Argentina's far-right frontrunner reopens wounds of dictatorship
Javier Milei has provoked alarm and outrage by downplaying the number of victims of the countrys 1976-83 military rule
Tom Phillips and Uki Goñi in Buenos Aires
Thu 19 Oct 2023 08.00 EDT
A sign outside the subterranean torture chamber welcomed victims to The Avenue of Happiness.
A gramophone played a rock song on loop to muffle their screams: (I Cant Get No) Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones.
It wasnt a horror film, it was real-life horror, said Ricardo Coquet, 70, one of about 5,000 prisoners held at the Buenos Aires death camp during Argentinas 1976 to 1983 dictatorship and one of the few to make it out alive.
Tears filled Coquets eyes and his voice cracked as he remembered seeing a young mother marched down to the secret jails basement in her nightgown to be drugged and thrown from a plane, just hours after giving birth.
She was only 20, he stuttered as he toured the deactivated Escuela de Mecánica de la Armada (Esma) prison, today a memorial museum that was recently declared a Unesco world heritage site.
The horrors described by Coquet occurred more than four decades ago during an almost unfathomably cruel period of military rule that saw an estimated 30,000 regime opponents killed or disappeared the vast majority unarmed civilians.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/19/argentina-javier-milei-dictatorship-presidential-election