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Jail for Argentine junta chiefs

July 6, 2012

An Argentine court has sentenced former dictator Jorge Videla to 50 years in jail for stealing babies from political prisoners. There were also heavy penalties for others involved in the practice.

https://p.dw.com/p/15S7i
Argentina's former dictator Jorge Rafael Videla attends his trial in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Monday Feb. 28, 2011. Videla is among those who face life sentences if convicted on charges of implementing a systematic plan to steal the babies of political prisoners during the 1976-1983 dictatorship. Also charged are six other former military and police officials. (ddp images/AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Jorge Rafael VidelaImage: dapd

Videla was sentenced at Argentina's Federal Oral Tribunal Court on Thursday, along with other former officials from the 1976 to 1983 dictatorship.

The court ruled that Videla was guilty of systematically executing a plan in which infants were taken from detainees who had been kidnapped, tortured and killed by the regime.

While Videla was given a 50-year sentence, the country's last dictator General Reynaldo Bignone received a 15-year-term. Both men were already serving sentences for other human rights abuses.

Hundreds cheered the ruling, which was broadcast on a giant television screen outside the courthouse.

Nine other defendants were jailed for between 15 and 40 years because of their roles in the practice.

Rights campaign group Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo has fought a legal battle calling for justice for the stolen children since 1996. It claimed 500 babies were taken and subsequently raised by families close to the regime.

Pepa Pussek holds a picture of her son Juan Carlos Galvan
Relatives have long called for justice for both "the disappeared" and their babiesImage: AP

Dirty war cover-up

According to the evidence, Bignone had been urged to reveal the identities of the stolen babies as part of the country's transition to democracy. Instead, the court heard, he had ordered a cover-up.

The junta's "dirty war" on leftist dissidents eventually claimed 13,000 victims according to official records - including pregnant women who were forced to give births inside torture centers. Rights groups place the number at closer to 30,000.

The 35 abductions dealt with in the court case took place at the Argentine Marine School of Engineering, ESMA, in Buenos Aires.

Survivors who testified said that inmates gave birth while shackled and hooded and, in the overwhelming majority of cases, were never allowed to see their babies.

In most cases babies were given to soldiers or friends of the military, while the mothers were thrown into the sea from military planes in what were known as "death flights."

rc/ch (AFP, AP, dpa)