The Uruguayan Government analyzes freeing access to memory archives

The Uruguayan Government analyzes freeing access to memory archives

The minister met today for just 20 minutes with the new authorities of the state National Institution for Human Rights and the Ombudsman’s Office (Inddhh) and spoke to the press upon leaving.

He regretted that until now there are files that could only be known by a few historians, journalists, official institutions or the Justice.

The idea is that with the initiative “they can be digitized (the documents) and anyone can freely access them”, and skip the current procedure of reaching this documentation through a request for access to information, which “requires a procedure, a request, which may eventually require an opposition”, Garcia remarked.

“You can be able to, but there is a bureaucracy in the middle, there is a mechanism, and that sometimes prevents you from doing it,” he explained.

For the Minister of Defense, “it is much easier if it is already published on the Internet and each one accesses according to their will without paperwork and without interference.”

The president of the Inddhh, Marcos Israel, described the initiative as “fantastic” because “it is necessary to fully socialize the information, which should not be the property of some circles, whether they are academics or whatever,” reported the newspapers El País and The Daily.

In his statements, García also called for “being vigilant” when “soldiers are stigmatized “because they are military” and warned that “injuries from the institutional point of view cannot be naturalized, as is sometimes seen, against people who They are compatriots, who fulfill a function”.

García invited the members of the Inddhh to visit the so-called Jail of the People, a property where the Tupamaros held captive members of the so-called “death squad”, a paramilitary force, as well as officials and businessmen.

Later, under the dictatorship, that house became a clandestine detention center through which hundreds of social and union leaders passed.

Now it is under the orbit of the Ministry of Defense.

“I think that this integrality of knowing the history completely can help the Inddhh in some way”, considered the minister, and Israel described the proposal as “interesting”.

The 1973-85 dictatorship left 197 missing in Uruguay, according to human rights organizations, although the victims are many more due to murders in neighboring countries and forced exiles.

The process of judging those responsible for these violations was complex, because in 1986 the Expiration Law was approved, which vetoed the chance of trials for military and police officers and endorsed in two plebiscites in 1989 and 2009, although in October 2011 it was repealed. by Congress.

Source: Ambito

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