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GUEST VOICE: DAY OF REMEMBRANC­E FOR TRUTH AND JUSTICE|

42 YEARS ON, THE SEARCH FOR JUSTICE CONTINUES|

- BY VERÓNICA TORRAS|

No anniversar­y of March 24, 1976, is the same as the one before it. This year is no exception. On this year’s anniversar­y we will look back and recall the gathering that took place on May 10 last year, when half a million people flooded the Plaza de Mayo. Those gathered were sending a message to the country’s judges, a message that said they do not want to live in fear at the prospect of running into a human rights violator on the streets of Argentina. Human rights groups had called the protest in response to a Supreme Court decision to apply reductions to prison sentences (a method known as ‘2x1’), like the ones handed down to Luis Muiña, who was convicted of kidnapping and torturing workers from the Posadas Hospital during the last dictatorsh­ip. The size of the march that day highlighte­d the broad social consensus in favour of the legal processes that have addressed the human rights crimes that were committed systematic­ally by the nation’s Armed Forces and security forces –under the former’s control – beginning with the implementa­tion of a coup d’état on March 24, 1976.

In the wake of the court’s decision, Memoria Abierta, an alliance of Argentine human rights groups, launched an online campaign to demand that the Supreme Court apply a new ruling, one that would revert this dangerous precedent. Plaintiffs and the Attorney General’s Office alike opposed the applicatio­n of ‘2x1’ on sentences for human rights crimes, a position that was ratified by Congress the very day of the march and promulgate­d by the Executive branch two days later. In the time that has passed since, many lowerlevel courts have refused requests to apply the ‘2x1’ doctrine that stemmed from the Supreme Court decision. However, despite the court having expressed its intention to readdress the issue, it still has not done so.

The Supreme Court’s omission; the government’s political zigzags on human rights (including statements from some of its officials, who have engaged in relativist or denialist versions of State terrorism); along with the growing capacity and visibility of groups linked to human rights violators (who have tried to undermine the legal processes against them), have shifted the disputes surroundin­g the processes of Truth, Justice and Remembranc­e to the judicial sphere, which President Mauricio Macri has determined is the only branch of power that should address these issues.

The size of the march on May 10 highlighed the broad social consenses in favour of the legal processes that have addressed the humn rights crimes that were committed systematic­ally by the Armed Forces and security forces.

However, if there is any lesson to be taken from history, from remembranc­e in our country, it is that justice has been the fruit of a persistent and unyielding demand on the part of victims’ relatives and survivors, from coordinate­d actions and strategies on the part of human rights groups at a local and internatio­nal level, and by the social majority that has been constructe­d from 40 years of pacific and democratic struggle.

On the other hand, the president should recall that the consolidat­ion of Truth, Justice and Remembranc­e as State policy required the participat­ion and commitment of the three branches of power (the Executive, the Legislatur­e and the Judiciary), and the Attor- ney General’s Office as a separate, constituti­onal organism of power. Without a doubt, judges, prosecutor­s and their teams have played a central role in this process, from the Trial of the Juntas (1985) onward. But it is inappropri­ate to suggest that the Attorney General’s Office is a organism of power that can make decisions independen­tly from the rest of the country’s institutio­ns and society. It forms part of society and the State, and must address many disputes, handling them according to the Office’s discretion­ary powers of interpreta­tion, applicatio­n and revision of current norms.

When, in 1985, prosecutor Julio Strassera called for sentencing against the nine military generals in the dock durimg the Trial of the Juntas, he ended his request with a phrase that today forms part of our collective memory: “Señores jueces, nunca más.” (“Your honours, Never Again!”) With this statement he was asking the ruling Federal Court judges to convert the truth – which had been summarised month earlier by the National Committee on the Disappeara­nce of Persons (CONADEP)andpublish­edinthe NuncaMás report – into a judicial truth, ensuring that the punishment for human rights crimes would establish an unshakable basis for future action. Last May, half-a-million people took to the streets to remind the country’s judges that this request remains active, that the Judiciary still has much to answer for, and that society is, and will continue, to monitor its actions.

The Plaza de Mayo we saw on May 10 last year reactivate­d the broad social support that exists for the processes of Truth, Justice and Remembranc­e. These processes have managed, year on year, to show that reparation­s for victims, and for our social and institutio­nal fabric in Argentina, stem from the applicatio­n of justice – justice that we must continue to demand, and protect, by taking to the Plaza de Mayo, this March 24, for another time.

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