Ricardo Olivera
Ricardo Olivera (born June 10, 1886 in Mercedes , Buenos Aires Province , † 1949 ) was an Argentine diplomat .
He was the son of Josefa Esquivel and Teódulo Olivera
Life
Ricardo Olivera studied law at the Universidad de Buenos Aires , the Sorbonne and the Collège de France . In 1903 he founded the nationalist magazine Ideas with Manuel Gálvez . A copy of Directive 11/1938 , which was received in Stockholm until Olivera's term of office, has been preserved.
When the financing of the NSDAP's organizational structure through funds from the Winter Relief Organization was discovered in Argentina , Ernst von Weizsäcker appointed Olivera to the Foreign Office. In January 1943 Olivera was summoned by the German authorities, which had exercised their regime in southern France since 1942. He was proposed to repatriate 15 Argentine Jews who were still living in France within the next three months.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ronald Hilton, Who's Who in Latin America: Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru; Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruquay, 1971, p. 471
- ↑ Götz Aly , The persecution and murder of European Jews by National Socialist Germany 1933-1945 p. 218, FN3
- ^ Ronald C. Newton, The "Nazi menace" in Argentina, 1931-1947
- ↑ Uki Goñi , The real Odessa: how Perón brought the Nazi war criminals to Argentina, 2002, 382 pp.
predecessor | Office | successor |
---|---|---|
Jorge Reyes Carlos Alberto Alcorta |
Ambassador of Argentina in Stockholm 31 Mar. 1916 to July 4, 1918 1936 to 1938 |
Jacobo F. Peuser Carlos Guillermo Miguens Diehl |
Paulino Llambí Campbell |
Argentine Ambassador to Mexico City from 1938 to 1939 |
Juan G. Valenzuela |
Eduardo Labougle Carranza |
Argentine ambassador in Berlin from 1939 to 1942 |
Luis Santiago Luti |
Miguel Ángel Cárcano | Argentine Chargé d'Affaires in Vichy 1942 to March 18, 1943 |
Luis Ureta Sáenz Peña |
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Olivera, Ricardo |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Argentine ambassador |
DATE OF BIRTH | June 10, 1886 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Mercedes , Buenos Aires |
DATE OF DEATH | 1949 |