• 2 days ago
👉 Nair Galarza, condenada a cadena perpetua por el asesinato de Fernando Pastorizo, reaparece en los medios buscando una revisión de su sentencia. A través de sus declaraciones y un libro que compila sus textos, Galarza argumenta haber sido víctima de violencia de género, aunque esto no fue probado en el juicio. La Corte Suprema ya ha ratificado su condena, dejando como única opción la apelación ante la Corte Interamericana. Esta reaparición mediática podría ser parte de una estrategia para intentar reducir su pena. El caso sigue generando debate sobre justicia y violencia.

👉 Seguí en #ArrancaLaTardeEnA24
📺 a24.com/vivo

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Transcript
00:00Here, in this same place where we are, in the vicinity of General Paz and Artigas,
00:12in the early hours of the morning, they murdered a young man of 20, 21 years old, with two
00:18shots.
00:19When I was with her, she changed her face, she didn't want to be armed anymore.
00:25She was very aggressive with him, you could see it in the bullets, we were there in a
00:29bullet and she was going to make a mess of him, she grabbed him.
00:33In front of everyone.
00:34Yes.
00:35The truth is that she took the responsibility of having shot, you have to see in what brand.
00:40The young woman will be transferred, there she is, there she is transferred after participating
00:45in this hearing.
00:46It wasn't just one night, it was many years ago, and even all those things are in the
00:55case, but they also gave it importance, for example, gender violence, that is, they said
01:04that I wanted to invent things against Fernando or that I wanted to lie or leave him wrong,
01:12to achieve gender violence, but no, the reality is that there is truth.
01:18I've never hit anyone, I've never seen anyone hit me, I'm going to break my head bad,
01:24they've thrown me a house against the wall like 45,000 million times.
01:27It was your dad then.
01:29And what I can tell you is that I am responsible because I am coordinated, so if they didn't
01:35mess with him at the time, it's like he is now.
01:40I never had the benefit of the doubt, I was always the murderer who killed her boyfriend
01:48because he wanted to leave her.
01:53The truth is that at some point I wanted to live this hope of being able to get out
02:00of here, of being able to do something normal again, and more than anything, because of the
02:07sentence, in that sense it has taken a lot away from me, and I think it is not important
02:14that these are the hands of my life.
02:21Well, there they were, his reappearance, a crime he commits at the age of 18.
02:27Today the sentence is firm, it is permanently condemned, a sentence that remains firm
02:32since the Supreme Court of Justice was dismissed.
02:34There are no appeals from the nation except the Inter-American Court.
02:39What strategy does Nair Galarza pursue in this reappearance?
02:42And in these words that we are quickly going to read, we are all passive-aggressive,
02:47listen carefully.
02:48Yes, this is from the book El Exilio de Nair, right?
02:51Of course.
02:52Where his texts are collected and compiled.
02:54I think that killing is an ethical dilemma, quite complex in a situation where you would have
03:00to kill someone to save yourself or save someone.
03:03Would you do it?
03:11There is more, let's see.
03:13There is more.
03:24There is more.
03:43This is an extract from the book.
03:45Yes, yes, yes.
03:46Yes, from one of the books.
03:47El Exilio de Nair.
03:48Regarding Nair Galarza.
03:49Yes, and it must be said that gender violence was investigated,
03:52it was not proven in the file.
03:54In no way.
03:55There is only one victim, which is Fernando Pastorizo.
03:58Of course.
03:59What else did he say?
04:00He said,
04:12Yes.
04:42Yes.

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