Argentine
military face trials
At
least 40 retired Argentine military officials accused of human rights
violations during the 1976-1983 dictatorship are now in custody in Argentina
and facing trials in Europe after the new government moved to strip them
of their longstanding immunity from extradition.
President
Néstor Kirchner, who took office two months ago, revoked a government
edict that prohibited Argentine officials from being handed over to foreign
countries to face criminal charges abroad.
His
action came one day after a federal judge in Buenos Aires ordered the
detention of 46 former government officials, all but one of them military
officers, in response to a Spanish government request for their extradition.
The
two actions represent an important shift in Argentina's position on bringing
human rights abusers to justice and signal what could turn out to be a
major advance in international law.
During
the late 1980's, the Argentine Congress, facing the threat of rebellions
within the armed forces, approved a pair of laws that granted amnesty
to hundreds of military officers facing criminal charges inside the country.
The
officials now being held for extradition include the two principal leaders
of the successful military coup of March 1976. The coup was followed by
a campaign of state terrorism in which foes and critics of the government,
real and imagined, were kidnapped and killed. The two men, Gen. Jorge
Rafael Videla and Adm. Emilio Massera, both 77, were facing other criminal
charges stemming from actions not covered by the amnesty and were already
under house arrest.
In
1985, General Videla and Admiral Massera were among nine members of the
military junta who were tried by an Argentine court and found guilty of
human rights violations ranging from kidnapping to murder. Both were sentenced
to life in prison, but in 1989 and 1990, President Carlos Saúl
Menem pardoned them, along with other military officers and left-wing
guerrillas they had fought.
Two
senior military officials sought in the Spanish extradition request have
died, including the former junta chief, Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri, and another,
according to government officials, has fled.
Foreign
governments seem especially interested in trying Alfredo Astiz, a 50-year-old
naval captain who has become perhaps the most notorious symbol of Argentina's
Dirty War. Nicknamed "the blond angel of death," Captain Astiz
infiltrated human rights groups and is accused of having designated which
of their leaders were to be kidnapped, tortured and killed.
Captain
Astiz, had already been convicted in absentia in France in 1990 and sentenced
to life in prison for the kidnapping and killing of two French nuns in
1977. The French government said that it would renew an earlier request
for his extradition; in 2001, Italy and Sweden also filed papers asking
that Captain Astiz be handed over so he could be tried for the kidnappings
or killings of citizens of those countries.
As
Captain Astiz's case indicates, deciding which extradition requests to
honor, and in which order, is likely to be a complicated and time-consuming
process. The judge who issued the detention orders, Rodolfo Canicoba Corral,
said it would take "at least several months" to sort out the
various requests and hinted that extraditions might not occur at all if
Argentina reversed course and decided to try the accused in local courts.
Mr.
Kirchner has said he would like to see the amnesty measures overturned,
which would allow local prosecutions, but he does not have the authority
to do so himself. Lower courts have found both amnesty laws to be unconstitutional,
but those verdicts have been appealed to the Supreme Court, which is in
turmoil because of Mr. Kirchner's campaign to force judges loyal to Mr.
Menem to step down. A final ruling on the question has not yet been issued.
The
Spanish judge who made the extradition request, Baltazar Garzón,
is the same judge whose efforts led to the detention of Gen. Augusto Pinochet,
Chile's former military dictator, in Britain in 1998.
With
the 30th anniversary of the coup that brought General Pinochet to power
now less than two months away, Argentina's actions are certain to add
to an already heated debate in Chile about how to deal with military human
rights abusers there.
Source:
New York Times.