The Day

Last president of Argentina’s dictatorsh­ip dies at 90

- By ALMUDENA CALATRAVA

Buenos Aires, Argentina — Reynaldo Bignone, the last military president from Argentina’s 1976-1983 dictatorsh­ip, died Wednesday at age 90, the country’s state news agency said.

Bignone had been serving life sentence under house arrest for multiple human rights crimes. He was also serving time for the theft of babies from political prisoners who were later killed and for his role in an internatio­nal conspiracy to kidnap and forcibly disappear dissidents across internatio­nal borders known as Operation Condor.

He died at a military hospital in the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires, Telam news agency reported.

Bignone was named de facto president by the military junta after Argentina lost the 1982 war with Britain over the Falkland Islands. He was the last survivor of Argentina’s four military presidents and his death brings an end to one of the symbols of the darkest chapters in Argentina’s history.

Human rights groups estimate up to 30,000 people were kidnapped, tortured or killed during the dictatorsh­ip. Many were pregnant women who “disappeare­d” shortly after giving birth in torture centers. The baby thefts set Argentina’s brutal dictatorsh­ip apart from all the other juntas that ruled in South America at the time.

In 2011, Bignone received a 15-year-prison sentence for setting up a secret torture center inside a hospital during the 1976 military coup.

When he served as the junta’s president in 1982 and 1983, he ordered the destructio­n of evidence documentin­g illegal detentions and disappeara­nces, and he dictated a military amnesty for human rights violators before agreeing to transfer power to Raul Alfonsin, the democratic­ally elected president.

In a landmark trial, Bignone was one of 15 former military officials who were found guilty by a court in 2016 for their role in Operation Condor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States