Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Spanish Judge victims filed petition to stop former ministers … – Caracol Radio

Spanish Judge victims filed petition to stop former ministers … – Caracol Radio

Madrid, February 3 (EFE) .- A Spanish judge has filed the request of an association of victims of Francoism to be arrested in Spain twenty people, including two former ministers, in the case that carries a judge for Argentina crimes in the Spanish dictatorship.

The National Court Judge Eloy Velasco stated in a car that State Coordinator in Support of Complaint Argentina Crimes against Francoism (Ceaqua), who ordered the arrest of Rodolfo Martin Villa and Jose Molina Utrea is not entitled to ask this type of arrest.

The judge considers should be done through a process of extradition would formally ask the Argentine government to Spanish.

The association claimed in November that the last twenty accused by Argentina justice in the cause for the crimes of Francoism leading Judge Maria Servini were arrested, after which Interpol Argentina asked Spain its preventive arrest for extradition .

Within this driven in Buenos Aires because, Interpol also called on Spain to submit all required to process the international arrest data.

Velasco has proceeded to close the proceedings, and recalling that only a State may require the extradition.

He added that Argentina can still ask the Spanish Ministry of Justice delivery of the accused, an issue which highlights the judge is “uninvolved Audiencia Nacional”.

The association urged requests for arrest as a result of recent decisions taken by the Servini judge, who last October issued a writ ordering the arrest of 20 accused crimes committed during the dictatorship.

The list includes twenty people, including several senior positions Franco as former ministers and José Rodolfo Martin Villa Utrera Molina.

The complaint in Argentina was presented in 2010 for “crimes of genocide and / or crimes against humanity” committed during the Civil War and the Franco dictatorship and covering the period from July 1936, when there was the military uprising, and June 15, 1977, almost two years after the death of Francisco Franco, when the first democratic elections were held. EFE

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment