makes a speech about the protests in Jujuy. National minister
Gabriel Katopodis wrote on
Twitter that the national government deplores the repression against peaceful demonstrators. Morales mocked the term "peaceful" and detailed the criminal records of a number of detained demonstrators, as well as posting a video of them throwing rocks at the police. Their criminal record included theft, threats, and injuries to other people and others. As the protests got worse, Morales blamed president
Alberto Fernández and vice president
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who both replied that Morales was the one to blame. Presidential candidate
Javier Milei opined instead that Morales had been too permissive and that the actions of the protests should have been halted long before they turned into vandalism. Morales said that the protests were encouraged by the national government to distract from the scandal over the murder of
Cecilia Strzyzowski in
Chaco. He said that
La Cámpora had brought two hundred protesters from other provinces and that the president had sided in the past with
Milagro Sala. National minister of security
Aníbal Fernández said that it was a lie and refused to send the national police to the conflict because the provincial police would already be dealing with it. This became part of a judiciary case against the detained protesters for assault, resistance to authority, injuring, aggravated damage, fire, and the attack to the legislature. Some of those protesters were from
Buenos Aires, and the investigation of their cell phones confirmed that they were paid $5,000 to take part in the protest and that they were instructed to use hoods and surgical masks to conceal their identities. A pair of protesters carried
Arg$1,000,000 in banknotes, stored in a backpack, and some of them were identified as members of
HIJOS and work unions. Kirchnerite diplomats negotiated a swift reaction of the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), who described abuses and urged to respect the freedom of speech, the standards in the use of the force, and political dialogue that respects union rights and indigenous groups. The statement was criticized by diplomats from
Juntos por el Cambio who said that it was based on biased and unchecked sources and that the IACHR has not been present in Jujuy during the events. Diplomat Brian Schapira pointed out that the text cites sources such as the "Consejo Federal de Mecanismos Locales para la Prevención de la Tortura", the "Defensoría de los Derechos de las Niñas, Niños y Adolescentes" and a news article from
Telam. According to Schapira, all those organizations and news agencies are blatantly not neutral and biased towards the government. National deputy
Gisela Marziotta, from the
Frente de Todos proposed a bill to declare the
federal intervention of Jujuy, which would remove the authorities from the three local powers and replace them with people sent by the national government to restore order. This was immediately rejected by politicians from
Juntos por el Cambio. The president gave a conference and announced that he had instructed
Martín Soria, minister of justice, to denounce the amendment to the constitution of Jujuy as unconstitutional. ==References==