Thursday, April 10, 2008

Female Lengerie Wrestling

photo exhibition opens with ABN reporters on events of 11-A AN

photographic work displayed by the photographers of the Bolivarian News Agency (ABN) for the April 11, 2002 was published by the Ministry of People's Power for Interior Relations and Justice (MIJ), through an exhibition called Pueblo Bravo Week, an event which opened Wednesday and will run until 30 April.

The authorship of the sample corresponds to the photographer Wendy Olivo, Maikel Torcatt, Enrique Hernandez, Francisco Batista and Angel Corao, who provided their professional services to ABN, by then called Venpres, when there was a coup in 24 hours against the current government of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, and the subsequent replacement of it in power. Here the summary


Click the magnifying glass to read more:


    Deputy Minister of the Interior, Tamara Duque, inaugurated the exhibition at the headquarters of that office, in Caracas, noting that this material has been part of the evidence contained in court that the prosecution began around the events of April 2002, after investigations by the prosecutor Danilo Anderson.

    In this sense, the reporter Wendy Olivo, who managed to take about 200 pictures by hiding the camera in a backpack, said the first person to whom she recorded her material was to Chavez: "Remember that after the coup began questioning in the National Assembly (AN), which were 33 and that among these was that of President. I gave my photos to him so he used them in his questioning. "

    With photographs of Olivo, Torcatt, Hernandez, Batista and Cora, the prosecution managed to identify eight members of the Metropolitan Police (PM), then led by the commissioners Henry Vivas, Iván Simonovis and Lázaro Forero, who were captured lenses by firing their weapons against civilians.

    means left
    videos no-bush

0 comments:

Post a Comment