http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_22721613/operation-condor-trial-begins-buenos-aires

Updated: 03/05/2013 11:46:42 AM MST
'Operation Condor' trial begins in Buenos Aires
By ALMUDENA CALATRAVA Associated Press






Former dictator Jorge Rafael Videla attends the first day of the trial for his 
alleged involvement in the so called operation, Plan Condor, in Buenos Aires, 
Argentina, Tuesday, March 5, 2013. Argentina began today its first human rights 
trial focused on the joint operation by the southern cone's 1970s dictatorships 
to track down leftists in each other's countries. Videla has already been 
sentenced to life imprisonment for crimes against humanity. ((AP Photo/Natacha 
Pisarenko



BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Argentina began a long-awaited human rights trial 
Tuesday focused on Operation Condor, the 1970s conspiracy launched by Chilean 
dictator Augusto Pinochet to enlist South America's dictators in a combined 
effort to leave no refuge for their leftist critics. 
The 25 defendants include former Argentine junta leaders Rafael Videla, 87, and 
Reynaldo Bignone, 85, both already serving life sentences for multiple human 
rights violations during the 1976-1983 dictatorship. This time, the charges 
include criminal association, kidnapping and torture. 

Also on trial is a former Uruguayan army colonel, Manuel Cordero, who allegedly 
tortured prisoners inside Automotores Orletti, the Buenos Aires repair shop 
where many captured leftists were taken to be interrogated under orders from 
their home countries. 

More than 400 witnesses are expected to be called in the two-year trial, which 
involves 106 victims from at least four countries who were killed in Argentina. 
The case also includes three Argentines killed in Brazil. 

A key piece of evidence is a declassified FBI agent's cable, sent in 1976, that 
described in detail the conspiracy to share intelligence and eliminate leftists 
across South America. 

The actual conspiracy went further than that: the U.S. government later 
determined that Chilean agents involved in Condor killed the country's former 
ambassador Orlando Letelier and his U.S. aide Ronni Moffitt in Washington, 
D.C., in September 1976, and tracked other exiles across Europe in efforts to 
eliminate them, as well. 

Operation Condor grew to include the military governments of six countries: 
Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. 

Other Argentine defendants include Santiago Riveros, Carlos Humberto Caggiano 
Tedesco, Luciano Benjamín Menendez y Antonio Vanek. Others have died of old age 
or seen their charges dropped for reasons of poor health. 

Because in many cases the bodies of the victims have never been found, 
Argentine prosecutors argue that the crime of covering up their deaths 
continues today, and that statutory time limits don't apply. 

The victims include Maria Claudia Irureta Goyena, the daughter-in-law of 
Argentine poet Juan Gelman, who was pregnant while kidnapped and held for 
months inside Automotores Orletti before an Argentine air force plane took her 
to Uruguay. She gave birth there, and then was disappeared. Her daughter, 
Macarena Gelman, recently discovered her own true identity. 

Another victim was Chilean militant Edgardo Enriquez Espinosa of the Leftist 
Revolutionary Movement who had taken refuge in Buenos Aires from Pinochet's 
forces, only to be kidnapped and killed after the March 1976 Argentine coup. 

Prosecutor Pablo Ouvina said torturers from Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and 
Paraguay often did their dirty work side by side


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