A key body of the Church invites the faithful to march Nisman: "This is an act of republican value"
(La Nacion – Buenos Aires) - National Commission for Justice and Peace, which depends on the Argentina Episcopal Conference, today said that adhere to the silent march to be held on February 18 by federal prosecutors following the death of prosecutor Alberto Nisman, considering that it is of "an act nonpartisan and republican value".
The church body, composed mainly of lay believers invited to participate in this initiative by "prayer to the Lord of History, asking for our peace, justice and truth Patria".
The Commission, chaired by Gabriel Castelli, former national director of Caritas Argentina, said in a statement joining the march next Wednesday, "with the understanding that this is a non-partisan event, and Republican deep sense of value."
Meanwhile, church sources said the DyN agency that "there will be no participation of bishops formally or officially."
The march of prosecutors in tribute to Nisman, who was found dead on January 18 in his apartment after reporting to President Cristina Kirchner Kirchner and other officials to cover up the AMIA bombing, joined criticism of the ruling party and the accession of sectors the judiciary, the opposition, the Jewish community and citizenship.
Yesterday, the first president accused its organizers choose to go quietly because "they have nothing to say or cannot say what they think."
A few days after the death of Nisman, the National Commission for Justice and Peace warned of "circumstances of the institution", urged the authorities to "use extreme care to the full clarification of the facts" and recalled that goes unpunished caused by the bombing of the AMIA.
In turn, the Argentina Episcopal Conference, chaired by Monsignor José María Arancedo expressed "shock and bewilderment" over the death of fiscal Nisman and asked "overcome the shadow of impunity"
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