Quién es el papá de Candela y por qué lo investiga la Justicia por la muerte de su hija

LA INVESTIGACIÓN AHORA RONDA EN TORNO A ÉL – Luego de que la pequeña Candela Rodríguez apareciera asesinada, las miradas de los investigadores se posaron sobre su propio padre Alfredo Rodríguez, quien purga prisión por un caso de piratería del asfalto.

Alfredo Laureiro Rodríguez es un nombre desconocido para la mayoría de la sociedad, pero no para los investigadores que indagan sobre la muerte de la pequeña Candela. Por caso, es su padre y se presume que el asesinato de la niña se trataría de en realidad de un mensaje contra él en el marco de un presunto “ajuste de cuentas”.
Su nombre fue puesto sobre el tapete por primera vez por este periódico el pasado 25 de agosto, cuando los medios aún no arriesgaban hipótesis sobre la desaparición de la niña.
Lo que pocos saben es que Rodríguez está detenido desde hace 14 meses por un caso de piratería del asfalto y recibió en las últimas horas un permiso especial del Servicio Penitenciario bonaerense para dejar la cárcel donde está alojado para reunirse con la madre de la niña asesinada.
Según NA, el fiscal bonaerense dijo que Rodríguez le transmitió que no tenía enemigos, que no le debía nada a nadie, pero así y todo dio un par de nombres de quienes podrían estar vinculados al hecho delictivo que terminó con la vida de su hija.
Lo cierto es que los investigadores no han creído del todo en la versión de Rodríguez y ahora se prevé que la indagación se centre en los enemigos del padre de la nena.
Las dudas están relacionadas con ciertas cuestiones que habrían sido calladas por la familia, como por ejemplo la existencia del papá de Candela, Alfredo Rodríguez, nombre que jamás han mencionado ni la madre ni la tía de la niña a lo largo de la instrucción del expediente de marras.
Otro dato que llama la atención es el que está vinculado con el llamado extorsivo que recibió la familia. Es que, por la forma de comunicarse, se estima que el supuesto asesino sería un conocido de estos.
Con estos datos a cuestas, la Justicia ha pedido un cruzamiento de llamadas, entre otras medidas. Desde ya, se puede anticipar que los resultados de esa medida arrojarán más de una sorpresa.

Fuente: Christian Sanz

‘They can’t stand to be told the truth,’ Aníbal Fernández over fraud rumours

Chief of Staff, Aníbal Fernández, considered as “finished” all discussion and fuzz triggered after the August 14 Primary election in which opposition leaders reported electoral fraud.

Likewise the minister accused the existence of “some sectors that did nothing but put bumps in the road”, and aimed to the press specifically, “They [opposition media] say so many lies, that then when someone comes face-to-face to tell them the truth, they simply can’t stand it.”

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Upper House preliminary approves human trafficking and rapists registry bills

The Upper House preliminary approved two bills regarding the fight against human trafficking and the implementation of a rapist registry. The bills seek to harden the penalties against those involved in human trafficking and to create a natiomal registry of genetic data that included information on those accused of rape. Now the bills be debated upon in the Lower House.

Earlier, the Upper House failed to debate on a single ballot system bill, which was backed by Peronist Adolfo Rodríguez Saá. Due to the fact the several single ballot system bills don’t have comittee’s ruling, they needed to vote of two third of the votes of Senators to be debated in todays’s session, but they failed to do so.

The bill to change current law 26.364, regarding human trafficking, obtained the ruling of Justice and Legal Affairs comittees on Tuesday. The bill seeks to force the State to guarantee legal and medical assistance to victims, and enable them to find jobs and qualification.

Likewise, Senators also debate a bill that seeks to create a national bank of genetic data linked to sexual assaults and rape, in order to facilitate the identification of those responsible of rapes.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Argentina Central Bank: Capital Flight Should Ease In 4Q

BUENOS AIRES (Dow Jones)–Central Bank of Argentina President Mercedes Marco del Pont said Wednesday that the recent jump in a measure of capital flight should start to ease in the fourth quarter after general elections.

«It accelerated in the third quarter. We expect this to be a trend that will probably manifest itself until October and slow down in the last quarter of the year,» she told reporters at the sidelines of a conference.

The formation of assets abroad by the nonfinancial private sector rose to $6.13 billion in the second quarter, from $3.68 billion in the first quarter and $2.24 billion in the fourth quarter of 2010, according to the central bank.

Argentines frequently turn to the U.S. dollar during an election year and 2011 is proving to be no exception.

Argentina President Cristina Kirchner is widely expected to win a second term in October after she received nearly 51% of the vote in a national primary election held earlier this month.

Kirchner’s interventionist economic policies have fostered high rates of economic growth and an expansion in industry, but at the cost of what most economists say is annual inflation above 20%.

The central bank regularly intervenes in the foreign-exchange markets to engineer a gradual depreciation of the peso versus the dollar to control inflation and help exporters.

The peso was quoted on the MAE local foreign-exchange wholesale market closing at ARS4.1995 per dollar on Wednesday, bringing its year-to-date loss versus the dollar to 5.3%. The government has pledged an average exchange rate of around ARS4.10 per dollar in 2011.

But double-digit gains in consumer prices have caused the peso to appreciate in inflation-adjusted terms against the greenback. At the same time, unions have won annual salary increases that are thought to exceed inflation.

Goldman Sachs expects that the 25% increase in Argentina’s minimum wage announced last week likely will contribute to consumer-price inflation of around 20% in 2012 and put pressure on the authorities to depreciate the peso at a faster pace after the election.

The central bank will continue its managed float of the peso after October to dispel any doubts «that following the elections there will be an exchange-rate adjustment, which isn’t going to happen,» Marco del Pont said.

«The exchange rate today is competitive in terms of the country’s [international] insertion as an exporter» of industrial goods, she added.

Source: online.wsj.com

Argentina Debates Foreign Land Buys

BUENOS AIRES—Argentina’s Congress is gearing up for a debate on a bill to limit the amount of farmland foreigners can buy, amid a surge of interest in land deals triggered by rising food prices.

The proposal by President Cristina Kirchner would bar individual foreigners from owning more than 2,500 acres and would limit aggregate foreign ownership to 20% of Argentina’s total rural land. President Kirchner has touted the bill as her top legislative priority for this fast-growing agrarian economy, which was the world’s second-largest corn exporter and third-largest soybean exporter last year.

A lower house committee slated a hearing to discuss the bill on Wednesday, but legislators say it could take time to iron out the differences between the government’s plan and 14 previously submitted bills regulating foreign land acquisition. There aren’t firm statistics on foreign land holdings in Argentina, but a study by a think tank affiliated with the conservative Republican Proposal party estimated that foreigners hold between 3.4% and 9.9% of total rural land.

For years, Argentine nationalists and indigenous rights groups have raised concerns about purchases of large tracts in the southern Patagonia region by wealthy foreigners, including media mogul Ted Turner, clothing entrepreneur Douglas Tompkins and the Benetton Group.

But eyebrows are now being raised over recent deals in several regions that are focused on ensuring food security for foreign governments amid rising commodity prices. For instance, the government of the Rio Negro province recently announced a deal to lease as much as 800,000 acres to China’s state-run Heilongjiang Beidahuang Nongken Group. The provincial government said the Chinese have pledged to invest $1.5 billion in irrigation and other infrastructure, and plan to export food to China.

Details of the plan are still fuzzy, and it has caused controversy, in part because the province doesn’t own all of the land involved, says Maria Magdalena Odarda, a provincial congresswoman, who has led opposition to the proposal. In an interview, she said many growers are resistant to shifting from cultivating fruit to soybeans, as the Chinese want them to do. The local government says the deal will bring badly needed investment to the region and create jobs. It didn’t respond to a request for further comment on the deal.

Earlier this year, the government of the northern province of Chaco announced a deal with Saudi Arabian investors to lease up to 500,000 acres for farming. Gov. Jorge Capitanich said the Saudis will initially invest $400 million to upgrade infrastructure, providing «an increase in the future value of the land and the state patrimony.»

Mrs. Kirchner has indicated that her law wouldn’t be applied retroactively, meaning that current investments wouldn’t be affected. One of the provisions of her proposal would be to create a unified registry of land ownership to define who owns what land. Records are now scattered among provincial and local land offices.

The range of land deals underscores the complexity of Congress’s challenge in crafting the bill, says Nieves Pascuzzi, an economist at the Argentine Rural Society, a group representing agrarian interests here. She said legislators need to iron out whether they intend to regulate only land purchases or also land leasing and other arrangements. The draft proposal itself also isn’t clear about whether restrictions would apply to all foreign investments, or only those in which foreigners hold a majority stake, she said. Finally, Congress needs to make allowances for the diversity of agrarian investments, ranging from sprawling sheep ranches in Patagonia to smaller soybean farms on the pampas.

Last year in neighboring Brazil, there was an immediate chilling effect on the rural land market when the government imposed limitations on foreign land ownership, said Kory Melby, a Minnesotan who does agrarian consulting from the western Brazilian town of Goiânia. «It has inhibited a lot of land deals in the last 12 months and slowed things down,» he said.

Latin America’s more restrictive posture to land purchases stands as a contrast to the position of Africa, which has been offering attractive longterm leases and tax incentives to Chinese and Arab investors, said Irma Mosquera, a specialist in law and investment at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands.

«I think Africa is where Latin America was 20 years ago in saying, ‘We need foreign investment. We are opening to the market.’ » Ms. Mosquera said. «In Latin America, governments are no longer so willing to encourage investment without conditions.»

Source: online.wsj.com

Argentina Sees More Companies Tapping Local Bourse In ’12

BUENOS AIRES (Dow Jones)–Argentina’s Industry Ministry expects more small companies to raise money on the local capital market next year following an initial public offering by a foods company earlier this month.

«Since early 2011 [the ministry] has been working to bring small firms to the market. It’s expected that in the first quarter of 2012, about 20 companies will be in a position to go to the bourse,» Industry Minister Debora Giorgi told Dow Jones Newswires in an emailed statement Wednesday.

Those listings will probably be a mix of shares and debt securities, though bonds will likely account for most of the volume, she said.

Giorgi said the ministry is currently working with companies in the auto parts, agriculture, chemicals and pharmaceutical sectors.

Ovoprot Internacional SA (OVOP.BA), a producer of egg products, sold 3.3 million shares for about 30 million pesos ($7.1 million) on the Buenos Aires Stock Exchange last week.

The Fondo Comun de Inversiones, a fund set up by the Industry Ministry and the national pension agency, Anses, to invest in securities sold by small- and medium-size manufacturing companies, purchased Ovoprot shares.

Today, the fund has more than ARS100 million in assets under management, according to the ministry.

«Our ministry accompanies small- and medium-size firms through the entire process of going to the capital markets, as was the case with Ovoprot,» the minister said.

The volume of corporate bonds and asset-backed securities sold on the local capital market more than doubled to ARS15.38 billion during the first half of 2011 as a booming economy spurred companies to seek financing.

But IPOs have been few and far between in the last decade due in part to the lack of domestic investors and the reluctance of closely held firms to open their books to outsiders.

In the last 12 months, three companies, including Ovoprot and real-estate company TGLT SA (TGLT.BA), have listed shares through an IPO.

-By Ken Parks, Dow Jones Newswires; 54-11-4103-6740, ken.parks@dowjones.com

Source: online.wsj.com

Contested polling station authorities to be replaced In October, Gov’t confirms

The national Government announced that the National Electoral Justice decided to replace those polling station authorities that made mistakes during the primary elections vote count on August 14th.

Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo told State run news agency télam that the National Electoral Justice will replace those authorities in whose polling stations irregularities were detected.

Randazzo’s announcement is expected to be confirmed by a resolution signed by the judges of the National Electoral Board. Those polling station authorities that did not respect the requirements of the Electoral Code for the drawing up of the telegrams that are sent through the Correo Argentino post from schools to courts will be replaced.

A few days after the primaries, several opposition leaders that those polling station authorities that committed mistakes are penalized. The Government sidestepped the designation of polling station authorities, and the Judiciary clarified that the assignation of the authorities is done with the Supreme Court’s computer programme.

La Plata judge Manuel Blanco admitted that there were “serious irregularities during the provisional vote count but “defended the polling stations authorities’ assignment. “If the authorities are randomly and impartially assigned, and they don’t fulfill their duties and the Correo Argentino designates other kind of people neither the Supreme Court’s system nor the Judiciary branch I belong to are to blame,” Blanco stated.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald