Current:Home > ContactArgentina’s former detention and torture site added to UNESCO World Heritage list -Financium
Argentina’s former detention and torture site added to UNESCO World Heritage list
View
Date:2025-04-18 17:36:00
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Argentina on Tuesday welcomed a decision by a United Nations conference to include a former clandestine detention and torture center as a World Heritage site.
A UNESCO conference in Saudi Arabia agreed to include the ESMA Museum and Site of Memory in the list of sites “considered to be of outstanding value to humanity,” marking a rare instance in which a museum of memory related to recent history is designated to the list.
The former Navy School of Mechanics, known as ESMA, housed the most infamous illegal detention center that operated during Argentina’s last brutal military dictatorship that ruled from 1976 through 1983. It now operates as a museum and a larger site of memory, including offices for government agencies and human rights organizations.
“The Navy School of Mechanics conveyed the absolute worst aspects of state-sponsored terrorism,” Argentina’s President Alberto Fernández said in a video message thanking UNESCO for the designation. “Memory must be kept alive (...) so that no one in Argentina forgets or denies the horrors that were experienced there.”
Fernández later celebrated the designation in his speech before the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday afternoon.
“By actively preserving the memory that denialists want to conceal, we will prevent that pain from recurring,” he said. “Faced with those crimes against humanity, our response was not vengeance, it was justice.”
It is estimated that some 5,000 people were detained at the ESMA during the 1976-83 dictatorship, many of whom were tortured and later disappeared without a trace. It also housed many of the detainees who were later tossed alive from the “death flights” into the ocean or river in one of the most brutal aspects of the dictatorship.
The ESMA also contained a maternity ward, where pregnant detainees, often brought from other illegal detention centers, were housed until they gave birth and their babies later snatched by military officers.
“This international recognition constitutes a strong response to those who deny or seek to downplay state terrorism and the crimes of the last civil-military dictatorship,” Argentina’s Human Rights Secretary Horacio Pietragalla Corti said in a statement.
A video posted on social media by Argentina’s Foreign Ministry showed Pietragalla with tears in his eyes as he celebrated the designation in Saudi Arabia alongside the rest of Argentina’s delegation.
Pietragalla was apropriated by security forces when he was a baby and raised under a false identity. He later became the 75th grandchild whose identity was restituted thanks to the work of Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo. The group has located 133 grandchildren through genetic analysis.
The designation “is a tribute to the thousands of disappeared individuals in our continent,” Pietragalla said, adding that “this is an event of unique significance within Argentine and regional history, setting a precedent for continuing to lead by example in the world with policies of Memory, Truth, and Justice.”
Argentina has done more than any other Latin American country to bring dictatorship-era crimes to trial. It has held almost 300 trials relating to crimes against humanity since 2006.
“Today and always: Memory, Truth and Justice,” wrote Vice President Cristina Fernández, who was president 2007-2015, on social media.
Among the reasons for deciding to include the ESMA in the World Heritage list was a determination that the site represents the illegal repression that was carried out by numerous military dictatorships in the region.
The designation of a former detention and torture center as a World Heritage site comes at a time when the running mate of the leading candidate to win the presidential election next month has harshly criticized efforts to bring former military officials to trial.
Victoria Villaruel, the vice presidential candidate to right-wing populist Javier Milei, has worked for years to push a narrative that the military junta was fighting a civil war against armed leftist guerillas. Milei rocked Argentina’s political landscape when he unexpectedly received the most votes in national primaries last month.
veryGood! (35)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- Parents will have to set aside some earnings for child influencers under new California laws
- En busca de soluciones para los parques infantiles donde el calor quema
- Halloween superfans see the culture catching up to them. (A 12-foot skeleton helped)
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Judge dismisses lawsuit over mine sinkholes in South Dakota
- Unprecedented Numbers of Florida Manatees Have Died in Recent Years. New Habitat Protections Could Help Them
- FBI seizes NYC mayor’s phone ahead of expected unsealing of indictment
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Climate solution: In the swelter of hurricane blackouts, some churches stay cool on clean power
Ranking
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Hoda Kotb says she is leaving NBC’s ‘Today’ show early next year
- US Open Cup final: How to watch Los Angeles FC vs. Sporting Kansas City
- 'Megalopolis' review: Francis Ford Coppola's latest is too weird for words
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Caitlin Clark, Indiana Fever eliminated by Sun in WNBA playoffs
- Smell that? A strange odor has made its way across southwest Washington state
- Mark your calendars: 3 Social Security COLA dates to know for 2025
Recommendation
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
Judges set to hear arguments in Donald Trump’s appeal of civil fraud verdict
2 hurt in IED explosion at Santa Barbara County courthouse, 1 person in custody
How New York City Is Getting Screwed Out of $4.2 Billion in State Green Bonds
Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
Ryan Reynolds' Deadpool mocks Marvel movies in exclusive deleted scene
Simone Biles Wants Her Athleta Collection to Make Women Feel Confident & Powerful
Parents will have to set aside some earnings for child influencers under new California laws