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 | | Posted by admin on Saturday, March 25, 2006 - 08:57 PM |
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 |  | No-one seems quite sure why this anniversary is different.
By Daniel Schweimler
BBC News, Buenos Aires
The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo now say they are being heard
But somehow the days leading up to 24 March 2006 - 30
years since the military came to power in Argentina - have captured the
public attention like no other.
Books have been written, plays performed and debates
conducted. There are art exhibitions all over the country, plaques are
being unveiled to commemorate the victims.
Thousands will run in ten and three kilometre races on
Sunday in memory of Miguel Sanchez, himself a runner and just one of
the 30,000 killed during military rule between 1976 and 1983.
Daniel Acosta was a young art student in the city of La
Plata when in 1977 agents working for the state abducted him, a hood
over his head. He spent the next five years in prison and was often
tortured. He was labelled a subversive.
He drew while in prison to help come to terms with a
situation that made no sense. Some of those works are on display at the
Recoleta Cultural Centre in Buenos Aires as part of an exhibition to
mark the anniversary.
Newspaper cuttings, telling stories of bomb attacks,
dead bodies found on the street and political turmoil, line the walls.
One painting is of the waters of the River Plate where bodies, some
still alive, were dumped from military planes.
People are leaving behind the fear
Another is a study of the Ford Falcon, an Argentine-made
car that has become a symbol of the repression since it was these
vehicles, with darkened windows and licence plates removed, that were
used to abduct victims in the middle of the night.
One of Daniel Acosta's works - of two shoes left behind
when agents came to collect him in the night - has the word "Censored"
stamped in one corner.
He says that this anniversary feels different from
previous ones because the victims and Argentine society have put some
distance between themselves and the horror of the military rule.
"People are leaving behind the fear," he says. "We can
have a calmer look at the subject. That doesn't mean forgetting or
pardoning but more justice and more truth."
'Hard to believe'
The book, Nunca Mas - Never Again, a report by
Argentina's National Commission on Disappeared People, was first
published in 1984, just a year after the return to democracy.
It is a study of repression, detailing who was kidnapped, how they were taken and the torture they suffered.
The Ford Falcon is seen by many as a symbol of the repression
It begins with the words: "Many of the events described
in this report will be hard to believe. This is because the men and
women of our nation have only heard of such horror in reports from
distant places."
That book is being re-published to mark the anniversary
with new testimonies and new information that has come to light as
investigators and victims' families continue trying to understand the
nightmare that befell what they thought was a modern, civilised
country.
The report focuses on more than 9,000 victims - the
disappeared - people who were taken in the night and their bodies never
found. Human rights investigators say the true figure is closer to
30,000.
Alongside, not against
The most prominent of those who refused to give up the search for justice are the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo.
When no-one would listen to them, they marched, silently
outside the government palace in Buenos Aires every Thursday afternoon,
demanding to know what happened to their sons and daughters.
They march to this day. They have in the past suffered death threats and constant abuse.
Daniel Acosta's art has helped him come to terms with his abduction
While their work continues, they find themselves now
operating in a very different environment, alongside the government of
President Nestor Kirchner, rather than against it.
They recently stopped their annual 24-hour march of
resistance, designed to get the authorities to listen to their demands,
because they said they were being heard.
The Mothers were the catalyst for other groups such as
the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo. They search for the children who
were taken as babies from prisoners and given for adoption to military
or police couples. Those babies' mothers were usually killed.
The Grandmothers have found more than 80 such children so far and their work also continues.
After the return to democracy in 1983, some of the perpetrators of some of those crimes were tried and sentenced.
But subsequently the governments of, firstly, Raul
Alfonsin and then Carlos Menem pardoned the military leaders
responsible for the terror. They talked about moving on, putting the
past behind them.
But the Argentine people have not done that. A recent
campaign in the continued fight for justice is the "escrache" - a
popular denunciation of alleged human rights violators.
Last week, several thousand people turned up outside the
apartment block where the former military leader, Jorge Rafael Videla,
lives. They shouted "murderer" and threw red paint at the building.
He may never be brought to justice but the protesters
are determined that his retirement, at the very least, will not be a
comfortable one.
National holiday
As well as the continuing search for justice, this has also been a time to remember the dead.
It is only democracy which can save a people from horror on this scale
A plaque has been unveiled in the Plaza San Martin, in
the centre of Buenos Aires, naming the victims from Argentina's
religious communities. Roman Catholics, Protestants, Jews and Muslims
joined together to sing the national anthem and then heard the names of
the victims read out.
The Argentine military are firmly back in their barracks
and some, humbled by the shame of the repression, have apologised for
their actions in those dark years.
After a debate in Congress last week, 24 March was declared a national holiday.
It will not be a celebration but a day of reflection.
In his prologue to the report Nunca Mas, the Argentine
writer Ernesto Sabato said: "It is only democracy which can save a
people from horror on this scale."
"Only with democracy, will we be certain that Never
Again will events such as these, which have made Argentina so sadly
infamous throughout the world, be repeated in our nation."
Argentina is still a nation coming to terms with its
past. But with each anniversary of the military coming to power, the
confidence that it will not return to that nightmare is growing. | |
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