The dictatorship in Argentina March 24, 1976 – December
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The dictatorship in Argentina
March 24, 1976 – December 10 1983
Main Facts
March 24, 1976
On March 24, 1976, Isabel Perón was deposed and arrested.
The Military Junta took power.
The junta named Jorge Rafael Videla president of Argentina, and established that
the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force would compose the future government.
This was the beginning of the so-called “National Reorganization Process.”
What were the events that led to such actions?
• Recession.
• Budget crisis: foreign debt (US$2.5 billion)/budget deficits (over
US$5 billion), in 1975.
• The President was accused of having embezzled large sums from a
government-run charity into her personal accounts in Spain
Beginning of the military regime
• The junta announced its plan to contain inflation, stop speculation,
and stimulate foreign inversion. But it was a slow start.
• In such economic climate, the military junta imposed “terrorism of
State,” which targeted the elimination of any type of popular
participation.
• The military regime started an implacable repression over all
democratic forces: political, social, and unionist, with the objective
of subduing the population through terror. Their objective was to
restore “order.”
• This day inaugurated the bloodiest authoritarian government in the
history of Argentina. Students, union workers, intellectuals,
professionals, and many others were kidnapped, murdered and, later
on, disappeared. Those who could went on exile.
Censorship
Announcement number 19, March 24, 1976:
The Military Junta announces to the people that any person who spreads,
reveals, or promotes announcements or images, through any type of media,
produced by or related to illicit associations, or to persons or groups dedicated
to subversive activities or terrorism, will be punished with confinement for an
indefinitely period of time. Any person who spreads, reveals, or promotes news,
announcements, or images, through any type of media, with the purpose of
disrupting, prejudicing, or discrediting the activities of the Armed Forces, the
Security Forces, or the Police, will be punished with confinement for up to ten
years. (Newspaper “The Press,” March 24, 1976)
Dirty War
• The “disappearance” was the most sinister formula of the “dirty
war”: the “target” was abducted (“sucked”) by a paramilitary squad
(“patota”); the “target” would become a number and have no legal
warranty nor rights; the “target” was at the mercy of her/his captors.
• The “disappeared ones” were thrown to the Río de la Plata (Silver
River), previously sedated, from military planes or helicopters, or to
common graves with no identification whatsoever.
The “disappeared ones”
Percentages of disappeared people according to their profession:
Blue collar workers..............................................30,0%
Students................................................................21,0%
Other workers.......................................................17,8%
Professionals.........................................................10,7%
Teaching staff..........................................................5,7%
Self-employed............................................................5%
Housewives.............................................................3,8%
Conscripts and military personnel...........................2,5%
Journalists................................................................1,6%
Actors and artists......................................................1,3%
Priests and nuns........................................................0,3%
(Conadep Report, 1984)
Detention camps
• Detention camps were clandestine. People who were
taken to these centers were tortured and eventually
killed.
• However, they were centrally located, in downtown!
• There were 340 in the whole country.
Theft of children
• Besides adult kidnapping, many children were literally stolen. The stolen kids,
many times children of detained pregnant women who gave birth at detention
camps, were registered as kids of military families; other times they were sold or
abandoned in orphanages.
• The military government thought that children of the “disappeared ones” should
loose their identities. For this reason, the military made them disappeared. The
government thought that subversion was hereditary or, at least, passed on by
family links.
Mother of the Plaza de Mayo
• Born in 1977, this group was formed by the mothers of the “disappeared ones.”
• This group became the most active group opposing the government. They wear
white head scarves with their children’s names embroidered.
• The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo is a unique organization of Argentine women
who have become human rights activists in order to achieve a common goal. For
over three decades, the Mothers have fought for the right to re-unite with their
abducted children. They still gather every Thursday afternoon for a half hour
walk around the plaza.
• The 14 founders of the association were Azucena Villaflor de De Vincenti, Berta
Braverman, Haydée García Buelas, María Adela Gard de Antokoletz, Julia Gard,
María Mercedes Gard and Cándida Gard (4 sisters), Delicia González, Pepa
Noia, Mirta Baravalle, Kety Neuhaus, Raquel Arcushin, and Sra. De Caimi.
They started the demonstrations on the Plaza de Mayo, in front of the Casa
Rosada, on April 30, 1977.
• Some of the founders of this group were also abducted.
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