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Hundreds face trial for dictatorships crimes
Argentine court strikes down amnesty for torturers
By Bill Van Auken
16 June 2005
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Nearly three decades after the US-backed military coup that
led to the disappearance of an estimated 30,000 people
in Argentina, the countrys Supreme Court Tuesday struck
down a pair of laws that effectively granted an amnesty to those
responsible for the dictatorships crimes.
The ruling sets the stage for the prosecution of hundreds of
members of the countrys security forces who carried out
the abduction, torture and murder of leftists, militant workers,
students and other perceived opponents of the military dictatorship,
which ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983.
In its ruling, the high court found that the two lawsknown
as punto final, or full stop, and obedencia
debida, due obediencewere in violation of both the
Argentine constitution and international treaties to which Argentina
is a signatory.
It also found that crimes against humanity have no statute
of limitations and cannot be made the subject of an amnesty.
Similar laws protecting the military and police against charges
of crimes carried out under US-backed dictatorships were implemented
in Uruguay, Chile and Brazil as part of the so-called transition
to democracy in the 1980s.
Responding to the decision, Argentine president Néstor
Kirchner said, It is a breath of fresh air that the impunity
is coming to an end. He said that the two laws struck down
by the court had filled Argentines with shame.
Estela Carlotto, president of the Grandmothers of the Plaza
de Mayo, praised the law, saying it would clear the way for trying
the military criminals with all of the law and constitutional
norms that our children never had. Carlotto, whose daughter
was abducted and then executed after giving birth in prison to
a baby boy, added, For years we have had to live with thieves
and assassins.
However, Hebe de Bonafini, the president of the Mothers of
the Plaza de Mayo, which has fought for justice for the disappeared
for nearly three decades, was far more circumspect. She was skeptical
that very many of those who committed crimes against humanity
under the dictatorship would be punished. There are more
than 400 judges from the dictatorship, judges who are accomplices
of the military, she said. I am not optimistic that
they are going to jail.
The two laws struck down by the court decision were enacted
under the government of president Raul Alfonsín, who headed
the first civilian government after the collapse of the military
junta in the early 1980s, amid a mounting economic crisis and
the juntas ignominious defeat in the Malvinas War with Britain.
Under Alfonsín, former junta leaders, including Gen.
Jorge Videla, Admiral Emilio Massera and Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri,
were tried and sentenced in 1985 to life in prison.
Afterwards, the military exerted pressure on the government
to call a halt to prosecutions stemming from the repression. The
Alfonsín administration responded with punto final
in 1986, imposing a 60-day deadline for the courts to wrap up
any cases involving crimes against humanity.
The law had the unintended effect of provoking a flood of new
charges that increased tension within the armed forces. A section
of the military rose up in revolt, seizing control of army installations.
In answer to the uprising by the military, masses of Argentines
took to the streets, vowing to resist. Far more frightened of
the masses than of the military, Alfonsín enacted the due
obedience law in June 1987, essentially providing a blanket
amnesty on the same grounds made infamous by the Nazis: the dictators
assassins and torturers were only following orders.
The law brought an immediate halt to the prosecution of human
rights charges against 1,180 members of the security forces. It
threw into limbo two major cases that had been brought over crimes
committed in two of the dictatorships largest torture centers:
the Navy School of Mechanics (ESMA) and the First Army Corps headquarters.
After Tuesdays courts decision, Alfonsín,
the leader of the opposition Radical Party, joined the chorus
of politicians praising the action, while making the improbable
claim that he had himself laid the foundations for this step by
enacting the very laws that were rejected. Was democracy
strengthened by the enactment of these laws? he asked. The
only answer is yes, because 20 years after they were enacted,
they can now be struck down, declared null and unconstitutional
... in the context of a decisively affirmed democracy.
The chief of the Argentine Army, Lt. Gen. Roberto Bendini,
acknowledged that up to 3,000 members of the armed forces, most
of them retired, could be called before courts, but insisted that
no more than 400 would likely be charged. This, however, is probably
a conservative estimate.
The involvement of members of the security forces in acts of
state terrorism was widespread. In part, this was the result of
a deliberate policy by senior commanders to implicate as many
personnel as possible in order to compromise them and prevent
them from talking.
Left unanswered by the high court ruling is whether new charges
can be brought against the surviving members of the former military
juntas. While convicted in 1985, they were pardoned in 1990 by
then-president Carlos Menem, a Peronist.
Abduction of babies
Videla and others have since been detained on charges related
to the abduction of babies of the disappeared, some of them born
in the torture centers, who were then illegally handed over to
military and police personnel to be raised as their own children.
The prosecutions were possible because the crimewhich involved
several hundred childrenwas not covered by either of the
two amnesty laws.
The case that finally undid these two infamous laws was that
of a young coupleJosé Poblete and Marta Hlaczikwho
were abducted along with their eight-month-old baby, Claudia,
in 1978 by one of the dictatorships task forces.
José was a Chilean railroad worker who had lost both
legs in a train accident and had come to Argentina for physical
therapy. A member of the group Christians for socialism,
he became active in the Peronist Front for the Disabled, campaigning
for more funding for wheelchairs and other aid. He met and married
his wife Marta, an Argentine, who was also active in the disabled
movement.
They were taken to Olimpo, a concentration camp erected inside
the main vehicle maintenance facility of the Argentine Federal
Police. There, according to the testimony of survivors, they were
both subjected to brutal torture. José was thrown out of
his wheelchair, beaten and mocked by the torturers. Witnesses
saw jailers dragging Marta naked by her hair while kicking and
beating her. The two subsequently disappeared, though Josés
wheelchair was seen discarded in a corner of the installations
parking lot.
The baby, Claudia, was taken from her mother with assurances
that she would be delivered to her grandparents. Instead, she
was given a new identity and handed over to a police officer and
his wife.
Underlying the case was the bizarre contradiction stemming
from the amnesties extorted by the military in the 1980s. While
those responsible could be tried for the abduction of the child
and her illegal adoption, they could not be punished for the disappearance,
torture and murder of both her parents.
As a result of the legal case brought by the Grandmothers of
the Plaza de Mayo and the Center for Legal and Social Studies,
a judge ruled in 2001 that the laws granting the torturers in
the case impunity were unconstitutional. Despite the agitation
and pressure exerted by thousands of relatives of the disappeared
and survivors of the repression, it has taken four years for the
decision to work its way up for consideration by the Supreme Court.
The old adage justice delayed is justice denied
is clearly applicable to the long-awaited court ruling. In some
cases, the passing of nearly 30 years presents serious hurdles
to the presentation of evidence. In others, defendants are already
dead.
Moreover, most of those who bore principal responsibility for
the crimes of the dictatorship are now in their 70s and will likely
never spend a day behind bars. The standard practice of the Argentine
courts has been to sentence those above 70 who are convicted of
such crimes to house arrest. Other military officers, meanwhile,
have been sentenced to confinement at army installations, protected
by the institution that they previously served by organizing torture
and murder.
There are reportedly 137 members of the military who are already
detained either at home or on bases.
Because the great bulk of those facing the threat of prosecution
are already retired, the court ruling has not provoked the same
kind of reaction within the ranks of the armed forces as was seen
in 1986-87. Argentine defense minister José Pampuro said
that while some officers were expressing concern in a personal
capacity, the institution accepted the decision.
Washington implicated in state terrorism
There is no doubt that the Argentine courts ruling provoked
disquiet in Washington. Top American officials, both former and
current, are deeply implicated in the horrific crimes carried
out by the military junta in Argentina.
Former secretary of state Henry Kissinger, a close confidante
of the current Bush administration, provided Washingtons
explicit support for the bloodbath in Argentina. Declassified
US government documents detailing a meeting between the then-US
secretary of state and his counterpart from the Argentine junta,
Admiral Cesar Augusto Guzzetti, quote Kissinger saying, If
there are things that have to be done, you should do them quickly.
Amid widespread reports and protests over the disappearance,
torture and murder of politicians, union leaders, students and
intellectuals in Argentina, Kissinger went on to tell Guzzetti:
We are aware you are in a difficult period. It is a curious
time, when political, criminal, and terrorist activities tend
to merge without any clear separation. We understand you must
establish authority.
The father of the current US president was at the time the
director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and also deeply involved
in the repression taking place in Argentina and elsewhere in Latin
America.
Also present were the two most influential members of the current
Bush administration. Vice president Dick Cheneythen the
White House chief of staffand Donald Rumsfeld, who, then
as now, was defense secretary, overseeing relations between the
Pentagon and the Argentine military.
Thus, the two figures who have served as the most prominent
defenders of US behavior at the detention camp in Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba have a long history of justifying and facilitating torture
in the name of fighting terrorism. This was precisely
what the Argentine junta claimed to be doing as it rounded up
and murdered over 30,000 of its own people.
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