Arturo Mathov

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Arturo Mathov (born June 21, 1915 in Buenos Aires ; † November 1989 ibid) was an Argentine politician , vice president of parliament and diplomat .

Arturo Mathov was the son of Esther Spivakosky de Mathov (1890–1950) and José Mathov (1889–1964). In 1949 his son Enrique Mathov was born.

Career

From early youth he was a member of the Unión Cívica Radical del Pueblo (UCRP). Within the Unión Cívica Radical del Pueblo , he belonged to the anti-peronist wing. After the assassination attempt on the Plaza da Mayo on April 15, 1953, he and Roque Carranza were arrested by the Policía Federal Argentina , accused of perpetration and tortured.

On November 20, 1956, Arturo Mathov claimed at a rally in the Buenos Aires Once de Septiembre train station that there were 21 generals with National Socialist or fascist tendencies who had formed a kind of lodge and should be viewed as conspirators. Whereupon President Pedro Eugenio Aramburu in December 1956 Juan Bautista Loza (born June 20, 1906 in Santiago del Estero , † August 20, 1999 in Buenos Aires), the commander in chief of the army, Lieutenant General Francisco José Zerda (born June 20, 1902 in the Ciudad de Salta, son of Carmen Urey and Angel Mariano Zerda) and Francisco Antonio Imaz (born June 13, 1906, † 1993) retired .

From 1960 to 1964 Arturo Mathov was a member of the Buenos Aires constituency in the Argentine National Congress . During this legislative period he was Vice President of Parliament. During this legislative period, Arturo Frondizi's reign and overthrow fell from 1958 to 1962. From October 12, 1963 to June 28, 1966, in the reign of Arturo Umberto Illia , he was ambassador to Bogotá .

predecessor Office successor
José Rodolfo Saravia Ambassador of Argentina in Bogotá
October 12, 1963 to June 28, 1966
Miguel Angel Espeche

Individual evidence

  1. DE SECRETARIO DE SEGURIDAD AL BANQUILLO DE ACUSADOS, Contradicciones de un político, El ex secretario de Seguridad Interior de la Alianza Enrique Mathov, [1] Enrique Mathov: 4 años y 9 meses de prisión e inhabilitación especial para ejercer, [2 para ejercer ]
  2. el historiador y funcionario radical Félix Luna, afirma en su libro Perón y su tiempo que Carranza fue uno de los responsables del atentado terrorista: [3]
  3. Rosendo Fraga, Rodolfo Pandolfi, Aramburu: La Biografía, Vergara, Grupo Zeta, 2005 - 411 pp., P. 228 ; Daniel Mazzei, Bajo el poder de la caballería: El ejército argentino (1962–1973), [4]