Argentina’s federal police have confirmed that they have made one arrest following last Monday’s week’s attack on the offices of the Clarín newspaper.
Police sources said that a 44-year-old man of Uruguayan nationality, reportedly an anarchist, had been taken into custody following a raid on a flat at Lavalle 3766 in the early hours of Friday morning.
Officers at the scene reportedly found two metal drums containing petrol. They identified the individual using CCTV footage of the incident at the newspaper’s offices in the City neighbourhood of Barracas.
Leaders from across the political spectrum this week condemned Monday night’s attack on the newspaper’s offices, which Grupo Clarín bosses described as “worrying” but “minor.” At least nine molotov cocktails were thrown at the entrance to the pro-opposition daily’s offices on Monday night at around 11.05pm.
The attack was captured by a nearby security camera. In the footage, which Clarín posted on its website, a group of hooded people can be seen loitering on the pavement on the opposite side of the road to the building, located at 1743 Piedras.
The gang, thought to number nine, then start to throw crude incendiary devices, commonly known as molotov cocktails, at the newspaper’s offices, before running off down Ituzaingó Street.
Security staff promptly called the emergency services, with firefighters and police rushing to the scene and sealing off a perimeter. The City’s Bomb Squad was also deployed to ensure all the incendiary devices were no longer a threat.
The incident has been classified as “public intimation” by the authorities, who have opened an investigation and are searching for the culprits. On Tuesday morning, scorch marks could be seen on the pavement and building’s exterior.
Condemnation of the attack was swift and came from all political sectors.
"I would like to express our repudiation of the episode that took place in front of the Clarín newspaper’s headquarters. Violence always disrupts democratic coexistence. We hope that the facts are clarified and the perpetrators are identified through the investigation that is underway," President Alberto Fernández said in a post on Twitter.
"Democratic coexistence, which is severely affected by the promotion of hate speech, must be cared for by all Argentines," read a statement issued via the La Cámpora youth organisation linked to Kirchnerite sector of the ruling coalition that has often been at odds with the newspaper.
Taking a stronger tone, former president Mauricio Macri said the “unacceptable” attack was an assault on freedom of speech.
"The attack on Clarín is a very serious attempt to intimidate the media and the entire press. It is unacceptable and reminiscent of the violent practices of the past. I repudiate the attack and send my solidarity. May the government and the justice system clarify what happened and arrest those responsible," said the Juntos por el Cambio leader on Twitter.
Buenos Aires City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta also repudiated the attack, describing it as a "sign of intolerance and violence."
A number of press organisations, including Asociación de Entidades Periodísticas Argentinas (ADEPA), Foro de Periodismo Argentino (FOPEA), Federación Internacional de Periodistas (FIP) and Sindicato de Prensa de Buenos Aires (SiPreBA) also expressed their condemnation of the attack, calling on the authorities to bring the perpetrators to justice.
In a statement, the newspaper’s parent company Grupo Clarín condemned the “violent expression of intolerance against a media outlet” and said it was awaiting “urgent clarification and sanction.”
– TIMES/NA
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