
Bullrich anticipated sentences of up to 20 years in prison for those detained in Congress.
With the implementation of the new Anti-Mafia Law, the arrested terrorists face several years in prison.
Today Wednesday, in front of the Congress, a new wave of violence was unleashed by far-left groups that attacked the Security Forces, causing riots in downtown Buenos Aires.
Hours later, a part of the Kirchnerist activists went to Plaza de Mayo, where they used the emblematic commemorative stones of the COVID-19 victims to throw them against the Casa Rosada.
In these incidents, several civilians, unrelated to the protest, as well as police officers, were injured, highlighting the violence with which the left-wing sectors operate.
According to official sources, this day of chaos caused a million-dollar expense for the State, with damages estimated to reach 275 million pesos.

The Minister of National Security, Patricia Bullrich, made a strong statement public after the arrest of more than a hundred criminals who unleashed chaos around the Congress.
On her social media, Bullrich denounced the violence and destruction of property orchestrated by the Kirchnerists, activists of left-wing political groups, and hooligans who have undoubtedly operated for years with total impunity.
"The violent detainees today are the darkest face of the decay we have decided to leave behind with Javier Milei's government. These terrorist groups, led by the left and their criminal partners, have terrorized society for too long," expressed Bullrich, who described the detainees as "activists of criminal organizations and hooligans."

With the implementation of the new Anti-Mafia Law, the arrested terrorists face sentences that can reach up to 20 years in prison, marking the end of an era of coercion, extortion, and the business of fear that the left and its allies maintained for decades.
"We are going to dismantle these criminal structures that only bring violence and disorder to the nation," stated the minister, making it clear that the law will now prevail over the mafias that have sown chaos in the country.
In an act of firmness, Bullrich concluded: "In Argentina, the law rules, not the hooligans, nor the left." She joined her message with a video showing a protester assaulting a police officer.
With this clear message, the minister reaffirms Milei's administration's commitment to security, order, and justice, against those who seek to destabilize the country.
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