Alvarado confirms he received Steinert security plan

Interior Minister Claudio Alvarado stated he received the national security plan prepared by former Minister Trinidad Steinert. Current Security Minister Martín Arrau said he used the document as a base for his presentation.

Alvarado stated Wednesday at La Moneda that on Tuesday, June 2, Minister Martín Arrau presented the plan’s axes in the Senate, including prevention, territory recovery, and legal initiatives. He confirmed receiving and reading the document. Arrau said Thursday morning that Steinert delivered a “bastante acabado” plan used as the base for the one presented. He noted he does not know why it was not made official earlier. Former Undersecretary Ana Victoria Quintana had indicated the plan existed and was sent to the Interior Ministry. Alvarado clarified that Steinert did not require authorization to present it.

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Claudio Alvarado defending cabinet changes at a press conference
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Alvarado defends Kast cabinet change and urges opposition to build agreements

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New Interior and Segegob biminister Claudio Alvarado defended the May 19 cabinet adjustment driven by President José Antonio Kast. He highlighted the need to strengthen the security agenda and improve government coordination.

Security Minister Trinidad Steinert denied before the Senate Security Committee any involvement in the exit of PDI's former Intelligence subdirector, Consuelo Peña, and dismissed rumors of a romantic relationship with a subprefect. Steinert expressed discomfort over reports linking her time as regional prosecutor in Tarapacá to the decision. She also presented the government's Integral Public Security Plan.

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Public Security Minister Martín Arrau confirmed the government will present a national security strategy in the Senate in the coming days.

President José Antonio Kast removed Trinidad Steinert from the Public Security Ministry and Mara Sedini from the government spokesperson role this week. Polls by Cadem and Descifra show between 87% and 88% of respondents approve the cabinet adjustment.

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Chile's Ministry of Public Security has expanded its complaint against three UACh students charged in the April attack on Science Minister Ximena Lincolao, invoking the State Security Law—a move declared admissible by a judge amid debates over the ministry's authority.

President José Antonio Kast said in his first radio interview from La Moneda that exceptions will be evaluated case by case in the 3% budget cuts ordered by Hacienda to ministries. He confirmed analyzing salary reductions for executive authorities amid the fuel price crisis. He also backed questioned ministers and defended his emergency government's priorities.

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Security Minister Trinidad Steinert led a migration operation on Friday in La Vega Central, Recoleta, alongside PDI Director Eduardo Cerna. Seventy-five PDI officers and Carabineros checked 100 foreigners. Thirty were transferred for administrative violations, and three were arrested on pending warrants.

 

 

 

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