IDENTIDADES 1 ENGLISH IDENTIDADES 9 ENGLISH | Page 69
where he died on January 31, 2014.
From 1984 to 1987, she was Regent of
Studies at the National School of Dramatic
Arts in Buenos Aires. In 1987, she and her
sister Susana founded the Black Comedy,
dedicated to the research and theatrical
expression of the Afro culture. She attended
the Citizen Conference against Racism,
Xenophobia,
Intolerance
and
Discrimination (Santiago, 2000) and the
Third World Conference against Racism,
Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and
Related Intolerance (Durban, 2001).
E2, E3, E4, E5. Mary, Facundo, José
María and Juan Saraví Platero. All of
them were born in Buenos Aires: January
30, 1968 / March 11, 1969 / May 17, 1970 /
April 28, 1971, respectively. Oral sources:
Idem E1. Written sources: None. See E1.
F. Detention and disappearance
F1. Jose Raul Diaz, alias Sugus, Puppet
and Black. Chaco, ca. 1949 - La Plata
(Buenos Aires). CONADEP file: 876.
Written sources: Pepe, Moreira and Añón
Suárez, 2008; Cecchini, 2012; Cecchini and
Elizalde Leal, 2013.
He ought to emigrate from Chaco before
1967, because at that year he was already in
high school at the Nacional College of La
Plata. He was an active militant in the
Revolution Base Group (GRB), the
Argentine Liberation Forces August 22
(FAL 22) and the Marxist-Leninist-leaning
Revolutionary Workers Party (PRT). In
early 1975, he and another PRTista,
Eduardo "Dito" Priotti, rented a house near
the National Technological University. A
gang of the right-wing National University
Concentration (CNU) —protected by the
Governor Victorio Calabro and the fascist
interventor of the National University of La
Plata— illegally entered the house to abduct
and murder them, but Díaz and Priotti were
not there. On January 1, 1976, Díaz was
arrested and disappeared. He was currently
studying Anthropology.
F2. Mirta Esther Montero. Buenos Aires,
September 1, 1949. CONADEP file: 2,507.
Oral sources: TC 103. Interview with his
mother, Orfilia Rivero (82), Buenos Aires,
July 6, 2010. Written sources: AA. VV.,
2007; Institute Space for Memory, 2008;
Montero and Cirio, 2012. See A1 (Mother).
She studied Psychology and lived with his
parents in 2330 Uriarte 3rd A (Palermo
neighborhood), where she and her mother
Orfilia were arrested on February 14, 1977.
From ESMA she was transferred to the
Clandestine Detention Center Club Atlético
(San Telmo neighborhood). Herein her
track is lost. There was no legal reason to
arrest her.
F3. Alicia Rosalía País de Juárez. Buenos
Aires, April 6, 1932 – November 1, 1977.
Oral sources: TC 179. Interview with his
son Ramon Camilo Juárez (45), Buenos
Aires, August 6, 2013. Written sources:
Dandan, 2013a and b; Beguan, 2006: 217219. See C1 (Youngest son), C2 (Eldest
son), F3 (Older sister).
At the time of his arrest she was living in
410 Brazil 9th A, San Telmo (Buenos
Aires) with his sons Martin (9 years old)
and Ramon Javier Camilo Juárez (11 years
old). The father was Quique Juarez. She
was a costume designer for film and theater,
who militated in the Agrupación Evita and
the Peronist Youth. She attended the Basic
Unit Felipe Vallese, where she organized
the domestic and childcare employees,
helped in both the literacy work and the
campaign giving the cup of milk to
children, and fought against evictions.
In April 1976, she was arrested with her
children during a search-and-size police
operation against Quique. Although he had
separated from her and was not in the
household, she and her children were
interrogated at the Police Station 14. The
minors were handed over to their paternal
grandparents and she was transferred to
Devoto Prison, where she died of cardiac
arrest due to poor care of asthmatic crisis.
Thanks to the Legal Committee of Children
(in which Camilo militates), it is known
that she was taken to the morgue and buried
in the Western Cemetery. Of course, no one
claimed her remains and they ended up into
the ossuary. Before Judge Daniel Rafecas,
her children filled a complaint on
abandonment of a detained-disappeared
person.
F4. Olga Norma País Espinosa. Buenos
Aires, November 14, 1931 – March 1,
1977. CONADEP file: 6,684. Oral Sources:
Interview with his nephew Ramon Camilo
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