The Never To Be Forgotten List

This decision is long overdue. That doesn’t make it any less welcome.

Argentina’s Supreme Court overturned two amnesty laws Tuesday that had prevented the prosecution of hundreds of military officers, soldiers and police linked to this country’s “dirty war,” in which tens of thousands of people may have been slain.

The ruling allows the reinstatement of hundreds of prosecutions and civil lawsuits that had been dropped nearly two decades ago, legal experts and government officials said. Government sources and human rights activists said new charges naming as many as 300 defendants ? the majority retired military and police officers ? could be filed in the coming weeks.

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About Edward Hugh

Edward 'the bonobo is a Catalan economist of British extraction. After being born, brought-up and educated in the United Kingdom, Edward subsequently settled in Barcelona where he has now lived for over 15 years. As a consequence Edward considers himself to be "Catalan by adoption". He has also to some extent been "adopted by Catalonia", since throughout the current economic crisis he has been a constant voice on TV, radio and in the press arguing in favor of the need for some kind of internal devaluation if Spain wants to stay inside the Euro. By inclination he is a macro economist, but his obsession with trying to understand the economic impact of demographic changes has often taken him far from home, off and away from the more tranquil and placid pastures of the dismal science, into the bracken and thicket of demography, anthropology, biology, sociology and systems theory. All of which has lead him to ask himself whether Thomas Wolfe was not in fact right when he asserted that the fact of the matter is "you can never go home again".

6 thoughts on “The Never To Be Forgotten List

  1. It is in the long run a mistake. You can bet the next military government will think three times before giving up power.
    If you wish to have an orderly transfer of power between governments, the outgoing government must be able to be confident in its personal security.
    If you don’t care do it like Romania, but no stunts like this. The law is useless if it can’t be trusted.

  2. Oliver, how about the very long run? Military governments thinking three times before committing such grave crimes? The law is useless if it can be bent in a way to cover such crimes.

  3. Such laws won’t stop at military governments. This is making it impossible to use harsh emergency measures. While such measures can bring a lot of harm, they can become necessary. And if they become necessary and are not applied, that which will come later, after the crisis has become more serious, will be far bloodier.

  4. That comes close to triggering Godwin’s law, but whatever. The best example is Hindenburg (the man, not the airship)

  5. Wonder if evidence gathered through the granting of amnesties will be permissible in these prosecutions? If so, successful initiatives like the Truth and Reconciliation committees in South Africa will be much harder to replicate in South America.

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