The celebration of the birthday of the first lady Fabiola Yáñez on July 14, 2020 at the olive farm will be marked as the beginning of the end of the government of Alberto Fernandez. That celebration was held while the strictest stage of the quarantine decreed by the President as a result of the coronavirus pandemic was in force throughout the country. On the third anniversary of the well-known ‘Olivosgate’, he spoke Paul mustfather of As long as leisurethe woman who died of breast cancer and who, due to health regulations, left the world without saying goodbye to her loved ones.
“Today, July 14, should be commemorated the national day of IMPUNITY,” Pablo said in a Twitter post. In this line, and taking into account that Fernández stated in the last hours that “he sleeps in peace because he did everything in his power”, the man replied: “You are not going to rest in peace, Alberto.” And he warned: “We are going to follow you with Justice until my last breath.”
🔴 Three years after the Olivos party: the word of Solange’s father.
“Sol asked to see me but we couldn’t make it happen, nobody listened to her,” said Pablo Musse.
🔷 In #The news con @edufeiok. pic.twitter.com/x3JQSyyUwD
— The Nation More (@lanacionmas) July 14, 2023
The Solange Musse case
On the weekend of August 15, 2020, Pablo Musse, Solange’s father, had left the Neuquén town of Plottier for Córdoba, but upon arriving in that province they denied him entry and he had to return to Neuquén. Although Musse had obtained a special permit and traveled with his sister-in-law, who has a disability and lives in Alta Gracia, the town where Solange lived, personnel from the Emergency Operations Center (COE) did not allow him to enter Cordoba territory. .
After that episode, the man returned to Neuquén and the corresponding swab was taken, which was negative, so he was waiting for authorization to visit his daughter. But on August 21, Solange passed away, leaving behind a letter in which she wrote: “What they have done to my father and my aunt is inhumane, humiliating and very painful.” And she added: “I hope that with this that has happened to my family, it does not happen to anyone else. How far do our rights go?