2024-08-15 18:38:50
Although the Córdoba Legislature unanimously approved in March 2023 a law allowing the restoration of the labor records of provincial public administrators who disappeared or were murdered by state terrorism during the last dictatorship, to date the province’s human rights The Secretariat received a request for compensation. It corresponds to the missing Deputy Commissioner Ricardo Fermín Albareda.
With this bill, the sequence began in early August that Albareda’s widow Susana Montoya was murdered by her son Fernando Albareda, who was arrested as the sole person responsible for the crime . The family’s demand for P76 million in compensation from the police after the admission will be one of the reasons for this result.
According to the province, this is the only action within the framework of Document Restoration Act No. 10,874.
The Albareda trial is typical for the federal judiciary in Córdoba because it exposed the repressive behavior of the police, especially the D2, Córdoba Provincial Police Information Department. Ricardo Fermín Albareda, deputy councilor and activist of the Revolutionary Workers Party (PRT), was abducted by D2 elements in Cruz Roja and Nores Martínez and taken to the so-called Casa Hidráulica on the shores of Lake San Roque, where they suspected him of involvement with the People’s Revolutionary Army (ERP ) kept in touch and brutally tortured him until death.
In 2009, Luciano Benjamín Menéndez (life sentence), Rodolfo Aníbal Campos (life sentence), Cesar Armando Cejas (life sentence), Miguel Ángel Gómez (16 years old) and Calixto Flores (initially acquitted but later convicted) were convicted of these crimes The incident was tried and he was found guilty. In light of this judicial precedent, the provincial government deemed it appropriate to restore Deputy Commissioner Albareda’s file.
Therefore, in March 2024, Governor Martín Llaryora, Ministers Liliana Montero and Juan Pablo Quinteros and State Prosecutor Jorge Córdoba signed a decree ordering the Provincial Memory Archive to proceed with the restoration of Albareda’s archives at that time. Commissioner.
“Ricardo worked for the municipal traffic police and as deputy chief of the provincial police. In addition, he was a member of the PRT. On September 25, 1979, he was kidnapped from the Casa de Hidráulica clandestine center on the shores of San Roque Lake , was tortured and killed by members of the Police Information Department 2. He was 37 years old and his whereabouts are still unknown. After Albareda disappeared, he was acquitted by the police.
Administrative procedures
Albareda’s widow (who was murdered earlier this month) and her son Fernando immediately initiated an administrative process at the Córdoba police station to provide posthumous promotions to those who achieved extraordinary merit in service. This recognition has an economic relevance, which in this case amounts to 76 million pesos. Compensation has not yet been paid because Montoya was murdered before that and her son was arrested as the only defendant.
On May 10, the Minister of Security, Juan Pablo Quinteros, signed a resolution deeming that under article 41 b) of Law No. 9728 (on police officers) and its article 10 Superintendent Order No., promotion to Albara Reda Commissioner is appropriate.
“Request for the payment of the allowance provided for in Article 1. Article 114 of Law No. 9728 provides that this allowance is awarded to both parties before the appearance and is calculated taking into account the amount of the monthly salary corresponding to the level of promotion of the late Mr. Ricardo Fermín Albareda,” the resolution states .
Additionally, a request to modify the salary Montoya received as the widow of a missing police officer was approved. Benefits total 76 million pesos. In light of Moyano’s murder and Fernando Albareda’s arrest, a legal ruling is now expected to determine whether the payment was appropriate, how much and to whom. The woman also has a son and grandson from her deceased daughter.
However, the provincial archives restoration law does not specify the amount of compensation. In the Albareda case, the allowance was paid in accordance with the law governing police personnel, which provides for automatic promotion for those who die in the line of duty.
National level with a long history
In 2006, within the framework of the memory, truth and justice policy, the restoration of the archive began at the national level. Human rights groups have since begun reconstructing the whereabouts of the missing workers from the National Ministry of Planning and Public Works. Six years later, this mandate was approved by Decree No. 1199/2012, which provides for the registration of the identities of detainees and missing persons in more than 130 national files. To date, more than 500 files have been repaired.
Before each original document is restored by the state, a copy is given to family members, including current workers and former colleagues, at a public event in the workplace. The state also facilitates the access of children of missing or murdered workers to these facilities.
At the national level, in December 2021, the U.S. Senate also unanimously turned private sector document repair into law. The norm provides for the registration of detained or missing status in the labor records of workers who are victims of state terrorism and are classified as persons dependent on private companies.
On the basis of this legislation, the restoration of documents in the files of missing persons means that, according to this administrative action, the real reasons for the termination of employment emerged, namely that they had disappeared and/or been murdered for political reasons. It is often said that they do not stop working voluntarily (this can be inferred from, for example, the expression “abandonment of service”). Or, when they appear to have resigned, it can be a sure sign that they did not do so of their own free will. That is, it has been documented that they were forced to resign as a result of political persecution, which prevented them from continuing to work because that was where they were more likely to be found, abducted and disappeared by repressive forces.
1723747412
#file #repair #file #Córdoba #Alba #Radar