A square demanded justice
The repudiation of the coup and the demand for speeding up the trials of the repressors was the unanimous request. Tens of thousands of people joined the call for agencies human rights and meeting the Memory, Truth and Justice. By Laura Vales

human rights organizations marched together to wake up to Justice. "
"Awaken to Justice with noise, whistling, chanting," suggested the girl from the stage and down in the Plaza de Mayo, people responded with what was at hand. Two skinny holding a sign, supported it on the floor to applaud, the bass drum sounded too dark patch as on the court, and almost immediately others followed the rhythm with your hands. Firecrackers, drummers, batucada, Song ". In the 33 anniversary of the coup of '76, thousands of people claimed massively to speed up the trials of the oppressors. There were two marches, one called by human rights organizations and other organizations that brought the left. Thus, there were two very different events with speeches, during a day where you could see people marching to the square all afternoon. The first demonstrators arrived at the stage set up next to the Pyramid of May at half past three, and four hours later the last groups were still trying to make space for approaching the site.
middle class, workers who were with their unions, picketers arrived on trains from the suburbs, college activists, people with no affiliation to any militant group and was listed in the column with his party. As every year, he turned to see the mix: on the Avenida de Mayo the columns of the social and political organizations were formed following the outline agreed to work for the organization in advance of the day, while on the trail, breaking out of that order , loose demonstrators overflowed the slow progress of the columns. As every year, too, turned to see that mobilization is chosen by many parents to take their kids to know a march of 24. Another outgoing data is the number of youth who always manages to gather the repudiation of the dictatorship.
agencies
The first of the marches was convened by human rights organizations. Organized by children, mothers Line Founder, grandmothers, Herman @ s, the Center for Legal and Social Studies (CELS), the Human Rights Association (APDH), the Serpaj and Medha, among others, activity was preceded on Monday, for a concert in front of the courts to claim justice for the delay in trials for human rights violations.
questioned agencies that six years after it annulled the laws of Punto Final and Due Obedience "only has 44 convictions." Recalled that "526 genocidal await trial, but by the slow pace of proceedings" 192 repressors are dead, "while another 47 remain large. "Numerous trials have been reopened since the laws of Punto Final and Due Obedience were declared unconstitutional in 2001, the National Congress set aside by law in 2003 that the Supreme Court ratified this way in 2005, recognized from the scenario, where a group of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo read a consensus document. "But how many decades will be necessary to condemn all genocides by all partners? We have been too many years for justice. All branches of government have the responsibility to accelerate the processes that bring the perpetrators of crimes against humanity and end with the consequences of a pardon. "
In this edition, the entrance to the square of the march was led by a squad of dancers from the Chilinga, social school drum and dance founded by Daniel Buira, Vicentico drummer. Dressed in white from head to toe, about fifty girls danced to the chanting. Ago was the traditional flag with the photos of the missing and the columns of organisms. Continued to trade unions, the CTA with guilds, the Human Rights Secretariat of the CGT, the UOM Quilmes, and social and political movements. K organizations stained blue this stretch of the march: the Peronist Youth, the Free Movement of South Prevents Movement, The Campora, the Cross Front, National People's were some of them, almost all images of Eva Peron in their banners. There were also groups that do not integrate Kirchner, as the Gathering for Democracy and Equity, the mayor of Morón, Martín Sabbatella-South Project de Pino Solanas, "the Communist Party and the UCR.
questioned agencies that six years after it annulled the laws of Punto Final and Due Obedience "only has 44 convictions." Recalled that "526 genocidal await trial, but by the slow pace of proceedings" 192 repressors are dead, "while another 47 remain large. "Numerous trials have been reopened since the laws of Punto Final and Due Obedience were declared unconstitutional in 2001, the National Congress set aside by law in 2003 that the Supreme Court ratified this way in 2005, recognized from the scenario, where a group of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo read a consensus document. "But how many decades will be necessary to condemn all genocides by all partners? We have been too many years for justice. All branches of government have the responsibility to accelerate the processes that bring the perpetrators of crimes against humanity and end with the consequences of a pardon. "
In this edition, the entrance to the square of the march was led by a squad of dancers from the Chilinga, social school drum and dance founded by Daniel Buira, Vicentico drummer. Dressed in white from head to toe, about fifty girls danced to the chanting. Ago was the traditional flag with the photos of the missing and the columns of organisms. Continued to trade unions, the CTA with guilds, the Human Rights Secretariat of the CGT, the UOM Quilmes, and social and political movements. K organizations stained blue this stretch of the march: the Peronist Youth, the Free Movement of South Prevents Movement, The Campora, the Cross Front, National People's were some of them, almost all images of Eva Peron in their banners. There were also groups that do not integrate Kirchner, as the Gathering for Democracy and Equity, the mayor of Morón, Martín Sabbatella-South Project de Pino Solanas, "the Communist Party and the UCR.

The loose William, his wife and two children were among the "loose" on the fly. "We live in La Plata and this year decided to come to leave here," she told him. Why? "We thought the place came to be occupied by another event, which had nothing to do with what we want but the idea of \u200b\u200binstalling the death penalty. I think that difficult times ahead ", defined. Simon, 14, wore a shirt with the demand for a live appearance of Julio Lopez, said that for him, going to the march was "a way to learn."
Claudia also responsible for the child murga drones, gave the sense of movement. "We wanted to come long ago," he said. Moreno traveled from 30 of the boys. "Everyone has an idea and because the subject is hit in the schools, but it is important that they can come and see this," he said.
Encounter claims A first gear followed the second meeting convened by the Memory, Truth and Justice, which brings together three hundred social and political organizations. The leftist parties, social movements, the students of the University Federation of Buenos Aires provided the largest columns of this mobilization.
The meeting was at his bedside the slogan "No more impunity and repression" and released a document with harsh criticism of the government. Disarm impunity requires much more than speeches, requires a political decision that the government has "no, indicated there. The Association of Former disappeared, Argentina League for the rights of man, the Professional Center for Human Rights were some who were placed in the header was shared with leaders of the Workers Party, the Socialist Workers Movement, the PTS, the Classist and Combative and the Federación Universitaria de Buenos Aires (Fuba), among others.
"Despite what the government says, 95 percent of the genocide are free, raised in the text they read on the same stage of the Plaza de Mayo. Of those convicted or prosecuted, "most scandalous conditions remain in detention in country or military." Organizations also criticized "the rate hikes, layoffs," the figures published by the INDEC ridiculous "and" external debt "as signs that the government intends to" end the crisis without touching the real culprits. "
The claim by the disappearance of Julio Lopez, a refusal to order an iron fist, refusing to take a look at social problems police were points very much in the day.
addition to the hundreds of posters with a picture of Lopez led protesters to the march, there were signs that answered the recent claims by the death penalty. "As you think how to kill us, we already live sentenced to death, "said one handwritten banner with all the fingerprints of the suburbs. In another manuscript also read: "when speaking of the death penalty, humanity back on all fours."
opened in the Pearl a space for promoting human rights
From death camp to the memory site
The event in La Perla, from April to open its doors to the public twice weeks
La Perla, the largest clandestine detention center (CCD) which operated inside the country during the dictatorship, was authorized yesterday in Cordoba as Space for Memory and the Promotion of Derechos Humanos. Frente a una multitud que se reunió para conmemorar el 33º aniversario del golpe de Estado, se reclamó “que todos los genocidas sean enjuiciados”, así como una mayor celeridad de los juicios en curso. El público podrá visitar La Perla a partir de abril dos veces por semana, aunque la sala de torturas estará vedada hasta que finalicen las pericias judiciales que aún se realizan allí.
“Por más genocidio que haya, la vida siempre supera a la muerte”, aseguró Emiliano Fessia, coordinador de la Comisión Provincial de la Memoria, que abrió el acto con su discurso. También miembro de HIJOS, que agrupa a los hijos de desaparecidos durante la dictadura, Fessia enabling the public highlighted the premises where it ran the extermination camp which handled about 2500 people, most of which is still missing, because it was given "life to a place where trucks entered before death" . Among the authorities present at the ceremony were the deputy governor, Hector "Pichi" Campana, the general coordinator of the National Memory Archive, Judith Said, and federal fiscal Córdoba, Graciela Filoñouk, an active supporter of the cases against crime against humanity. Ornate
the Patio de Armas with the pictures of the missing, the event was attended by survivors and bodies human rights, as well as legislators and large crowds. Secretary of Human Rights in the province, Raúl Sánchez, stressed the "duty and responsibility of national and provincial state to protect and promote the memory" and hailed the decision of former President Nestor Kirchner of transferring military property for use as site memory. Also spoke Emilia D'Ambra, chairman of the organization Families of the Detained and Disappeared for Political Reasons, and stressed the claim to "sectors of the judiciary to try to put obstacles to challenges and incompetence of judges" to hinder the process judicial the oppressors.
Also known as "the University" in military jargon for its "advanced" system of torture, La Perla was the largest detention center outside Buenos Aires. Ran from February 1976, when still ruled Isabel Martínez de Perón, and September 1979. The disappearance and torture center was in charge of the Third Army Corps, commanded by Luciano Benjamin Menendez, now convicted of crimes against humanity committed in Córdoba and Tucumán. Colonel Cesar Anadón was the direct command of the Pearl. He had four buildings: two used by officers and NCOs, another as a garage and left for to hold, torture and kill the hostages. According to testimonies of survivors, over the entrance to the torture room a placard stated: "intensive care room - Pets are not sick."
The event in La Perla, from April to open its doors to the public twice weeks
La Perla, the largest clandestine detention center (CCD) which operated inside the country during the dictatorship, was authorized yesterday in Cordoba as Space for Memory and the Promotion of Derechos Humanos. Frente a una multitud que se reunió para conmemorar el 33º aniversario del golpe de Estado, se reclamó “que todos los genocidas sean enjuiciados”, así como una mayor celeridad de los juicios en curso. El público podrá visitar La Perla a partir de abril dos veces por semana, aunque la sala de torturas estará vedada hasta que finalicen las pericias judiciales que aún se realizan allí.
“Por más genocidio que haya, la vida siempre supera a la muerte”, aseguró Emiliano Fessia, coordinador de la Comisión Provincial de la Memoria, que abrió el acto con su discurso. También miembro de HIJOS, que agrupa a los hijos de desaparecidos durante la dictadura, Fessia enabling the public highlighted the premises where it ran the extermination camp which handled about 2500 people, most of which is still missing, because it was given "life to a place where trucks entered before death" . Among the authorities present at the ceremony were the deputy governor, Hector "Pichi" Campana, the general coordinator of the National Memory Archive, Judith Said, and federal fiscal Córdoba, Graciela Filoñouk, an active supporter of the cases against crime against humanity. Ornate
the Patio de Armas with the pictures of the missing, the event was attended by survivors and bodies human rights, as well as legislators and large crowds. Secretary of Human Rights in the province, Raúl Sánchez, stressed the "duty and responsibility of national and provincial state to protect and promote the memory" and hailed the decision of former President Nestor Kirchner of transferring military property for use as site memory. Also spoke Emilia D'Ambra, chairman of the organization Families of the Detained and Disappeared for Political Reasons, and stressed the claim to "sectors of the judiciary to try to put obstacles to challenges and incompetence of judges" to hinder the process judicial the oppressors.
Also known as "the University" in military jargon for its "advanced" system of torture, La Perla was the largest detention center outside Buenos Aires. Ran from February 1976, when still ruled Isabel Martínez de Perón, and September 1979. The disappearance and torture center was in charge of the Third Army Corps, commanded by Luciano Benjamin Menendez, now convicted of crimes against humanity committed in Córdoba and Tucumán. Colonel Cesar Anadón was the direct command of the Pearl. He had four buildings: two used by officers and NCOs, another as a garage and left for to hold, torture and kill the hostages. According to testimonies of survivors, over the entrance to the torture room a placard stated: "intensive care room - Pets are not sick."

Texts sent by Mirta Clara: "Places that demanded justice. Demonstrations in the provinces / marches in Buenos Aires / / opened La Perla"