Four years have passed since Juan Manuel Teixidó was run over by Pablo Ferreira, son of the former president of ANDE, Pedro Ferreira, in San Bernardino. The cyclist took the controversial statements of a Uruguayan businessman against Paraguay and fired large-caliber ammunition due to the prevailing injustice.
4 years of an episode that almost did not end in disgrace.
On the morning of January 6, 2019, the driver Pablo Ferreira, son of the then head of ANDE, Pedro Ferreira, ran over cyclist Juan Manuel Teixidó with his shot on General Jacinto Morínigo avenue (kilometer 48) of the city of San Bernardino.
KNOW MORE – Cyclist run over by drunk son of ANDE owner: “Thank God I’m not dead”
Teixidó suffered various injuries from the impact and when he fell from his bicycle to the pavement. ferreira was tested for alcotest, which gave a positive result with 0.27 mg/l, not without before hinder the police procedure with all the means at their disposal.
The affected cyclistthat until Today he has sequelae in one of the hands as a result of the mishap, used his social networks to return the matter to the table. In this sense, she endorsed the controversial statements by a Uruguayan businessman, who treated Paraguay as a “republiqueta”, alluding to the lack of seriousness and commitment to the law.
“I read the indignation of the people on social networks (…) And The truth is that I am also outraged, I am outraged because it is so. Why I live it in my own flesh. This is a country in which people can shit in Justice”, started Teixidó.
Teixidó recalled that a few days ago Pablo Ferreira had to face a second trial “for having run over me drunk.” He insisted that “this trial should no longer exist,” but the defendant’s defense chicaneado the case “for the eighth time.”
“This is a republic. It is not for you, nor for me. It is for the Pablo Ferreira of the life; that Yes, they can be drunk, they can run over people, they can delay their alcohol test for three hours, they shit in the courts, they laugh in your face. While you and I have another version of Paraguay, ”she said.
The man spoke of other aspects, including the health system and the prevailing informality, to insist that if one in Paraguay “does not have a father-in-law, a relative-in-law, a grandfather-in-law… you are at what God is great”.
“God is great, but unfortunately in this country injustice is gigantic,” he said.