for Social and Legal Studies, both initiatives reduce the role
00:32 of the States as a guarantor, a mediator of rights, and replace it for a guarantor of
00:36 the private appropriation of resources.
00:40 We are very concerned to understand what the delegation of legislative powers in security
00:45 and defense matter means.
00:48 It is not explained anywhere.
00:50 Both in relation to the DNU and the Omnibus Law, the Supreme Court jurisprudence and international
00:56 human rights standards are very clear that the President is not allowed to have these
01:00 powers and it is also forbidden for the Congress to endorse them.
01:05 For the human rights organizations, it is clear that the Exegro is looking for a change
01:11 of regime.
01:16 To try to make a massive and systematic reform of the Argentinian legal system and, fundamentally,
01:22 to go back in terms of human rights using extraordinary mechanisms, especially to avoid
01:28 the very thing we are doing now, the parliamentary debate.
01:31 This is quite obvious, contrary to Article 99 of the National Constitution, and for this
01:37 reason, especially the DNU, is being widely prosecuted.
01:44 These are decisions taken by the Mal administration that, according to a specialist, implied a
01:48 lack of legal protection for the Argentinians and freeways to increase their repression.
01:59 What is the narrative?
02:00 There is an extremely violent narrative, not only by the government but also by its followers
02:06 in the social media, roots and all the means of communication they use, by which anyone
02:15 who criticizes is attacked in a very strong, very hard and very aggressive way.
02:24 On the other hand, there is the Bullrich protocol for repression.
02:29 It is a protocol that assumes that any popular claim made is in itself a crime.
02:39 A ruling that establishes the need of permits by the Minister of Security in order to demonstrate
02:43 its support for the expenses incurred by police operatives, affine demonstrators, among other
02:48 fragile human rights violations.
02:52 In addition to all this, what we have is a regulation that the Minister of Security set
02:56 off hand while you can consider it withdrawn, when she realized it was nonsense.
03:02 But she didn't withdraw anything.
03:04 There is nothing to indicate that she did.
03:06 It says that it is forbidden for more than three people to be in a public place.
03:12 Excuse me, three or more persons, not more than three persons, without a previous authorization
03:19 from the Ministry of Security.
03:25 All these measures are part of planned debts.
03:28 According to Westporch, has the auditors to hand in natural resources and goods over to
03:32 foreign interests at the expense of the Argentinian people, a country where you have wealthy,
03:38 very wealthy people and many more that are poor, increasingly very poor.
03:43 Carolina Silvestre, Telesur, Buenos Aires.