Coordinates: 34°26′41.28″S 58°58′52.1″W / 34.4448000°S 58.981139°W / -34.4448000; -58.981139

Fatima massacre

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"plaque mounted to the wall by four corners, black lettering carved in marble or similar polished stone. Top line says 'MASACRE DE FATIMA', second line reads '20 de agosto de 1976', third line is the inscription 'LOS PUEBLOS SIN MEMORIA NO TIENEN FUTURO'. Below that making up the bilk of the face are 2 columns of numbered spots for names of victims, though 7 spots are blank (possibly ubidentified?). At the bottom is the text '30 COMPAÑEROS ASESINADOS ACA PRESENTES!!!'. Listed names may be found in section below
plaque memorializing the event and victims; third line inscription translates as "towns(folk) without memory have no future", or perhaps less literally, "a community that fails to remember, fails"

The Fatima massacre refers to an incident in Fátima, Buenos Aires, Argentina, where 30 prisoners in the custody of the federal police were illegally detained, drugged and shot.[1] On August 20, 1976, the bodies of the victims were blown up.[2][3]

Events

Shortly after four o'clock on the morning of August 20, a loud explosion woke inhabitants of Fatima. Workers at a nearby brick foundry arrived on scene and claimed they had found human remains scattered over an area of one hundred yards, presumably a result of the explosion. Almost immediately the area was fenced by soldiers. Photojournalists who had taken photos were kidnapped. The soldiers and civilian staff collected the body parts and loaded them onto a truck of the Municipality of Pilar.[citation needed]

According to the police, the victims were thirty people, ten women and twenty men, including some teenagers. Only five could be identified at the time. The bodies of the unidentified victims were buried in Derqui Pte Cemetery, where they were exhumed years later for identification.

The Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team was able to identify eleven more victims. One of the first was Susana Pedrini of Bronzel, after whom they named a street in the center of Pilar, specifically in the square near the water tank.[citation needed]. Pedrini, who was abducted together with her husband and her mother, was two and a half months pregnant when she was killed.[4][5] Only half of the victims could be identified by family and friends through the work of the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team.

On July 11, 2008, two former Argentine police officers were sentenced to life in prison without parole for their role in the killings.[2][6][7]

Identified victims

Listed as numbered on the commemorative plaque pictured above:

  1. Ines Nocetti
  2. Olivetti, Roberto Hector
  3. Ramon Lorenzo Yelez
  4. Aggio, Enrique Jorge
  5. Angel Osvaldo Leiva
  6. Lincoln, Maria Rosa
  7. Alberto Evaristo Comas
  8. [blank]
  9. Conrad(o) Alzogaray
  10. [blank]
  11. (Jorge) Daniel Argente
  12. [blank]
  13. Carlos Raul Pargas
  14. [blank]
  15. (Raul) Ricardo Jose Herrera
  16. Joseph/Jose Daniel Bronzel
  17. Poddleky de Bronzel, Cecilia
  18. Susana E. Pedrini de Bronzel
  19. Pascliarrosa, Jose Jacinto
  20. Carmen Maria Carnaghi
  21. Pascliarrosa, Juan Carlos
  22. Pangoli de Vera, Marta Alida
  23. Haydee Cirullo de Carnaghi
  24. Norma Susana Fontini
  25. [blank]
  26. Selma Julia Ocampo
  27. [blank]
  28. Horacio O. Garcia Gastelu
  29. [blank]
  30. Juan Carlos Vera

See also

References

  1. ^ Anstett, Elisabeth; Dreyfus, Jean-Marc (2017). Destruction and Human Remains. New York: Manchester University Press. p. 148. ISBN 9780719096020.
  2. ^ a b Burke, Hilary (July 11, 2008). "Argentine police get life term in 'dirty war' case". Reuters. Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  3. ^ Ferguson, Sam (July 30, 2008). "The Fatima Massacre". truthout. Archived from the original on October 31, 2010. Retrieved 2009-09-18.
  4. ^ "BRONZEL - PEDRINI | Nuestros Nietos | Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo". www.abuelas.org.ar. Retrieved 2019-01-14.
  5. ^ Ginzberg, Victoria. "Susana is back". www.pagina12.com.ar. Retrieved 2019-01-14.
  6. ^ "Amnesty International Report 2009 - Argentina". United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Archived from the original on 2012-10-09.
  7. ^ Human Rights Watch (2011). World Report 2009: Events of 2008. New York: Seven Stories Press. p. 150. ISBN 9781583228586.

34°26′41.28″S 58°58′52.1″W / 34.4448000°S 58.981139°W / -34.4448000; -58.981139