
‘You couldn't trust anyone': documenting Argentina's military dictatorship
Shortly after 10am on 14 September 1980, a small turboprop aircraft en route from Buenos Aires to the Argentinian city of Rosario crashed into the Rio de la Plata, killing both pilots and three journalists from the newspaper Crónica who were on the way to cover a football match.
The authorities logged the crash as an accident, even though the pilots had raised no alarms to suggest there was a problem with the plane. Many were not convinced. This was Argentina in the middle of a brutal crackdown on opponents of the then military dictator, Jorge Rafael Videla – who came to power in a coup, 49th anniversary of which is on 24 March.
José Luis with his colleagues at the newsroom of Crónica.
Among the sceptics convinced the aircraft had been brought down deliberately was José Luis Ledesma, a photojournalist and colleague of the Crónica reporters who died. He would have been on the same flight had it not been for a last-minute change of plan.
''One of the journalists who died that day was said to be close to the Montoneros, the leftwing guerrilla group fighting the regime,' says Ledesma. 'Just a few hours before the flight, my photo editor informed me that I had been reassigned to another task.'
Arrests are made during the Cordobazo uprising in the city of Córdoba at the end of May 1969.
Barricades block Viale San Juan in Córdoba during the Cordobazo.
Arrests are made during riots in San Miguel de Tucumán in 1972.
The crash was one of several close escapes for Ledesma, who had long documented the brutality of the Argentinian army – and was himself the target of a series of attempts on his life that ultimately forced him to flee the country.
Huge crowds including supporters of Montoneros (Movimiento Peronista Montonero, MPM) gather for the return of Juan Perón after an 18-year exile in Spain on 20 June 1973.
Snipers open fire on the crowds of leftwing Peronists during the 1973 Ezeiza massacre.
'Those were difficult years,' Ledesma says. 'You couldn't trust anyone. Unofficial squads of soldiers would arrive in dark‑green Ford Falcons, without licence plates – vehicles that had become symbols of terror. They arrested political opponents, who then vanished without a trace.'
The bodies of three priests and two students killed in what became known as the San Patricio church massacre are taken away from the Belgrano, a neighbourhood of Buenos Aires, in July 1976.
After the 1976 coup, Argentina's military set about crushing any potential opposition, and eventually 30,000 people were killed or disappeared. Pregnant prisoners were kept alive until they gave birth and then murdered. At least 500 newborns were taken from their captive parents and given to military couples to raise as their own.
A group of mothers whose children had disappeared began to protest in front of Videla's presidential palace, going down in history as the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo.
The mothers of the Plaza de Mayo at a recent protest in March 2019.
With his Nikon F2 AS, Ledesma documented arrests, murders and kidnappings. In his stark black and white images lay the full drama of one of the bloodiest regimes in recent history: bloodied, lifeless bodies riddled with bullets lay strewn along the streets or in basements.
'Some were buried in concrete blocks,'' says Ledesma. 'Others washed up on Argentina's beaches, after having been thrown from aircraft into the ocean. Among them were some of my friends and a schoolmate – her name was Elena Isabel Barbagallo. She was beautiful, only 18 years old. She was abducted in 1977. They smashed her skull with the butt of a machine gun.'
Military police during a factory takeover in Ramos Mejía suburb of Buenos Aires, May 1974.
Press coverage became a dangerous liability for the regime. Dozens of journalists and photojournalists were killed by the military, and Ledesma began to sense that he might be next.
'They started tailing me,' he says. 'One day, around the end of 1981, as soon as I got off the bus, I noticed a car in the distance. Just as I was about to cross the street, the car began to accelerate – with its headlights off in the night – directly toward me. I leapt back, and it whizzed by within a few centimetres. It was a green Falcon without a licence plate.'
A protest in Tucumán, 13 August 1971. Between 1970 and 1971, the Ptr ERP (People's Revolutionary Army) led by Mario Roberto Santucho began an armed struggle in the region.
Ledesma reluctantly concluded that if he stayed, he would end up kidnapped, executed, or thrown into the sea.
Of the hundreds of photos he had taken, only a small fraction was published in Argentina.
'Men of the regime would come to the Crónica newsroom almost daily,' says Ledesma. 'They came with a briefcase and seized the negatives of the photos most damaging to the regime. I had hidden some of my rolls and managed to preserve them.'
People wait to report the disappearance of family members to the Inter-American Human Rights Commission of the Organisation of American States, September 1979.
Ledesma managed to save only some of those photos, especially those dating back to before the coup, when, according to the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons, at least 600 people were kidnapped and at least 500 opponents were executed by death squads.
In 1982, before the end of the Falklands war, Ledesma left Argentina and made his way to Milan, where he began his career as a freelance photographer.
José Luis Ledesma with Diego Maradona.
That same year, a young footballer from Argentina arrived in Spain. He was 21 years old, was barely 5 ft 4 (1.65 metres) tall, and hailed from Boca Juniors. His name was Diego Armando Maradona.
Diego Maradona with friends and family in Argentina in 1978.
In 1984, Maradona landed in Italy and Ledesma's destiny intersected with that of one of the greatest footballer of all time.
Diego Maradona's wedding to Claudia Villafañe in 1989.
'I met Maradona shortly after his arrival in Naples, and we became friends immediately,' Ledesma says. 'Diego was an extraordinary person with a big heart, as generous as few in the world. Unfortunately, many took advantage of him.'
In 2024, his book, The Joy of Life, was published, featuring some intimate shots of Maradona's private life.
Diego Maradona at a nightclub in Buenos Aires with his brother and friends in 1983.
Maradona in the upmarket Neapolitan neighbourhood of Vomero, where he lived, in 1984, and Maradona with his daughter Dalma, who was born in 1987 in Buenos Aires, and his then wife, Claudia.
Celebrations in Buenos Aires after Argentina's 1986 World Cup win.
'With Maradona, we often talked about the dictatorship,' Ledesma says. 'He was close to the cause of the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo. We discussed how strange it was to witness from Italy what our country had endured. When I lived in Argentina, I didn't realise I was in a dictatorship. I only understood it once I arrived in Europe.'
On 30 October 1983, Argentina held its first democratic political elections in seven years. The process of democratisation would be long and traumatic.
The actor Liv Ullmann during making of the film La Amiga in Argentina in 1986.
But the horrors of those years seemed to haunt Ledesma even in Italy. Many of the criminals who had been part of the regime fled to Italy, taking advantage of their Italian origins and dual nationality. Among them was Lt Col Carlos Luis Malatto, a former Argentinian army officer accused of murder and forced disappearances during the dictatorship.
In 2019, along with a group of journalists from la Repubblica, Ledesma, who had moved to Sicily, found out that Malatto had been living in a tourist village in the province of Messina, even though he was currently on trial in Rome for crimes committed in Argentina, which was also seeking his extradition.
Former army officer Lt Col Carlos Luis Malatto is discovered in Messina in 2019.
Almost 50 years after the coup, many of the victims of the dictatorship remain missing, and the fight for justice continues.
Human rights groups have raised alarm over the far‑right president Javier Milei's attempts to rewrite history, as he denies the long-standing consensus over the dictatorship's crimes.
'Argentina is going through a very dark period with Milei,' says Ledesma. 'Milei has publicly questioned the crimes of the military dictatorship. He doubts the numbers of the desaparecidos. He wants to erase history. He does this at a very crucial moment in the battle for the identification of the desaparecidos, because time is passing – and the Madres de Plaza de Mayo have become grandmothers, some even great-grandmothers, and many have died without ever knowing anything about their children and grandchildren.'
'Milei risks erasing their memory,' he adds, 'the only antidote to ensure that what happened never happens again.'
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Scotsman
3 days ago
- Scotsman
Inside Henco Venter's Glasgow Warriors exit and a special Scotstoun moment
Cult hero is swapping Scotland for France with a heavy heart Sign up to our Rugby Union newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... It's hard to think of an overseas player who has become so popular so quickly in Scotland as Henco Venter. Glasgow Warriors supporters have taken the South African forward to their hearts and serenaded him on Friday night in what turned out to be his Scotstoun swan-song. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It was a moving experience for Venter as he came off in the 72nd minute of the victory over the Stormers which kept his team's bid to win the United Rugby Championship for the second year in a row very much alive. Departing Glasgow Warriors forward Henco Venter is a hugely popular figure with the club's supporters. | SNS Group No club has done that before but Glasgow are now through to the semi-finals, thanks in no small measure to another outstanding performance from their No 8 and cult hero, who scored a try in the 36-18 victory. Alas, a parting of the ways is imminent. Venter is off to France next season to play in the second-tier ProD2. It was announced in March that he would be joining Brive and the news of his departure was a source of regret for Franco Smith as well as the club's fans. 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The game against the Stormers was Venter's first since returning from a six-game suspension for making contact with the eye of England prop Dan Cole during the win over Leicester in the Champions Cup in early April. It means he missed both of Glasgow's recent defeats by Leinster, the 52-0 hammering in Europe and the narrow 13-5 loss in the URC. If they are to prolong their season beyond this weekend they are going to have to find a way to win in Dublin. It's not been a happy place for Glasgow but Venter feels the Warriors are rediscovering their form and if they can match their hosts' formidable physicality they can progress to the final once again. 'Teams go through a bit of a dip here and there but I think after the weekend everyone's dialled in and everyone's ready to go again,' he said. 'We are prepared to sacrifice everything to win. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad


The Herald Scotland
3 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
Keir Starmer's desperate Churchill act won't fool anyone
But the PM's proclaimed enemy isn't the Argentinian junta but a mighty Russian military machine which could wipe Britain off the face of the Earth in 10 minutes. The truth is the Russians are not our enemies; they after all lost 20 million people helping us to defeat Nazi Germany. They are in conflict with the Ukraine and with Nato over the treatment of the Russian areas of Ukraine and the fact that Nato has placed troops and missiles right up to the Russian border despite saying it wouldn't. The war in Ukraine could have been over two years ago at the talks in Istanbul. Craig Murray, our former ambassador who attended these talks, told me that a peace deal was blocked by the US and Britain. Now Keir Starmer has taken on his warlike role and is willing to spend money on warfare rather than welfare. I believe Scotland should be different and be a force for peace in the world rather than war, but for that we need our independence. Hugh Kerr (MEP 1994-99), Edinburgh. Don't fall for war hysteria Failing governments love war hysteria to distract the public from their incompetence. Arms companies love war hysteria since it is great for profits. The military establishment loves war hysteria since it strengthens their resource bargaining power. The rest of us should view war hysteria with both concern and scepticism. The proposal that the UK should proceed with a range of tactical nuclear weapons for which they would purchase American Lockheed 5-35A planes to deliver them should certainly be cause for concern. The theory is that the smaller tactical nuclear bombs are more "useable" and, therefore, a credible threat. This is an invitation to so many other states who have until now ratified the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to decide that it would also be viable for them to go for small "useable" nuclear bombs. But so much in this Defence Review is also cause for scepticism. 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Scottish Sun
22-05-2025
- Scottish Sun
First pics of homeless man ‘who stabbed stranger at Spain holiday airport in rage over PHONE' amid rough sleeping crisis
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS is the first photo of the homeless man arrested over a vicious random stabbing at a popular Spanish holiday airport. The victim was stabbed 'a few centimetres' from the carotid artery in his neck in the attack at Majorca's Palma Airport - used by hundreds of thousands of Brits every year. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 7 Carlos Heriberto Beltran Perdomo, 45, is formally under investigation for attempted murder Credit: Solarpix 7 Perdomo is said to have attacked a traveller at random after losing his mobile phone Credit: Solarpix 7 Police were urgently called to Majorca's Palma Airport on Tuesday morning after reports of a man being stabbed in the neck Credit: Solarpix The Sun can reveal this picture of the 45-year-old suspect - a Salvadoran man thought to be one of the dozens of homeless people who sleep rough in the airport each night. It shows Carlos Heriberto Beltran Perdomo being hauled into a police van to be taken to court, where he faces a likely attempted murder charge. As of Thursday afternoon, Perdomo was under formal investigation but had not been officially charged over the assault. Police revealed Perdomo had no fixed address after arresting him on Tuesday morning - moments after the stabbing. They found a weapon in his pocket which they believe was the shank used in the attack. The airport-sleeper refused to testify in court and was remanded in custody before an investigating judge on Wednesday. Sources said they believe Perdomo lashed out while high on drugs after his mobile phone disappeared. They say he became agitated while he was going through his belongings at the airport after getting off a bus. The victim is Argentinian man who had gone to the airport with a friend who was collecting a relative. He told police he was approached by a 'scruffy' looking man wearing a green shirt and shorts as he returned to the carpark who asked him: 'What do you know about my mobile?" Tourist faces £168,000 fine after launching huge rock from a clifftop into a gorge at popular Spanish beauty spot Chilling CCTV images handed to investigators show the alleged attacker walking among crowds of holidaymakers behind the stab victim. The attack occurred amid reports about a worrying rough sleeping epidemic plaguing Spanish airports. These concerns led to night-time restrictions being introduced at Madrid's Barajas Airport to stop around 400 homeless people bedding down there. Detectives said in their first comments about the Palma airport attack: 'The incident happened at 10.35am on Tuesday outside the airport arrivals area next to the car park. 7 Homeless people bed down in filthy corners of Spain's airports - including Madrid's here Credit: Solarpix 7 Bundles of belongings take over this corner of the airport Credit: Solarpix 'A young man was stabbed in the neck and suffered a wound a few centimetres from the artery which required several stitches. 'The victim was walking with a friend towards the car park after having gone to meet a relative in arrivals when they were approached by a stranger. 'The suspect asked them about his mobile and then pounced on his victim brandishing a knife which he used to stab him in the neck. 'The young man tried to repel the attack and stop his assailant continuing to stab him, asking for help from security guards who were in the area and managed to restrain the knifeman.' The alleged aggressor is being represented by a Majorcan based lawyer called Ivan Garcia Lopez. Mr Lopez confirmed yesterday his client had been remanded in jail and was being investigated on suspicion of attempted murder. He added: 'I am working on trying to secure his release on bail.' The Sun can today reveal that the arrested man was already known to Spanish police following previous detentions i including one in Ibiza last year. He is thought to work as a chef in a Majorcan tourist resort, even though he has no fixed address. A source close to the investigation said: 'He was claiming after his arrest his mobile had disappeared after he got off a bus at the airport when he took it out for a moment to search for something in his pocket. 'It looks like the victim was just in the wrong place at the wrong time and happened to be the first person the alleged offender came across and asked about his phone. 'It was completely random. The victim could have been anyone of any nationality." Police requested a restraining order for the suspect, banning him from Palma Airport, before he was remanded in custody. The request was on the basis that millions of holidaymakers use the airport facilities every day and attacks on strangers massively impact tourist security. 7 Some 400 people are estimated to sleep in the airport each night in Madrid's airport Credit: AP 7 Some people choose to sleep on the airport's uncomfortable chairs Credit: Solarpix The suspect has not been formally charged with any crime at this stage - as is normal in Spain where charges are only laid shortly before trial. But he has been warned he could be jailed for up to ten years if convicted of attempted murder. Urgent action is being demanded over the homelessness situation at a number of popular Spanish airports, including the ones in Majorca and Malaga. The problem is said to be causing not only humanitarian issues but safety and health fears too. At Madrid's Barajas airport more than 400 people are reportedly sleeping rough, with many going out to work or beg during the day and returning each night. That airport also had to be fumigated last week to treat an infestation of bedbugs, fleas and cockroaches.