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The discovery came as workers were clearing out the area in preparation for transferring the archives to a newly-established museum, the court said in a statement on Monday.

The 83 boxes were sent by the German embassy in Japan's capital Tokyo to Argentina in June 1941 on board the Japanese steamship "Nan-a-Maru", the court statement said.

At the time, German diplomats in Argentina claimed they contained personal effects, but the shipment was held up by customs and became the subject of a probe by a special commission on "anti-Argentine activities". A judge later ordered the seizure of the materials, and the matter ended up before the Supreme Court, which took possession of the crates.

About 84 years later, upon opening one of the boxes, the court identified material "intended to consolidate and propagate the N*zi ideology in Argentina during the Second World War".

The rest of the boxes were opened last Friday in the presence of the chief rabbi of the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) and officials of the Buenos Aires Holocaust Museum.

Opened in front of a rabbi, 😆 now I definitely know its fake.

The court has transferred the boxes to a room

equipped with extra security measures and invited the Holocaust Museum in Buenos Aires to participate in their preservation and inventory.

Sure, Bob.
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Glad nobody was hurt in Palm Springs. But I don't give a shit about some cry baby pussy who compared being born to the equivalent of raping an unconscious woman.
He's dead.
Good.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Did we get lucky?
Timeliness change.
N I G H T S H I F T ✨️
NO TAX ON TIPS PASSES SENATE
100-0
Gm frens
Everyone is mad.
This is great 🐸
Lol.
Lmao even.
Another great meeting exposing evil to the world.
Media is too big
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Bloodland — Jonathan Holmes’ investigation into the violence, poverty and politics that define 21st century South Africa — aired on Foreign Correspondent on 31 July 2018.

Reporter Jonathan Holmes from ABC news visited South Africa, and confirmed the situation and brutality of the killings.