'No one can deny it now': death flight plane to be returned to Argentina
Flight logs revealed how 12 people were thrown out to their deaths into the Atlantic during the years of dictatorship
Uki Goñi in Buenos Aires
Fri 24 Mar 2023 05.30 EDT
On the night of 14 December 1977, the three pilots flew their turboprop aeroplane for more than an hour out over the Atlantic Ocean. The technical log they had completed on takeoff registered no passengers, but that was a lie: on the cabin floor behind them lay eight women and four men, tortured, drugged and barely conscious.
Two of the flight crew stripped the victims naked and opened the ramp door at the rear of the plane. Then they pushed their victims out, to fall thousands of feet into the South Atlantic.
Though such death flights by which thousands perished were routine during Argentinas 1976-83 military dictatorship, many of their details remain unknown.
After an astounding series of events, however, not only have the pilots of this particular flight been identified and convicted, but the plane itself, a Belfast-built Short SC.7 Skyvan, has been located in the US and will soon be returned to Argentina, where it will be put on display in Buenos Aires at the Museum of Memory set up in the former Argentinian military death camp that it once served.
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Unlike Brazil and Uruguay, where wide-ranging amnesties were passed for crimes committed during their dictatorships, Argentina has tried and convicted about 1,000 former military officers for human rights abuses under military rule. But that consensus shattered under former president Mauricio Macri, who may run again in this years elections and who this week dismissed the issue as the human rights scam of what happened 40 years ago.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/24/argentina-dictatorship-death-flight-plane-return-from-us