|
Amazon Body Care |
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 160 guests online |
|
Statistics |
Members: 494
News: 11474
Web Links: 0
|
|
Related Items |
-
A Brazilian Pledge: Lasting War on Deforestation
-
Brazil to Indemnify Families of ''Politically Missing''
-
Brazil Has Reason to Smile, Says Lula
-
Brazil's Lula: War Is Not the Answer to Terror
-
Brazil: Only Truth Will Put Ghosts of Dictactorship to Rest
-
Brazil's NGO Wants Dictatorship's Archives Opened
-
Brazil's Quandary: To Open or Not Dictatorship Archives
-
Lula May Open Secret Files of Brazil's Dirty War
-
Brazil Steps on Minefield Putting a Price on Dead and Disappeared
-
4,000 Soldiers Ready for Action in the Amazon After Nun's Slaying
-
Another Made-in-Brazil Submarine is Sea Ready
-
Brazil Launches Its Fourth Submarine
-
New Republic Celebrates 20 in Brazil
-
Brazil Ready to Fight Foreign Threats to Amazon, Says Admiral
-
Mission Accomplished. Brazilian Soldiers Leave East Timor.
-
Navy's Ship Becomes Showcase of Brazil's War Industry
-
Brazil and US Hold 16-Country War Games in Brasília
-
US Sends Troops to Paraguay Just a Stone's Throw from Brazil's Frontier
-
Brazil's Defense Minister Confirms Purchase of 12 Mirage Warplanes
-
Brazil Denounces U.S. Military Presence in Paraguay
-
Brazil Opens Archives from Dictatorship Era
-
Brazil's Defense Minister Wants Greater Military Presence in the Amazon
-
For UN Brazil Is a Country of Great Laws that Are Not Enforced
-
Brazilian Army Worried About US Military Build Up on Brazil's Borders
-
War-Mongering US Military Has Surrounded Brazil, Says Brazilian Analyst
-
Jet Vetoed by US Is Not Attack Plane, Says Brazil's Embraer
-
An Absent US Panned by Brazil and South American Military
-
Amnesty Calls for and End to Brazil's Big Skull Military Van
-
Brazil: Army Celebrates 1964 Military Coup and Says It Is Proud of It
-
Gaucho: A Military Van Built in Partnership by Brazil and Argentina
-
Brazil Launches Military Mission with War Plane and Navy Ships to Rescue Penguins
-
In a Veiled Threat, Brazilian Military Denounce Lula for Corruption
-
For Brazilian Professor, New Torture Law in the US Is Old News
-
New Documents Show the US Hand in Installing Dictatorship in Brazil
-
The US Plan to Prevent Brazil from Becoming a New Cuba
-
Brazil Boosts Military Spending by 50% But Tells Neighbors Not to Worry
-
Brazil Earmarks US$ 2.2 Bi for 36 Fighter Jets. Just for Starters
-
Brazilian Armed Forces Complain of Obsolete and Broken Equipment and Low Wages
-
Brazilians Involved in Military Era's Operation Condor Won't Be Extradited
-
Brazil Gets Ready for War Rearranging and Funding Its Defense Network
-
Four Policemen Arrested in Case of Murdered Brazilian Journalist
-
After 54 Deaths Brazilian Army Goes to the Streets to Fight Dengue
-
Brazil and Russia to Jointly Build Jet Fighters and Satellite Launchers
-
Brazil Says South America Doesn't Need US Permission to Beef Up Military
-
110 Deaths Later Brazil's Dengue Epidemic Seems to Be Easing
-
With Brazil Leading Way, South America Spends Record US$ 50 Bi with Military
-
Brazil to Adopt Rapid Strike Force as New Military Model
-
Brazil's Lula Silences Aides Pushing for Punishment of Dictatorship Torturers
-
Brazil & Neighbors Are Beefing Up Their Armed Forces. No Arms Race, They Say
-
In Show of Force, Brazil Goes to War Games in Defense of Newfound Oil
-
Russia Wants Joint Ventures with Brazil in Space and Defense
-
Press Organization Lauds Brazil in Case of Fight Against Impunity
-
Brazil & Neighbors Still Working on Military Alliance Free from US
-
After US Agreement Colombia Wants Military Rapprochement to Brazil
-
Isabel Allende Wants to Know Extension of Brazil Involvement in Her Dad's Death
-
Obama Considering Brazil Invitation for Summit on US Forces in Colombia
-
Unions in France Oppose Brazil Getting Military Technology
-
Brazil's Lula Defends His Defense Outlay and Backs Chavez
-
1989: Berlin Wall Falls and Brazil's Cold War Comes to an End
|
|
Contribution |
| Have you got news? Do you have news, comment or story on Brazil you want to share with Brazzil? Just send it our way to brazzil@brazzil.com. | |
|
|
|
The Latest from Brazzil Magazine |
|
|
|
|
Bad Idea, Say Brazil's Military to Sharing Dirty War Files |
|
|
|
|
Written by Rodolfo Espinoza
|
|
Wednesday, 09 February 2005 |
|
The Brazilian Armed Forces weren't happy at all at the declarations of the Minister-Chief of Brazil's National Secretariat of Human Rights, Nilmário Miranda, done at the World Social Forum, in Porto Alegre, state of Rio Grande do Sul, in the South of Brazil.
He proposed an international partnership in order to open the secret files of the Brazilian military regime (1964-1985) and its neighbors, which closely helped each other. The minister wants an exchange of information that would open the Brazilian files to foreign countries at the same time that some neighboring nations would opens their military files to Brazil's scrutiny. Argentina, Chile and Paraguay are the countries Miranda is more interested in. For the military however, the idea is "inopportune" and "unnecessary" and might open the door to what they call "unacceptable interference" in Brazil's internal affairs. There were shows of dissatisfaction in several Brazilian states, including Porto Alegre, Brasília, Recife, Fortaleza and Manaus. The military seem to be concerned that some documents from other countries might embarrass Brazil's former-leaders and institutions. The united actions executed by the military governments in South America during the seventies was known as Condor Operation. For the military the subject might bring diplomatic problems. Informed of those reactions, sources close to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva were quick to inform that the government is still analyzing the situation regarding such integration. Minister Nilmário's idea, they say, has yet to be discussed in higher level of the administration. Many of the military who showed their dissatisfaction are still active and they have made their uneasiness known to general Jorge Armando Félix, who is the chief of the Institutional Security Cabinet. Félix met Lula and told him about his concern that some military might circulate notes repudiating the idea of sharing information between nations. For Miranda the swapping of information is something that already exists. According to him, all the discussion will be done "without retaliation and without radicalism". "As uncomfortable as this might look, this is a subject that has to be discussed because it now is part of history," he commented.
BrM
|
|
|
|
|
Home
|
|
Brazzil Magazine - Since 1989 trying to understand Brazil |
|
|
|
|
|