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ARGENTINE PRIEST GETS LIFE TERM FOR ‘DIRTY WAR’ CRIMES

Friday, 26 October 2007
source: Yahoo News, Oct 10, 2007

 

A court in La Plata, southeast of Buenos Aires, found Catholic priest Christian Von Wernich guilty on seven counts of homicide, 31 counts of torture and 42 of false imprisonment, the Spanish news agency EFE reported Wednesday.

The first clergyman to be tried for ‘dirty war’ offences, Von Wernich was the chaplain of the Buenos Aires provincial police when the force was under the command of the late Gen. Ramon Camps, convicted in 1986 for crimes against humanity.

Several survivors of the repression testified that the priest, in addition to being present when detainees were interrogated under torture in secret prisons, accompanied paramilitary units on kidnapping missions and witnessed executions by firing squad.

Von Wernich, 68, did not speak until Tuesday’s final session, when he cited biblical passages to call for reconciliation and condemned his trial as a violation of the principle of equal justice under the law, likening the process to the Nuremburg Trials of Nazi leaders.

The reading of the verdict was delayed by what turned out to be a phoney bomb threat that forced authorities to evacuate the courthouse.

The courtroom was filled with applause and shouts of joy when the verdict was finally read.

Last year, the same court handed life sentence to a former senior police officer in the first dirty war trial since Argentina’s Congress and Supreme Court overturned 1980s amnesty laws that had protected more than 1,000 members and agents of the military regime from prosecution

 

 

 

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