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Justice Beyond Borders

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The Plan Condor trial that began on March 5, 2013 in Buenos Aires is an unprecedented opportunity for many victims of the human rights violations committed by South American military regimes in the 1970s and 1980s to finally see justice. The regional coordination of repression resulted in hundreds of disappearances and murders of Uruguayans, Chileans, and Argentines – amongst other nationalities – in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and even in the USA and Europe

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Ex-dictators Reynaldo Bignone (left) and Jorge Videla (centre) on the opening day of the trial in Buenos Aires

 Co-authored with Dr. Francesca Lessa, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Latin American Centre, St Anne’s College, University of Oxford.

Valparaiso, Chile, late November 1976

Two children, Anatole (aged four) and his sister Victoria (one and a half), are found wondering alone in the main square of Valparaiso. It is not just their clothes that make them stand out; Anatole’s unusual accent clearly identifies him as being a long way from home.

Uruguayans Anatole and Victoria Julien appeared in Chile having been victims of the borderless terror network of Plan Condor, which had killed their father Roger Julien in September 1976 – a leader of the Partido por la Victoria del Pueblo (PVP) – in Buenos Aires. Their mother Victoria later disappeared. The two children were first detained in the clandestine detention centre known as “Automotores Orletti” in Buenos Aires; they were then held in another secret detention centre in Montevideo before being taken to Chile and abandoned.

Anatole and Victoria are just some of the victims of the regional coordination by the military dictatorship that removed all borders and obstacles to the persecution and murder of political opponents seeking refuge in neighbouring countries. Hundreds of Uruguayans, Chileans, Argentines, and Peruvians disappeared outside of their countries during the 1970s. While for decades these and many other atrocities committed by the military dictatorships in South America remained under-investigated and unpunished, a new trial in Buenos Aires is now trying to bring to justice some of those responsible and provide redress to the victims and their relatives, including Anatole and Victoria since their mother’s disappearance is one of the cases considered in the prosecution.

What was Plan Condor?

In the mid-1970s, when a large number of countries in South America had fallen under military rule, a sinister and perverse form of cooperation among the dictatorships emerged. Plan Condor was allegedly a plan to coordinate intelligence activity between the dictatorships of Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, Paraguay, and Bolivia in order to exchange information about the activities of government opponents and exiles who had sought refuge throughout the region.

However, it went much further than just an exchange of intelligence; Plan Condor established a borderless area of terror in South America in order to facilitate the secret detention and “transfer” of exiles back to their home countries, resulting in many cases in their death or disappearance. The plan effectively allowed the members of armed and security forces of the governments involved to freely operate in one another’s territory, enabling them to chase political opponents and exiles even after they had fled persecution at home. It reproduced at the regional level the same machinery of terror and murder that was already being unleashed inside each of its member countries. According to scholar J. Patrice McSherry, the Condor states were inspired by the national security doctrine that targeted enemies on an ideological basis, engaging “in terrorist practices to destroy ‘the subversive threat’ from the left and defend ‘Western, Christian civilisation.’”

'Automotores Orletti' in the Floresta neighbourhood of Buenos Aires.

‘Automotores Orletti’ in the Floresta neighbourhood of Buenos Aires.

Some of the most notorious Operation Condor crimes took place in Argentina, such as the May 1976 assassination of the former President of the Uruguayan Chamber of Deputies, Hector Gutiérrez Ruiz, and Senator Zelmar Michelini in Buenos Aires. Plan Condor’s main operating base in the Argentine capital was “Automotores Orletti,” (see right) a workshop-turned-clandestine detention centre located in the Floresta neighbourhood. Yet Plan Condor reverberated well beyond the region and many of its infamous crimes took place far away from South America, including the 1976 murder of former Chilean Foreign Minister Orlando Letelier and his assistant Ronni Moffitt in Washington D.C. and the 1975 attempted murder of Chilean diplomat Bernardo Leighton and his wife in Rome.

The Trial in Buenos Aires

On March 5, 2013, the President of Buenos Aires Federal Tribunal 1 started proceedings in the historic trial known as “Plan Condor.” For the many victims of atrocities throughout South America, this trial is especially significant given the obstacles to obtaining justice in their own countries of origin, especially in Uruguay, Paraguay, and Chile.

The tribunal – composed of judges Adrián Federico Grünberg, Oscar Ricardo Almirante, Pablo G. Laufer, and Ricardo Angel Basílico (substitute judge) – ordered the merging of four separate cases (Plan Condor I, II, and III; Automores Orletti II) into one trial. It is expected to last for approximately two years and nearly 500 witnesses will be called upon to testify in the tribunal.

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Uruguayan, Manuel Cordero, in the dock.

The trial is unprecedented and noteworthy for several reasons. Its origins date back to the late 1990s when the Full Stop and Due Obedience amnesty laws were still in force in Argentina; yet this particular case was instrumental in beginning to break down the wall of impunity that surrounded the crimes of the dictatorship at the time. Using the argument that forced disappearance constituted a “permanent crime,” since it continues to be perpetrated until the person or the body is found, it was argued that the state had the obligation to bring the crime to an end and needed to do so before deciding whether to grant amnesty or pardon. Initially, the case involved 12 victims but many more were later added. In 2001, former Argentine dictator Jorge Videla was questioned on charges of illicit association, illegal arrest, and torture in connection with Operation Condor. In addition, an international warrant for the arrest and extradition of former Paraguayan dictator Alfredo Stroessner and of Manuel Contreras, the former chief of the National Intelligence Bureau (DINA), Pinochet’s secret police, had also been issued. The Argentine prosecutor in the Condor case, Miguel Angel Osorio, furthermore requested the extradition of well-known Uruguayan military and police officers José Nino Gavazzo, Manuel Cordero, Jorge Silveira, and Hugo Campos Hermida, all of whom had perpetrated crimes in Buenos Aires. The investigation was taken to court in 2008.

Among the 25 accused, the vast majority are Argentines, including former dictators Videla and Reynaldo Bignone . Also in the dock is Uruguayan former military officer Manuel Cordero, who was extradited from Brazil in January 2010 where he had absconded.

Secondly, that the trial is taking place in Buenos Aires highlights the disparities in the region in holding past human rights violators to account. Despite Argentina’s progress, the same cannot be said of its neighbours, particularly Paraguay, Bolivia, Brazil, and Uruguay, as the recent Supreme Court sentence evinces. For the moment, it looks unlikely that the trial in the Argentine capital will be able to force its neighbours into action concerning the Plan Condor crimes; nevertheless, the experience of Argentina should serve as a valuable example to the rest of the region, which with luck may lead to the establishment of a regional network of justice to replace that of terror which exerted its force 30 years ago.

The third innovative aspect of the trial relates to the victims; the Plan Condor trial (cases I, II, III) involves 106 victims, who had been illegally detained, tortured, murdered, and disappeared. It is noteworthy due to the numerous nationalities of the victims, including a large number of Uruguayans (48), but also Paraguayans, Chileans, Bolivians, Peruvians, and Argentines. The trial is of particular significance for the relatives of Condor’s victims because for many this is the first time their cases have been brought to trial or even investigated. Therefore, the Plan Condor trial has reverberations beyond Argentina, transcending borders in South America and offering the opportunity of justice denied until now to many victims and relatives throughout the region. In Argentina, for example, while there has been important progress in unearthing the circumstances of the dictatorship’s victims at home, the fate of those Argentines killed or disappeared abroad remains largely shrouded in silence. As such, for those who have thus far been unable to gain answers, this marks an extremely important moment and the first time accountability may be achieved almost four decades after the crimes were committed – including for Anatole and Victoria for whom, thirty-seven years after losing their parents, justice is finally within reach.

Photos kindly provided by Rolando Andrade Stracuzzi for H.I.J.O.S. Capital, Argentina


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