Families of victims of dictatorship in Argentina asking for documents to Italy.
ROME, Sept. 28 .- The relatives of the victims of Argentina's military dictatorship (1976-1983) today called on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Italy that complaints of missing persons at the Italian consulate to be delivered to the Argentine government.
The request was made foreign minister, Franco Frattini, by a score of relatives of victims and a group of, darkfall gold, seven Italian and Argentine associations believe that this documentation can be used in the context of investigations and therefore must be guarded by the Argentine government.
According to this group of family, between 1976 and 1983, "many people (Italian, Argentine, citizens of other European and South American countries) went to the Italian consulate, present in many Argentine, star trek online credits, cities to denounce the abuses suffered by them and their families" .
In 1983, the documentation was moved from the Italian Embassy in Buenos Aires to the Prosecutor of Rome, where he initiated a criminal action took years after the conviction of several Argentine military officers who committed crimes during the dictatorship.
This request comes in full, gaia online gold, view against a member of the Argentina military junta Emilio Massera by the death and disappearance of three Italians during the dictatorship, which continues today after yesterday declared the president of the National Memory Archive (ANM) of Argentina, Ramon Torres Molina, and journalist Victoria Ginzberg.
Torres Molina presented various documents to try to prove the alleged link between the former military to the crimes of the School of Naval Mechanics (ESMA), detention and torture center during the dictatorship.
Ginzberg, whose parents disappeared during Argentina's dictatorship and whose grandmother has seven missing relatives pinned as a journalist many cases of missing persons in the military junta, some of which may illustrate the Italian justice yesterday.