Carla Graciela Rutila Artes, the first grandchild recovered by the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo, Buenos Aires identified in several members of Argentina's Anti-Communist Alliance (Triple A) who ran a secret prison during the last military dictatorship (1976 -1983), at the trial that he continues to Eduardo Ruffo, one of his captors.
After residing in Spain for 23 years, Rutila returned to his country to testify in court Argentina the humiliation to which was submitted by Ruffo, his adoptive father, whom he opened a trial for his role in crimes against humanity committed in a secret prison at the time.
In his remarks, said he did not abandon his "stare" on Eduardo Ruffo, who kidnapped and separated from their natural parents during the dictatorship and who abused her sexually since she was three years.
"The fact that I could cope physically, visually Ruffo, and have realized that he could not face me, that to me has really been a repair that no one can imagine," he said in a conference press at the headquarters of the Grandmothers Plaza de Mayo. Carla Graciela
identified through a photographic round, Anibal Gordon and his son, the late Otto Paladino general and former civilian intelligence officer Raul Guglielminetti, among others, as members of the Triple A. The first grandchild
recovered testified in court No. 1 Oral Buenos Aires being conducted the trial for the illegal detention center Orletti Automotive.
Carla, born on June 28, 1975, and her mother, Graciela Rutila Arts, were taken in August next year from Bolivia to Argentina, where they were carried by military authorities Automotive Orletti.
His father, the Uruguayan Enrique Luca Lopez, MNL-Tupamaros militant was killed in the Bolivian city of Cochabamba (center) soon after, in September 1976.
He told the court that he "saw an arsenal of weapons at home (Ruffo), have seen a lot of money, including some stolen from the truck operational. At that time trucks stormed and took the material. The material passing through home.
added in his story that changed his captors often look for anyone to realize that it was the smallest of the photo that her grandmother had begun to spread next to a humanitarian association campaign to find children stolen from their parents missing. Eduardo
Ruffo, a member of the right-wing terrorist organization Triple A, is one of five defendants on trial for crimes against humanity committed in the clandestine detention center during the dictatorship Automotive Orletti Argentina.
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