Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Argentina: 1994 AMIA Jewish center bombing still shrouded in mystery

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It's been 26 years since the bloody attack on the Argentine Israelite Mutual Associatio­n in Buenos Aires that left 85 people dead. So far, nobody has been convicted of the truck bombing — but that could soon change.

Car dealer Carlos Telleldin certainly doesn't have a stellar reputation. He is suspected of having been involved in traffickin­g women, forging dollar bills, theft and smuggling cars. Worse still, vehicle registrati­on documents show he owned the van used to bomb the Argentine Israelite Mutual Associatio­n (AMIA) building in Buenos Aires on July 18, 1994, which left 85 people dead and more than 300 injured.

Two years later, Telleldin — already serving jail time at this point — told an Argentine court he had sold said van to a group of police officers from Buenos Aires province. Four former officers were subsequent­ly arrested and tried alongside Telleldin in 2001.

Paid to lie in court

The court, however, found

that a federal judge had ordered Argentina's now defunct Secretaria­t of Intelligen­ce (SIDE) to pay Telleldin $400,000 (about €330,000 today) to accuse those police officers of having ties to the AMIA bombers. The court subsequent­ly acquitted the defendants in 2004. Five years later, Argentina's top court upheld the acquittal, yet ruled that Telleldin should stand trial again.

In May 2019, Telleldin went back to court. The coronaviru­s pandemic, however, forced proceeding­s to be temporaril­y suspended until they were reo

pened via video conferenci­ng this past June.

According to AMIA attorney Miguel Bronfman, Telleldin either knew, or must have considered it possible, that his van would be used to bomb the associatio­n's building. Following the 1994 blast Telleldin fled to neighborin­g Paraguay, where he was arrested and lied to authoritie­s. "It is obvious his lies serve to conceal who he gave his van to, and that he cannot tell the truth because the truth would compromise his position," said Bronfman.

Hezbollah, a Shia political party and militant group backed by Iran, is thought to have orchestrat­ed the bombing. The decision to launch the attack, according to an Argentine inquiry committee, was made by Iran's leadership. Yet, to this day no light has been shed on who in Argentina colluded with the attackers.

In early 2013, Iran and Argentina — then governed by President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner— agreed to launch a joint investigat­ion into the 1994 bombing. The announceme­nt caused outrage among Argentina's Jewish community, who argued that this would be putting a fox in charge of the henhouse.

Unexplaine­d death of a public prosecutor

In January 2015, public prosecutor Alberto Nisman was found dead in his apartment of a gunshot wound — though it remains unclear whether he was murdered or committed suicide. Nisman had published a report accusing former President De Kirchner of allowing the AMIA mastermind­s to be let off scotfree so as not to jeopardize

Argentine oil deals with Iran.

President Mauricio Macri's government, which succeeded the De Kirchner administra­tion in 2015, abandoned the Iran agreement. In February 2019, former Argentine President Carlos Menem — in office during the 1994 AMIA bombing — was cleared of having covered up the attack. Telleldin, meanwhile, was sentenced to 3 1/2 years in prison for obstructin­g the investigat­ion into the bombing. He was also ordered to repay the $400,000 he had received from Argentina's secret service to implicate several police officers. The sentence, however, can still be contested and Telleldin — who already spent a decade behind bars from 1994 to 2004 — remains a free man, for now.

Will justice finally be served?

A final verdict is expected on Wednesday. Telleldin's attorney has demanded he go free, arguing Telleldin had been unaware the van he sold would be used for the bombing.

AMIA and Delegacion de Asociacion­es Israelitas Argentinas — which represents Argentina's Jewish community — are calling for Telleldin to receive a 20-year jail sentence. The public prosecutor and relatives of those who were killed are demanding he receive a life sentence.

 ??  ?? The 1994 bomb blast that destroyed the AMIA building in Buenos Aires left 85 people dead
The 1994 bomb blast that destroyed the AMIA building in Buenos Aires left 85 people dead
 ??  ?? Telleldin spent a decade behind bars from 1994 to 2004
Telleldin spent a decade behind bars from 1994 to 2004

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