Julio César Lupinacci Gabriel was a
Uruguayan diplomat.
Life
in 1953 he taught at the military and maritime school.
In 1962 he joined the Foreign Service, was a legal adviser, director, secretary of state in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Professor for
Public Law.
In 1976, he was an ambassador to
Caracas (Venezuela).
In Montevideo, the teacher Elena Quintero was arrested on June 26, 1976, and taken to torture center "300 Carlos".
On the pretext of an appointment, Elena Quinteros succeeded in arriving at the wall of the Venezuelan Embassy in Montevideo in an exterritorial area, communicating her name to the embassy staff, and praying for asylum. Her guards tore her off the wall, visibly breaking her leg, and then she was
disappeared.
On the grounds of violating the sovereignty of the Venezuelan Embassy in Montevideo, the government in
Caracas broke its diplomatic relations with the government in Montevideo on July 5, 1976.
Lupinacci was the co-author of a memorandum on the behavior of the Uruguayan government regarding the disappearance of the teacher Elena Quinteros.[1]
From 1985 to 1987, he was Permanent Representative of the Government of Uruguay to the
Headquarters of the United Nations in New York City.
In 1985, he chaired the Uruguayan delegation to the third conference on the
Convention on the Law of the Sea and was Secretary-General of the fifth session of the Foreign Ministers in Geneva on the
Uruguay Round[2]
From 1991 to 1993, he was an ambassador in Rome and at the same time accredited to the government in
Valletta(
Malta).[3]
In 1993, he was ambassador to Italy and sent a photo of the by the Chilean justice searched Chilean chemist Eugenio Berríos, which laid a track to his alleged residence
Milan. While Berríos was already dead in Uruguay for three months. He was found dead in Ururguay in 1995, after being guarded and abducted by Uruguayan soldiers, as the Chilean courts were able to establish.[4]
On 18 May 1999, he was appointed ambassador to
Buenos Aires, where he was accredited from 7 July 1999 to 9 May 2000.