Oh, el exotismo de tu secularización
con fines de lucro y grandeza personal, te permite esclavizar a una comunidad,
te da poder para manipular al pueblo usando los medios de comunicación, te da la libertad de esconder
crímenes atroces. Más ahora cuando te denunciamos no encuentras que hacer con todas esas
libertades de conducta, conciencia, y doctrina del réprobo ante el altísimo.
-
Nadir Siguencia
Between Heaven and Hell: Imagining the Apocalypse in Northern Renaissance Art... Peter Brueghel: demuestra
en su obra la “Caída
de los Ángeles Rebeldes” lo acontecido través de las edades, el miedo a ser condenados
en la gran tribulación. “Officer
charged with G20 assault blogged about humanitarian mission to El Salvador” Padrecito? Those tenebrosos assassins are
yours friends?
- Elisabeth H.Elys; traerá en su obra de arte la historia de un “padrecito con sonrisa insidiosa” quien con tenebrosos criminales, Órdenes honorificas y oraciones fúnebres está ayudando las “Calamidades perpetradas por el sistema.”
“Officer
charged with G20 assault blogged about humanitarian mission to El Salvador” Padrecito? These assassins are
yours friends?
This past fall, as Ontario's police
watchdog unsuccessfully tried to identify officers accused of roughing up a G20
protester, Constable Babak Andalib-Goortani was on a humanitarian mission
delivering de-commissioned ambulances to El Salvador.
The 30-year-old policeman was charged
Tuesday, after a second probe by the Special Investigations Unit, with
assaulting Adam Nobody during the summit last June.
More related to this
story
- Lone policeman identifies colleague charged with assault in G20 arrest
- Toronto police officer charged with assault in alleged G20 protester beating
- How a man named Nobody became the battered face of G20 protests
Watch video
In pictures
So far, few details on his life and
career have emerged. A travel blog, however, documents his participation in the
Caravan of Hope, in which a crew of 19 drove seven ambulances thousands of
kilometres from Toronto to Central America, passing through the United States
and Mexico on the way.
Rev.
Hernan Astudillo, who organizes the effort, said the officer navigated
for the group. He described him as quiet, respectful and generous, with a
penchant for buying food to share. He also went by "Bob" or
"Bobby," he said.
"I could see he was a good man with a good heart," Father
Astudillo said.
In his blog, peppered with detailed descriptions of the mountains of
Mexico, Constable Andalib-Goortani writes fondly of people met along the way.
"Poverty
is rampant along the countryside but the people still have smiles on their
faces," he writes in a Nov. 6 post. "Much is to be learned here for
us who are so fortunate with our possessions and services provided to us in our
hometowns."
He
expresses exasperation with some Mexican officials who tried to squeeze money
out of travellers, but writes of the friendliness of the locals, including two
police officers who were amazed his group had driven all the way from Canada.
At the end of the trip, the crew had dinner with El Salvador's
vice-president, Father Astudillo said. The politician presented an award of
recognition for the city of Toronto, which Constable Andalib-Goortani and a
fellow officer accepted, later to be passed on to city council.
On Wednesday, the officer went to
the SIU offices in a Toronto suburb to formally collect a summons to appear in
court Jan. 24.
Jimmy Lee, his lawyer, confirmed that his client had
worked as a front-line patrol officer, responding to emergency calls at
suburban 31 division.
The officer's father and wife did
not respond to requests for comment; a Richmond Hill condominium owned by him
did not appear to have a listed phone number.
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