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Last week the Radical (Centrist) Party, Argentina's biggest, landed a haymaker. From all over the country, delegates converged upon Nueve de Julio, 200 miles from Buenos Aires. Party conventions had long been forbidden, but Police Chief Filomeno Velazco's strong men did not interfere with this one. Admiral Alberto Teisaire, Acting Minister of the Interior, had assured Big Boss Juan Perón that the Radicals would support, or at least not oppose, the Government. The Admiral's own brother, Eduardo, was one of the leaders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: Elections? | 7/16/1945 | See Source »

...Farrell and Vice President Peron wanted the support of the United Nations, and (as a price) were willing to restore to the Argentine people some of their democratic liberties. But spotted through their administration were other powerful politicians who felt that to yield would be fatal. Most notorious were Filomeno Velazco, chief of police, and General Juan Pistarini, Minister of Public Works. Tenaciously, they and their fellows clung to power, preventing the Government's concessions from having much effect. Said Pistarini (according to Vanguardia): "We shall relinquish the Government when frogs grow hair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: Strategic Concession | 6/25/1945 | See Source »

...Government of President Edelmiro Farrell and Vice President Juan Domingo Peron still controlled the powerful Army and the Gestapo-like Federal Police, trained by Buenos Aires Police Chief Filomeno Velazco, an expert in torture. If it chose to defy both popular hatred and world displeasure, it might hold out indefinitely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: Report on Terror | 6/11/1945 | See Source »

Last March, Police Chief Colonel Filomeno Velazco suspected Aguirre Cámara of being editor of the famous underground newspaper Himno National (National Anthem). Arrested and imprisoned, Aguirre Cámara won his liberty by promising not to attack the Government without telling the police beforehand. Last month, astonished Police Chief Velazco got Aguirre Cámara's warning. Soon, wrote the cheeky ex-deputy, he would publish a scathing pamphlet. He would print it in Argentina. He would remain in the country "until I am convinced that the people do not want to be saved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: Catch Me! | 12/11/1944 | See Source »

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