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question everything

(47,474 posts)
Tue Dec 18, 2018, 02:29 PM Dec 2018

A Senseless Extradition - WSJ Editorial

Political persecution drove former Colombian agriculture minister Andrés Felipe Arias to flee to the U.S. in 2014. The U.S. Embassy in Bogotá helped him escape, and when he arrived in Florida he immediately applied for asylum. But if Mr. Arias thought he was safe, he wasn’t taking into account the U.S. Justice Department. For reasons that are hard to figure out, much less understand, Justice officials are working hard to send Mr. Arias back to Colombia.

Mr. Arias was once on track to succeed Álvaro Uribe, his political mentor, as president of Colombia. That’s when trumped up corruption charges emerged in the media. The Colombian Supreme Court, which is notoriously political, convicted the UCLA-trained economist of corruption after he had fled the country. He received a 17-year sentence in exile—from a country where the narco-terrorists known as the FARC enjoy amnesty these days. Mr. Arias was given no opportunity to appeal.

The Supreme Court—a longtime opponent of Mr. Uribe and his political allies—has continued to pursue Mr. Arias in the U.S. and under Colombian law it has the power to do so. In 2016 it asked the U.S. to extradite Mr. Arias, using a treaty that Colombia has never ratified. The Colombian Supreme Court has said it was never ratified; Mr. Uribe and former President Juan Manuel Santos have said there is no valid extradition treaty.

That should be enough for the U.S. to deny extradition and grant Mr. Arias’s asylum claim, which is making its way slowly through U.S. court. Meanwhile, Mr. Arias sits in a Florida jail. On Dec. 10 Colombia’s ambassador to the U.S., Francisco Santos, wrote the Justice Department Criminal Division requesting bail for Mr. Arias. The ambassador said Mr. Arias is not a flight risk and asked for the “rapid implementation of the steps necessary to ensure Mr. Arias may be released on bond, so that he can spend time with his wife and young children, especially during the holiday season.”

Colombia is the Justice Department’s client in this case, yet Justice is fighting the bail request. That makes no sense, but then neither does its determination to help the partisan Colombian judiciary fulfill what on the evidence is an unjust political prosecution.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-senseless-extradition-11545092026 (paid subscription)

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A Senseless Extradition - WSJ Editorial (Original Post) question everything Dec 2018 OP
Started reading about this Uribe puppet long ago. He and his wife hammed it up for cameras Judi Lynn Dec 2018 #1
From the Miami Herald which is always very pro-Latin American right-wing: Judi Lynn Dec 2018 #2
Thanks for the clarifications. I think that many of us are in a mood of granting asylum question everything Dec 2018 #3

Judi Lynn

(160,525 posts)
1. Started reading about this Uribe puppet long ago. He and his wife hammed it up for cameras
Tue Dec 18, 2018, 05:02 PM
Dec 2018

posturing for publicity photos during the time he was in hot water in Colombia for taking the money meant to go to legitimate, needy causes, and handing it off to wealthy, prominent Colombians of the power structure.





















Shameless dirtbags. They're just too white to prosecute. How dare the legal system.

From a petition:

Please do NOT grant asylum to Andres Felipe
Arias Leiva



Andres Felipe Arias Leiva is a criminal and fugitive from Colombia. He was Minister of Agriculture in Colombia during Alvaro Uribe Velez's second Presidential period (2005-2009).

Arias was sentenced to 17 years in jail by the Colombian Supreme Court for embezzling approximately $25 million of state subsidies meant to stimulate poor farmers to wealthy elites to seek political support.

Arias' Vice Minister, Juan Camilo Salazar, was sentenced to 10 years and 3 months of prison after pleding guilty on the same charges and stated Arias always had active participation and knowledge of the actions that surrounded the planning and execution of AIS ( "Agro Ingreso Seguro" ) while Minister of Agriculture, acting with total knowledge of the illegality of his conduct.

Please help us prevent The U.S. Department of Homeland Security from commiting a huge mistake by granting asylum to this criminal. It would be unfair to Colombia and its Justice system.

https://www.change.org/p/u-s-department-of-homeland-security-please-do-not-grant-asylum-to-andres-felipe-arias-leiva

Judi Lynn

(160,525 posts)
2. From the Miami Herald which is always very pro-Latin American right-wing:
Tue Dec 18, 2018, 05:11 PM
Dec 2018

Miami judge orders ex-Colombian minister convicted of corruption sent home
BY KYRA GURNEY

SEPTEMBER 28, 2017 06:45 PM,

UPDATED SEPTEMBER 29, 2017 07:12 AM

Arias served as Colombia’s minister of agriculture between 2005 and 2009. His signature policy was a $700 million subsidy program whose purpose was to help farmers prepare for the challenges of globalization and “reduce inequality in rural areas.” The program became mired in scandal, however, when news reports revealed that wealthy families with political connections had received millions in grants. Beneficiaries included relatives of lawmakers, companies owned by the richest man in Colombia, and a former beauty queen.

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/colombia/article176003146.html


It has always been obvious that the degenerated Latin American oligarchs, always right-wing, have always been slavish worshippers of appearances, but only if they are very Anglo, or at least Western European-looking, as in the human shapes populating their movies and tv and magazines. The fact that a poor farmer's money should go to a Colombian beauty queen, instead, shouldn't even draw a second look from people who've been aware of how their culture operates.

Real justice, however, would see things differently.

question everything

(47,474 posts)
3. Thanks for the clarifications. I think that many of us are in a mood of granting asylum
Tue Dec 18, 2018, 11:03 PM
Dec 2018

And now I read that we are going to send back to Turkey a cleric who has been living here.

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