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> CAMPO DE MAYO TRIAL STARTS

Trial relates to alleged crimes committed against 323 people who were detained during the dictatorsh­ip at the Campo de Mayo Army barracks. Four clandestin­e detention centres operated there during the dictatorsh­ip.

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A major trial into the human rights abuses of Argentina’s 1976-1983 military dictatorsh­ip began Tuesday in San Martín, an industrial suburb in Greater Buenos Aires.

The trial brings 11 individual judicial processes into one, after the Judiciary decided to unify several investigat­ions – among them the kidnapping and appropriat­ion of women detainees’ babies or young children, and human rights abuses against former workers of Mercedes Benz in Argentina. Known as a “mega-trial” or

megacausa, the trial involves 323 victims detained during the dictatorsh­ip at the Campo de Mayo military barracks, the Argentine Army’s largest, which is located on the far outskirts of Greater Buenos Aires. Four clandestin­e detention centres operated there during the dictatorsh­ip.

“This is a mega-trial, a large trial where many cases are brought together after a long del ay beca use of the many difficulti­es that exist to forma tribunal, ”Pablo Lachener, a lawyer for the Grandmothe­rs of Plaza de Mayo human rights organisati­on, told AFP.

“We represent around 40 victims, among whom were a number of women detained illegally and who remain disappeare­d,” he said. That casefile was opened in 2007, he explained.

An illegal maternity ward operated at Campode Mayo, like the one at the infamous ex-Navy Mechanics School (ESMA) in Buenos Aires. The work of Grandmothe­rs of Plaza de Mayo focuses on finding the children of the disappeare­d or detained during the dictatorsh­ip who were adopted illegally by other families.

On the doorsteps of the San Martín district court, Lorena and Flavia Battistiol have come to find informatio­n about their parents,Egi dio and Juan a,whoseso nor da ughterwasd­ue in late 1977.

“We want justice and informatio­n which will help us find where our missing relatives are and about the people who took our brother or sister. Our grandmothe­r began this journey. When this case opened, she was still he althy en oughtot es tifybut since it took so long, 12 years, her health has deteriorat­ed and today she cannot come,” Lorena, 43, said.

María Ester Landa buru is se ekingjus tic eforhers is te r Leonor Rosario and her brother-in-law Juan Carlos Catnich, who were kidnapped in 1977.

“My sister was seven-and-ahalf months pregnant. Our parents began this search. Neither of them are with us today and instead my siblings and I keep going. I mean to say the aunties and uncles of my niece or nephew who is today 41 years old”, she explained.

The court will try 22 defendants. Among them are former military and police officers, m os tofwhomh ave al re ad y be en sentenced in previous trials.

UNION ACTIVISTS

Most of the victims in the case-file were unionised workers in factories located in the industrial areas of northern Greater Buenos Aires, among them workers at the Mercedes Benz factory.

“They are not documented as union activists but the idea is that with this trial they will be recognised this way”, said assistant prosecutor Gabriela Sosti.

Former workers of Mercedes Benz have for year tried to shed a light on the supposed complicity of the company with Argentina’s military dictatorsh­ip, in particular the disappeara­nces of 14 unionised workers and the illegal detention of the sole survivor Héctor Ratto.

“We come for justice because we have the obligation to ensure that justice is served for younger workers so they do not have to experience economic power this same way”, said 73-year-old former factory worker Julio D’Alessandro, who spent time in exile in Italy.

In December, 2018, a court sentenced two former directors of Ford for participat­ing in the illegal detentions of 24 unionised workers from the Ford factory.

Former Junta leader Reynaldo Bignone was tried for crimes at Campo de Mayo. He was the commander of the barracks where approximat­ely 5,000 people are thought to have been held, according to human rights organisati­ons. Bignone died last year.

 ?? @SANTIAGOAC­ANTON ?? Relatives of disappeare­d former detainees hold up signs with the faces of the victims in court.
@SANTIAGOAC­ANTON Relatives of disappeare­d former detainees hold up signs with the faces of the victims in court.

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