This is great news
and a victory for all those who disappeared, the trade union fighters among
them, during the terror of the Argentinian dictatorship in the 1970’s. Facts
For Working People stresses one point in particular, it is inconceivable that
Ford and some executives here in the US were not aware of this, what is
basically the operation of a torture chamber on the Ford factory premises. It
is as common as the air we breathe for US corporations to function in this way
in Latin America and around the world as the CIA in cooperation with sections
of the AFL-CIO leadership suppressed independent militant trade unionism at
their plants whether fruit companies in Central America or Coca Cola, Freeport
McMoran and others. Facts For Working People and some union have demanded that
the AFL-CIO open its AIFLD archives as AIFLD is known to have been a CIA
partner in the suppression of workers' organizations abroad that threatened US
corporate interests. Do an AIFLD search on this blog and check out this
page for more reading and some resolutions on the AIFLD/CIA relationship We
urge union activists in the US to raise these resolutions in their unions, this
is especially important for socialists as it is in the traditional vein of
international solidarity and also is a way to educate their members as to the
role of US imperialism and the AFL-CIO in Latin America and around the world. Here
is a pdf of one of the original resolutions. The article below was Originally
published in the New York Times Admin
Argentina Convicts Ex-Ford Executives for Abuses During Dictatorship
By Daniel Politi
12-11-18
BUENOS
AIRES — A court in Argentina on Tuesday convicted two former Ford Motor
executives and sentenced them to prison for helping the country’s
military dictators kidnap and torture 24 workers during the 1970s.
The convictions were the first in which representatives of a multinational firm were found culpable in a human rights trial in Argentina.
Activists
hailed the sentences as a major step toward making amends for the
cooperation that several businesses provided to the brutal junta that
ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983. Union leaders were among the tens of
thousands of people sent to clandestine detention centers where
suspected dissidents were arbitrarily detained, tortured and often
killed.
Relatives of the 24 victims in the Ford case burst into applause in the courtroom as a judge read the verdicts.
A
three-judge panel sentenced Pedro Müller, 87, then a manufacturing
director at a Ford factory in Buenos Aires province, to 10 years, and
Héctor Francisco Sibilla, 92, then the security manager at the plant, to
12 years for assisting in the kidnapping and torture of their
colleagues.
The two executives “allowed a detention center to be set up inside the premises of that factory, in the recreational area, so that the abductees could be interrogated,” according to court papers.
The
court also sentenced Santiago Omar Riveros, a former head of the army’s
fourth battalion, to 15 years in prison. All the sentences can be
appealed.
“We were able to show during the trial that the company benefited economically during the period and how it used the repressive arm of the dictatorship to get rid of people that bothered them,” said Marcelo García Berro, the prosecutor.
Of the 24 workers whose cases are detailed in the case, 17 were detained in their workplace and 11 are alive today.
“These weren’t people tied to the subversion or anything of the sort. They participated in the unions,” Mr. García Berro said.
Although the prosecution had requested sentences of 25 years, the victims’ lawyers said they were satisfied.
“The sentencing of two company executives leaves no doubt that Ford was directly involved in committing crimes against humanity against workers, and that is historic,” said Elizabeth Gómez Alcorta, one of the lawyers.
Another one of the victims’ lawyers, Tomás Ojea Quintana, told Reuters that a lawsuit against the automaker may be filed in a federal court in the United States.
“It is clear that Ford Motor Company had control of the Argentinian subsidiary during the ’70s,” said Mr. Ojea Quintana. “Therefore, there is a direct responsibility of Ford Motor Company and that might give us the possibility to bring the case to the U.S. courts.”
Ford said in a statement the company was “aware of the verdict about the supposed participation of ex-employees of the firm in events related to human rights in the ’70s.” The company added that it “always had an open and collaborative attitude with judicial authorities supplying all the available information.”
Officials at Ford declined to comment further, noting that the sentences can still be appealed.
Argentina
has done far more than its neighbors to punish former military officers
and their accomplices for crimes committed during the dictatorships
that became the norm in much of the region in that period.
As of September, Argentine courts had convicted 862 people among the more than 3,020 individuals charged for human rights abuses, according to the attorney general’s office. The vast majority of those convictions involved former military officers. Relatively few civilians who were complicit in grave abuses have been convicted.
Experts said Tuesday’s verdict marked a turning point because it made a clear link between the dictatorship and the persecution of union activists.
“This is the first time that Argentina convicts business executives for crimes against humanity relating to union activism,” said Victoria Basualdo, a historian who served as an expert witness in the case.
Many businesses saw the dictatorship “as the opportunity to resolve labor conflicts in a repressive manner and increase profits,” the Center for Legal and Social Studies, a human rights group in Argentina said in a statement. By giving material assistance to the dictatorship, “they became one more link in the structure of state terrorism.”
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