http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/1F739DC5-6662-4FCF-968C-6206DA25E531.htm

Saturday 25 March 2006, 0:32 Makka Time, 21:32 GMT   

Argentina marks coup anniversary 


Families of the 30,000 people believed killed during Argentina's Dirty War have 
led commemorations to mark the 30th anniversary of the coup that brought the 
military to power.


Amid simmering resentment over the lack of punishment of top military officers 
involved in the 24 March 1976 coup, thousands descended on the Plaza de Mayo 
square in central Buenos Aires on Friday.

The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo, who held weekly protests in the  square for much 
of the past three decades, held an all night vigil to mark the grim anniversary.

Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Argentine Nobel Peace Prize winner, said: "We all want 
to be present to say 'never again' to military dictatorship."

Films on the dictatorship were shown on a giant screen in the  square at the 
moment early in the morning when the military moved against Isabel Martinez de 
Peron, the president.

A major rally was held in the square on Friday.

Amnesties questioned

Nestor Kirchner, the president, urged the country's judiciary to quickly rule 
on the legality of amnesties granted to the military leadership, as he unveiled 
a plaque at the national military college  declaring "no more coups d'etat and 
state terrorism".

"How can we live together while there is still impunity,"  Kirchner asked at 
the ceremony, at which he argued "only by punishing the guilty will the 
innocent be freed from blame".

     
      Kirchner: Amnesties for military
      officers should be ruled illegal
     
Kirchner said he believed amnesties given to top officers in 1990 by Carlos 
Menem, the then president, should be ruled in illegal.

In a new gesture to human-rights groups and the families who have campaigned 
for justice, the government this week ordered the military to open up archives 
that might shed light on some unsolved cases.

Kirchner's government has sought to meet many of the demands of human-rights 
groups to act over the junta's abuses.

It cancelled laws that granted amnesty to top officers and has  said it will 
cancel presidential pardons given to officers tried in 1985. 

But it is waiting for courts to rule whether the amnesties are constitutional 
before ordering prosecutions.

Resentment

Most of the 30,000 junta victims were believed to have been  tortured and 
assassinated, and there is widespread anger that most junta leaders have never 
been punished.

Menem issued blanket amnesties in a bid to move past an issue so  explosive 
that it was feared at the time it could rock a fragile democracy.

     
      Ex-military ruler Videla is under
      house arrest pending a final trial 
     
Now, with years of democratic rule behind it, many Argentines see Menem's 
action, at the time explained as a way of moving forward, as an unacceptable 
sweeping under the rug of the military crimes.

General Jorge Videla, now 80, who led the coup, lives in a  Buenos Aires 
apartment with his wife. 

He is under house arrest still awaiting a final trial for his role in the 
abduction of babies of imprisoned dissenters.

His deputy, Admiral Emilo Massera, who was sentenced to life  imprisonment in 
1985, remains outside prison but in a near coma.

Others await trial, including the notorious "Blond Angel of  Death", Captain 
Alfredo Astiz, who has been convicted in France for kidnapping and murdering 
two French nuns.

Hundreds free

Hundreds of police and military accused of murder, torture and human-rights 
violations continue to live freely following the amnesties and pardons.

The dicatorship has left deep scars.

Relatives are battling to identify bodies of the victims that  are still being 
uncovered.

The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo has been investigating to gain the 
identity of the babies of political detainees who were taken from their mothers 
and in many cases given to military families.

Adriana Calvo said: "Impunity has made society more sick than it was under the  
dictatorship. They imposed fear, but the impunity has reinforced it over the 
years."

Calvo, arrested while pregnant in 1977, was released with her baby daughter 
after a few months in prison, where the girl was born.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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