Rodolfo Barra, the Argentine justice minister who resigned from the government after his involvement with an anti-Semitic group became public, has received a medal from President Carlos Menem as a “token of thanks” for his services.
At the start of a Cabinet meeting last week, Menem presented the medal to Barra, who, at the time of his resignation, had been overseeing the ongoing investigations of the 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy and the 1994 bombing of the Jewish community headquarters.
Barra was replaced by Deputy Justice Minister Elias Jassan, who is Jewish.
Barra belonged to the right-wing group UNES when he was a high school student, according to a story in the local weekly magazine Noticias.
UNES was a youth group affiliated with Tacuara, an organization responsible for hundreds of anti-Semitic actions, including attacks against synagogues, a violent riot in the Jewish neighborhood here and the murder of Alberto Alterman, a Jewish lawyer.
Barra then admitted to belonging to UNES, but denied that he was a Nazi or a racist.
Noticias later reported that the minister graduated to the extremist group Patria Grande after his stint with UNES.
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The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.