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Documents of the Nazi documents in Argentina’s top court: NPR

Documents that were discovered from wooden boxes in the basement of the Supreme Court in Argentina included Nazi notebooks, photos and postcards.

Documents that were discovered from wooden boxes in the basement of the Supreme Court in Argentina included Nazi notebooks, photos and postcards.

Ulan/Pool/Latin America news agency about Reuters


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It was only by chance that a cache with secret Nazi documents in the Second World War was recently found in the basement of Argentina’s upper court.

Justice officials who moved the court archives to a new museum met the boxes of the German government records by chance, the Supreme Court said on Monday.

Inside there were stacks of Nazi papers, including material that “the ideology of Adolf Hitler in Argentina is supposed to consolidate and consolidate,” said the court. The content of the Nazicists is now examined and inventorized by the decision of the President of the Supreme Court of Horacio Rosatti.

According to the court, in 1941 in Argentina on board the Japanese steamer Nan-A-Maru in Argentina in Argentina.

The then German diplomatic mission said that the boxes contained the personal effects of its members, but Argentine customs officials warned the Foreign Minister that the neutrality of Argentina could threaten the packages into the country without inspection in World War II.

When some Argentine officials accidentally opened five boxes, they found Nazispropaganda, postcards, photographs and thousands of notebooks from the national socialist company organization for German workers abroad and the German union.

During the official opening of the Naziists confiscated by Argentina during the official opening of Argentina, who were recently discovered by the judicial officers in the state's head of the state.

During the official opening of the Naziists confiscated by Argentina during the official opening of Argentina, who were recently discovered by the judicial officers in the state’s head of the state.

Ulan/Pool/Latin America news agency about Reuters


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Ulan/Pool/Latin America news agency about Reuters

A federal judge ordered that the freight was confiscated and the matter referred to the Supreme Court of Argentina. In his announcement this week, the court did not say why the boxes had remained unopened for so long.

On Friday, Rosatti and other Argentine officials, including representatives of the Buenos Aires Holocaust Museum, were present for the official opening of the boxes.

The content is now under the police station while scanning, digitized and checked. Officials said they would like to see what information contains the materials about the Holocaust and other aspects of the regime, such as the “global Nazi money path”.

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