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Havana. May 15,
2009
Armando
Valladares’ CIA organization
linked to plot against Evo Morales
Jean-Guy Allard
• THE Bolivian district attorney’s office has identified Hugo Achá
Melgar who, according to the AFP news agency, is Bolivia’s
representative to the U.S. Human Rights Foundation (HRF), as providing
the bulk of the funds for the terrorist gang foiled in Santa Cruz while
plotting to assassinate President Evo Morales.
The HRF is a New York-based nongovernmental organization known for its
activities of interference and CIA links. Its general secretary, Armando
Valladares is a terrorist of Cuban origin. District Attorney Marcelo
Sosa, who is leading the investigation in this case, identified Achá,
alias "Superman," along with Alejandro Melgar, "El Lucas," as being
involved in and funding the plot.
In a statement to a La Paz television station, Achá – currently in the
United States – rejected those charges but confessed that he had met
with the killers’ leader, Hungarian-Bolivian Eduardo Rózsa-Flores, on
"four or five" occasions. The Rózsa-Flores terrorist group was
dismantled in a Bolivian police operation a few weeks ago. Three of the
mercenaries, among them the group’s alleged leader, Eduardo Rózsa-Flores,
died in a gun fight, while two others were arrested and are currently
being detained in La Paz. The authorities subsequently captured two
other conspirators, both members of the fascist organization Unión
Juvenil Cruceńista, which provided the group with weapons.
A RECOUPED HUNGARIAN NEO-NAZI
Born in Bolivia, Eduardo Rózsa Flores, the Hungarian leader of the
conspiracy to assassinate Evo Morales, belonged to circles of the
Hungarian extreme right close to the Jobbik neo-Nazi party, which
illegally maintains a paramilitary organization, the Hungarian Guard.
According to the Hungarian Spectrum website, he joined the Croatian army
in the early 1990s, took part in various battles and was wounded three
times. Suspected of trafficking arms and drugs, he left Croatia and
returned to Hungary in 1994, where he collaborated with neo-Nazi groups.
Two of his accomplices also have biographies that end with their
participation in extreme-right circles: Árpád Magyarosi, killed in the
assault, and Előd Tóásó, currently in detention, are both members of the
Székely Légió, a paramilitary organization that plans commando attacks
on Romania. Irishman Michael Martin Dwyer was a mercenary in the Balkans
and possibly met the leader of the group in Croatia.
In Bolivia, Rózsa was in contact with Jorge Mones Ruiz, head of
UnoAmerica, a fascist foundation linked to the CIA. According to EFE,
one of the detainees of the Santa Cruz conspiracy, Juan Carlos Gueder,
has already confessed to having met with Rózsa-Flores
http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2009/mayo/vier15/Valladares.html
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