Guillermo Patricio Kelly

Argentine politician
Guillermo Patricio Kelly
Born1921
Avellaneda, Argentina
DiedJuly 1, 2005(2005-07-01) (aged 83–84)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Occupation(s)Politician, activist
Known forFormer leader of the Nationalist Liberation Alliance
Kidnapping victim

Guillermo Patricio Kelly (b. Avellaneda, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1921 – d. Buenos Aires, July 1, 2005) was a politician and activist, the leader of the Nationalist Liberation Alliance (ALN) of Argentina from 1953 to 1955.[1] He led the party to drop its former antisemitism. Arrested after the military coup in 1955, Kelly escaped and fled the country. He later returned to Argentina and became active again, this time in left-wing politics.

Leader of the ALN

Kelly sought to move the ALN from its antisemitic past. He met with Israel's ambassador to Argentina, Dr. Arie Kubovy, and told him that the ALN had forsworn antisemitism.[2] In 1954, antisemitism was dropped from the party platform.[3]

Kelly was arrested for having used a forged passport after the 1955 anti-Peronist Revolución Libertadora, a coup d'état by the military. He escaped and fled the country in 1957. Kelly later turned to left-wing radicalism.[4]

He returned to the country. On 24 August 1983, Kelly was kidnapped and released some hours later. Aníbal Gordon, a suspected member of Triple A, a right-wing death squad founded in 1973 by the Perón government, was charged with Kelly's kidnapping and in 1985 convicted of three other murders during the early 1970s.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Alberto Ciria. Partidos y poder en la Argentina moderna (1930-1946). English translation. Albany, New York, USA: State University of New York, 1974. Pp. 68.
  2. ^ Benno Varon. Professions of a Lucky Jew, Cranbury, New Jersey; London;, Ontario, Canada: Cornwall Books, 1992. p. 206
  3. ^ Raanan Rein. Argentina, Israel, and the Jews: Perón, the Eichmann Capture and After, University Press of Maryland, 2003. Pp. 68.
  4. ^ Swiss Review of World Affairs, Volumes 25-28. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 1975. p. 8.
  5. ^ “Quién fue Aníbal Gordon” (Who was Anibal Gordon?) Archived 2009-05-21 at the Wayback Machine, article in Clarin, 14 October 1999 (in Spanish)
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