Thursday, April 14, 2011

Silver Pearl Is Worth How Much

identified at a police station in Tigre as clandestine center

Workers who survived the dictatorship took the act of marking the former detention center. "It was the first place to ask for help," recalled the victims. Police Station No. 1 of Tigre was transformed, like so many others during the dictatorship, in a clandestine detention center. But this place of kidnapping and torture was unique house the factory workers of the industrial belt of the north and northwest of the Buenos Aires suburbs, including the Ford workers, provided by their employers to the genocide. Yesterday, the police station was marked as a former Clandestine Detention Center, torture and extermination, in a coordinated effort between the National Archives of the report, the Commission for Memory, Truth and Justice in Northern Area and the town of Tigre. Pedro Troiani, a survivor of the Ford plant in General Pacheco, said yesterday that "Ford has to sit on the dock, and explain why you gave us, why did the lists of delegates and paid little heed workers saying faltábamos without notice after we were kidnapped. " "We see with satisfaction that speaks of 'civic-military coup', because you never mentioned companies as Ford, which gave us defend the rights of workers," he lamented. The event, organized by the Federal Network of Sites of Memory, which signals throughout the country sites operated clandestine centers, it was at the police station located in Bourdieu tigrense 548. Involved the mayor of Tigre, Sergio Massa, the provincial security minister, Ricardo Casal, the coordinator of the National Memory Archive, Judith Said, the Human Rights Adviser in the province, Edgardo Binstock, the Director of Media and Communication archive National Memory, Marcelo Duhalde and former employees of the Ford Motor Company General Pacheco and shipbuilding Astarsa, Vicente Forte and Mestrina.Graciela Villalba, a member of Families of Missing Navy, recalled that the Commissioner "was the first place, paradoxically , where we came to ask questions and get help for our family arrested 35 years ago, which at that time knew they were going to be missing. " "Signaling the former clandestine detention center we relive the struggles of these years is to get where we decided to not go unpunished largest barbarism committed in our country," expresó.En representing the Commission for Memory, Truth and Justice of the Northern Area, Raquel Mariano Witis Witis mother of murdered by a Buenos Aires police in September 2000 - is hopeful that "those who pass through this place and working in the police station are not indifferent to this poster, which think of those workers who passed through here and banish that anxiety cruel and inhuman repression that still nests in the military and leads them to commit wanton acts such as Kostecky and Santillan, Luciano Crease, Carlos Fuentealba, Lucas Rotenberg. "Judith Said, on behalf of national government, said:" This plaque placed is for fellow north side, is for the province of Buenos Aires and is also for those serving in the force, we want to know how was the repression, what were the powers that were taken from the civil-military dictatorship and why we are carrying out trials, for once and for all those responsible are punished. " For its part, Edgardo Binstock noted that "many companies were complicit in the dictatorship, because what was at stake was a model country, so the victims were centrally workers, because it sought to destroy the labor organization and awareness of work and struggle. " Posted by Argentine newspaper Tiempo

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