Eduardo Feinmann tamed the Kukas journalists who continue to defend the Iranian regime
Feinmman spoke of the journalists who interviewed Mohsen Rabbani, one of the main defendants accused of the attack on AMIA.
porEditorial Team
Argentina
The A24 driver exploded on the air after a controversial interview conducted on a streaming channel with Mohsen Rabbani, one of those accused of the attack on AMIA.
Journalist Eduardo Feinmann made a strong statement against the Kukas from a streaming during his time with Pablo Rossi on A24. The driver reacted with indignation when analyzing an interview broadcast by the streaming channel AZZ, where a group of journalists spoke with Mohsen Rabbani, one of the main accused of the attack on AMIA in 1994
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The journalist harshly questioned the tone of the interview and accused the journalists of treating with excessive cordiality a figure identified by the Argentine justice system as part of the framework that carried out the terrorist attack that left 85 dead and hundreds injured
.
“Can you imagine these journalists interviewing Hitler? Because these guys are that, these guys from Iran,” Feinmann launched at the beginning of his editorial, visibly outraged by
the situation.
During his analysis, the driver argued that the interview avoided addressing the central issues related to the attack on AMIA and, instead, included political questions related to current Argentinian affairs.
“These guys and these mines that were sitting there, Mohsen Rabbani needed to drink it. They pampered him between cotton balls,” he said.
According to Feinmann, the role of journalism in such interviews should be to confront questions related to the facts investigated
by the Justice.
“Instead of asking him 'tell me one thing, why did they plant a bomb and kill 85 people at AMIA? ' , they asked him what he thought of the arrest of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
,” he criticized.
The journalist also recalled that, according to various judicial investigations, the Hezbollah group appears to be linked to the terrorist attack that occurred in Buenos Aires.
In his editorial, Feinmann also linked the interview to the historic political controversy surrounding the memorandum with Iran, signed during the administration of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and which generated a strong institutional debate in the country.
“Of course, they pamper him and ask him that because it was precisely these guys who signed the memorandum with Cristina to give them impunity,” he said.
For the driver, the interview represents a lack of respect for the victims of the terrorist attacks that Argentina suffered in the nineties.
“You have no idea how much pain they cause to the victims of the two attacks. These guys planted two bombs in Argentina, one at the Israeli Embassy and the other at AMIA,” he said