The '1989 attack on La Tablada' was an assault on the military
barracks located in
La Tablada, in the
province of
Buenos Aires,
Argentina, by 40 members of the terrorist ''
Movimiento Todos por la Patria'' (MTP), headed by former
ERP leader
Enrique Gorriarán Merlo. 39 people were killed and 60 injured during the take-over of the barracks by the Army. The MTP has claimed the assault was made in order to prevent a coup prepared for the end of January 1989 by the ''
Carapintadas'', a group of far-right militaries opposed to the investigations concerning the "
Dirty War", while the official military report pretends that it was the MTP who planned to "take power." Given a
life sentence and emprisonned, as fellow comrades, in
high security quarters, Gorriarán Merlo was finally freed in 2003.
[1][2]
The January 1989 attack
On
23 January 1989, a group of approximatively 40 members of the ''
Movimiento Todos por la Patria'' (All for the Motherland Movement, "MTP", founded in 1986 by former
ERP leader
Enrique Gorriarán Merlo) attacked the Third Mechanized Infantry Regiment barracks in La Tablada (''Regimiento de Infantería Mecanizada Nº 3'', RIM3). They entered the barracks with a Coca-Cola truck and several cars.
According to the ''
Clarín'', three different versions about the attack exist.
[3] Ten days before the assault, lawyer Jorge Baños and MTP member had declared in a conference that the ''
Carapintadas'' were planning a
coup for the end of January. The ''Carapintadas'' were members of the Armed Forces that had rebelled against the national government three times in 1987 and 1988, protesting the investigations on
human rights abuses during the "
National Reorganization Process" (1976-1983). This has remained to this day the MTP's version, held in particular by Gorriarán Merlo who claimed that the MTP was fulfilling the
constitutional obligation of "bear[ing] arms in defense of the fatherland and of [the] Constitution".
[4][5]
The official report on the attack by head of the Army
Francisco Gassino claimed in contrary that it was the MTP, formed of several former ERP members, that had planned a coup. A last version claims that the MTP was victim of a manipulation by
intelligence services.
The
Argentine Army, assisted by the
Policía Bonaerense (a total of 3,600 personnel) was called on to counterattack, and undiscriminately used
white phosphorus (WP) in the zone, in violation of the
Geneva Conventions. Used as a
chemical weapon, WP is forbidden by international law. In this case, it had the effect of completely burning the barracks and of carbonizing corpses.
[6][7][3] Thirty-nine people were killed and sixty injured during the attack (the majority because of conventional bombings). Nine were military personnel, two were police officers and the twenty-eight remaining were members of the MTP.
[9][10]
The following day President
Raúl Alfonsín (
UCR, 1983-89) visited the site, protected by commandos of ''Cara pintadas'', along with federal judge of
Morón, Gerardo Larrambebere, who is today member of the court judging the 1994
AMIA bombing.
Human rights violations
At least two MTP members reported as killed, among whom Claudia Deleis, are suspected of having been "executed" after surrendering, and there was evidence that at least three others were "
disappeared" after being captured. In all, nine are thought to have been killed after capture. Five corpses were never identified. In addition, prisoners were allegedly
tortured immediately after capture, and then again while in custody of the
Federal Police and the
Penitentiary Service.
Retired sergent José Almada, who had participated in the capture of the MTP members, declared in 2004 that Iván Ruiz and José Díaz had been tortured. According to sergent Almada, they referred to two persons who were not members of their brigade, and most probably
SIDE agents. He identified one of them as Jorge Varando, chief of security of
HSBC during the
December 20, 2001 events. Furthermore, sergent Almada declared that he had clearly heard a radio conversation ordering to kill two of the captured prisoners. He also said that adjuvant sergent Esquivel, killed during the attack, had been in fact shot by the Army itself, after trying to get to his brother who had been taken prisoner. Sergent Almada explicitly denounced the
OEA report done by Jorge Varando and General Arrillaga, the highest official in charge of the repression, which aimed at disguising adjuvant sergent Esquivel's suspicious death.
[11]
José Almada said that he had tried to inform his hierarchy about these
human rights violations, in accordance with article 194 of the Military Justice Code, but that they ignored him. He notably tried to inform General Martín Balza. He also informed head of Argentine Army, General
Bonifacio Cáceres, also telling him about his concerns that his neighbours were insulting him, saying that they were responsible of new cases of ''desaparecidos''. Moreover, in his complaint before justice, he also said he had informed former head of the Army
Ricardo Brinzoni. After Cáceres's retirement in 1989, colonel Gasquet threatened José Almada of 40 days of arrest — he was finally given two days of arrest on charges of wearing a beard, and then sent him to
Paraná, Entre Ríos. Later, he was again sentenced to 30 days of arrest, confined to
Crespo near Paraná and finally forced to retire. He has claimed that to this day he is still being "persecuted."
Convictions
Twenty surviving members of the MTP were later convicted and given sentences ranging from 10 years to life imprisonment. They were judged under the ''
Ley de Defensa de la Democracia'' (Defense of the Democracy Act) which deprive them of a right to
appeal and to a new trial.
Enrique Gorriarán Merlo was given a
life sentence, and his ex-wife, Ana María Sívori, was sentenced to 18 years of imprisonment.
During the oral and public trial, Gorriarán put in question the legitimity of the process and objected the circumstances of his capture in the suburbs of Mexico in October 1995, which he called a "
kidnapping" (''secuestro''). He was charged of being co-author of qualified
illicit association,
rebellion,
usurpation,
homicide with aggravated circumstances , aggravated illegal privation of freedom and reiterated injuries. His ex-wife Sívori was charged of co-author of qualified illicit association, and secondary participant to offenses of rebellion, doubly aggravated homicide, tentative of homicide, aggravated thief, reiterated injuries and co-author of the use of
false identity documents.
Most of those convicted in the attacks were placed in a
maximum security cell block on the eighteenth floor of the
Caseros prison in
Buenos Aires.
[12][13]
Finally, President
Fernando de la Rúa (
Alliance for Work, Justice and Education, 1999-2001) comuted the prison sentences. And two days before
Néstor Kirchner's access to his functions, Interim President
Eduardo Duhalde (member of the
Justicialist Party) freed Gorriarán Merlo, on May 23, 2003, after 14 years of prison in high security quarters, who declared that it was "an act of justice.
"
References
1. Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos. Informe Nº 55/97 - Caso 11.137.
2. Human Rights Watch. 1989 Argentina report.
3. ''El Clarín''. El ataque a La Tablada, la última aventura de la guerrilla argentina, January 23, 2004
4. Taringa!. Copamiento al cuartel de La Tablada
5. Constitution of the Argentine Nation, Article 21. "Every Argentine citizen is obliged to bear arms in defense of the fatherland and of this Constitution…"
6. E/CN.4/2001/NGO/98, ''United Nations'', January 12, 2001 - URL accessed on February 9, 2007
7. ANSA cable quoted by RaiNews24: Alcune testimonianze sull'uso militare del fosforo bianco .
8. ''El Clarín''. El ataque a La Tablada, la última aventura de la guerrilla argentina, January 23, 2004
9. La Historia Pensada. Asalto al cuartel General Belgrano (La Tablada). September 17, 2006 .
10. ''Página/12'', January 23, 1999. Los puntos oscuros del asalto a La Tablada .
11. Página/12. “Mi verdad sobre La Tablada es irrefutable”, February 20, 2004
12. ''Seguimiento de la investigación criminal sobre el ataque al cuartel del Regimiento de Infantería Mecanizada III de La Tablada''.
13. Amnesty International. ''Argentina: bringing the law into line with international obligations — a challenge for the legislators''.
See also
★
History of Argentina
★
Carapintadas
★
Enrique Gorriarán Merlo
★
Argentine Army
★
White phosphorus (weapon)