Rubén Oscar Franco Explained

Rubén Oscar Franco
Birth Date:8 August 1927
Birth Place:Adrogué, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina[1]
Allegiance: Argentina
Branch Label:branch
Rank: Admiral
Commands:Member of the Argentine Military Junta (along with Cristino Nicolaides and Augusto Jorge Hughes); Argentine Navy Command
Known For:Repression
Battles:Falklands War
Alma Mater:Escuela Naval Militar
Signature:File:Firma Rubén Franco.jpg

Rubén Oscar Franco (pronounced as /es/; born 8 August 1927)[2] is a retired Argentinian military officer who held power as a member of the Argentine Military Junta from 1982 to 1983. Representing the Argentine Navy, he took power after the Falklands War, later yielding this power to a new legally constituted government headed by Raúl Alfonsín.[3]

Franco assumed the title of Admiral after the army's decision to dissolve the military dictatorship, under which Argentina had been suffering.

Since Omar Graffigna's death on 9 December 2019, Franco has been the last living former member of Argentina's notorious military juntas.

Military career

Bearing the rank of Captain, Franco was from June 1977 until January 1978 Chief of Staff at Naval Operations Command (Spanish: Comando de Adiestramiento y Alistamiento de la Armada — literally "Navy Training and Enlistment Command").[4] He then headed the Presidency's Public Information Secretariat from 1 February[5] to 12 December 1978.[6]

From February 1979 until January 1980,[7] Franco was second in command of Navy General Staff Operations. Beginning in 1980, when he bore the rank of counter admiral (roughly equivalent to rear admiral), he headed the General Directorate of Naval Personnel.

Command of the Argentine Navy

On 1 October 1982,[8] a few months after Argentina's defeat in the Falklands War, Admiral Jorge Isaac Anaya went into retirement and named Vice Admiral Rubén Oscar Franco to head the Argentine Navy Command, thus also at once raising Franco's rank to admiral.[9]

Franco himself retired on Saturday 10 December 1983,[10] and on 16 December 1983, only six days after democracy's return to Argentina, President Raúl Alfonsín named Counter Admiral Ramón Antonio Arosa as the new Commander of the Argentine Navy.[11]

Prosecutions

Those who belonged to the last Military Junta – as Franco did – were not prosecuted in 1985 in the Trial of the Juntas given that they were not included in President Alfonsín's decree, which ordered the promotion of legal proceedings,[12] but they were indicted in connection with signing the so-called Final Document on the Fight against Subversion and Terrorism (Spanish: Documento Final sobre la Lucha contra la Subversión y el Terrorismo), and with sanctioning a "self-amnesty law" (Spanish: ley de autoamnistía) in 1983, under which they sought to grant themselves amnesty from prosecution before the new democratic government had a chance to try them for any wrongdoing. The law might well have served to cover up the junta's practice of taking young children away from detained mothers during the Dirty War.[13]

Spanish request for extradition

In 1997, Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón sought to detain and extradite 45 Argentinian military officers, among them Rubén Franco, and one civilian to Spain to try them for genocide, state terrorism and torture of political prisoners by the de facto régime that held sway in Argentina from 1976 to 1983,[14] but the request was rejected several times by the Argentine government, invoking the principle of territoriality. On 27 July 2003, however, President Néstor Kirchner's Decree 420/03 modified that criterion and ordered the "obligatoriness of the judicial process", thus opening the way to extraditing the officers that Spain had asked for.[15] In August the same year, the then Prime Minister of Spain, José María Aznar ordered an end to the extradition proceedings, but this decision was struck down by the Supreme Court of Spain in 2005,[16] which led to the consequent reactivation of the extradition requests.

Taking children away

Subsequently, Admiral (ret.) Franco was further indicted for other crimes that arose from removing children from their families during the Dirty War. Carlos Menem's pardons did not extend to such crimes.[17] On 5 July 2012, however, the tribunal that had earlier passed judgement on Franco acquitted him of the charges that had been brought against him.[18] [19]

New trial

In March 2013 a new trial was begun within which various threads of the so-called Megacausa ESMA were woven together; Megacausa ESMA is a series of investigations into the crimes perpetrated by the various juntas during the Dirty War ("ESMA" is an acronym for Escuela de Mecánica de la Armada, or "Navy Mechanic School" — a reference to one of the clandestine detention and torture centres kept by the Argentine military).[20] In 2016 Franco was still being tried on new charges involving the crimes of illegally depriving others of freedom, application of torture, and torture followed by death, in cases relating to 12 victims. These crimes were aggravated by his being a public official.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nacimiento .
  2. Web site: Datos .
  3. Web site: Info básica de su participación en el Proceso de Reorganización Nacional. .
  4. Book: 1986 . 843296574 . 55 . . 692 . 692 responsables del terrorismo de Estado .
  5. Web site: Boletín Oficial de la República Argentina — Legislación y Avisos Oficiales — Decree 227 . 3 February 1978 . boletinoficial.gob.ar . Argentinian Presidency . 28 May 2024 .
  6. Web site: Boletín Oficial de la República Argentina — Legislación y Avisos Oficiales — Decree 2923 . 12 December 1978 . boletinoficial.gob.ar . Argentinian Presidency . 28 May 2024 .
  7. Book: 1986 . 843296574 . 54 . . 692 . 692 responsables del terrorismo de Estado .
  8. Web site: 26 February 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110226024400/http://www.abogarte.com.ar/garzon.htm . Retiro de Anaya .
  9. Book: Yofre , Juan Bautista . 2009 . Fuimos Todos . Buenos Aires . Editorial Sudamericana . 446 . 978-9875665682.
  10. Web site: 26 February 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110226024400/http://www.abogarte.com.ar/garzon.htm . Retiro .
  11. Web site: 18 June 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110618085637/http://www.rotary4890.org.ar/es/gobernador2012_13htm.htm . Llegada de Arosa .
  12. Web site: Exclusión del Juicio a las Juntas Militares .
  13. Web site: 7 November 2006 . 6 October 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071006184510/http://www.rionegro.com.ar/arch200602/07/n07j06.php . Una investigación que lleva tres jueces, Río Negro on line, 7 de febrero de 2006 .
  14. Web site: Auto de procesamiento de militares argentinos, Juzgado Central de Instrucción Nº 5 de España, 29 de diciembre de 1997 .
  15. Web site: 26 September 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070926215301/http://www.espectador.com/principal/noticias/ind0307262.htm . Argentina al rojo vivo tras la decisión del presidente Kirchner de habilitar la extradición de militares acusados de violaciones a los derechos humanos, El Espectador, 27 de julio de 2003 .
  16. Web site: Corte Suprema española ordenó pedir extradición de militares argentinos, 22 de julio de 2005 .
  17. Web site: Robo de Bebés: declara fundadora de Abuelas .
  18. Web site: Videla fue condenado a 50 años de prisión por el robo de bebes .
  19. Web site: Robo de bebés: medio siglo de prisión para Videla .
  20. Web site: Lesa humanidad: se reanudó el juicio oral por crímenes cometidos en la ESMA .