The China Mail - Oscar hopeful 'Argentina, 1985' offers lessons on democracy: prosecutor

USD -
AED 3.672999
AFN 70.495129
ALL 88.480839
AMD 388.079816
ANG 1.789679
AOA 916.499323
ARS 1124.989913
AUD 1.544595
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.693065
BAM 1.760475
BBD 2.01821
BDT 121.44561
BGN 1.752608
BHD 0.376926
BIF 2936
BMD 1
BND 1.304667
BOB 6.906795
BRL 5.611801
BSD 0.999608
BTN 85.262414
BWP 13.645733
BYN 3.271208
BYR 19600
BZD 2.00784
CAD 1.39553
CDF 2871.000251
CHF 0.841102
CLF 0.02451
CLP 940.569751
CNY 7.20635
CNH 7.196915
COP 4212.85
CRC 507.95051
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 99.124995
CZK 22.311966
DJF 177.720164
DKK 6.67299
DOP 58.9029
DZD 133.449925
EGP 50.462403
ERN 15
ETB 132.91142
EUR 0.894595
FJD 2.262498
FKP 0.758117
GBP 0.751945
GEL 2.744994
GGP 0.758117
GHS 12.724969
GIP 0.758117
GMD 71.999757
GNF 8654.999921
GTQ 7.685314
GYD 209.123559
HKD 7.79715
HNL 25.99252
HRK 6.741303
HTG 130.691715
HUF 361.5055
IDR 16619.9
ILS 3.56095
IMP 0.758117
INR 85.109298
IQD 1309.437546
IRR 42100.000137
ISK 130.350066
JEP 0.758117
JMD 159.24209
JOD 0.709297
JPY 147.62503
KES 129.500853
KGS 87.450421
KHR 4016.000273
KMF 440.503528
KPW 899.995499
KRW 1414.759838
KWD 0.30723
KYD 0.832966
KZT 508.08524
LAK 21620.000281
LBP 89549.999748
LKR 298.717314
LRD 199.62497
LSL 18.317566
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.489896
MAD 9.298389
MDL 17.472119
MGA 4518.675542
MKD 55.062334
MMK 2099.484484
MNT 3573.897983
MOP 8.02371
MRU 39.612944
MUR 46.429687
MVR 15.399357
MWK 1733.404745
MXN 19.426302
MYR 4.322497
MZN 63.8977
NAD 18.317813
NGN 1602.429756
NIO 36.779333
NOK 10.35813
NPR 136.415311
NZD 1.684201
OMR 0.384987
PAB 0.999577
PEN 3.65444
PGK 4.151402
PHP 55.771008
PKR 281.476394
PLN 3.78885
PYG 7982.465221
QAR 3.643417
RON 4.5659
RSD 105.514724
RUB 79.855411
RWF 1431.361783
SAR 3.750593
SBD 8.350849
SCR 14.220787
SDG 600.506901
SEK 9.72816
SGD 1.301815
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.749885
SLL 20969.500214
SOS 571.209973
SRD 36.497463
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.746686
SYP 13003.313899
SZL 18.312338
THB 33.246503
TJS 10.365266
TMT 3.5
TND 3.023498
TOP 2.342103
TRY 38.789698
TTD 6.783414
TWD 30.422052
TZS 2687.497909
UAH 41.541044
UGX 3658.179822
UYU 41.748053
UZS 12889.869031
VES 92.714991
VND 25961.5
VUV 119.97318
WST 2.778545
XAF 590.436285
XAG 0.030403
XAU 0.000308
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.734637
XOF 590.454887
XPF 107.349566
YER 244.449571
ZAR 18.34335
ZMK 9001.201071
ZMW 26.488498
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    63.81

    +1.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.0020

    22.078

    -0.01%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    10.6

    +2.08%

  • NGG

    0.0450

    67.575

    +0.07%

  • SCS

    -0.0650

    10.755

    -0.6%

  • RIO

    0.9950

    62.405

    +1.59%

  • BCE

    -0.5150

    22.045

    -2.34%

  • BCC

    1.2590

    94.359

    +1.33%

  • RELX

    0.5800

    52.41

    +1.11%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    12.88

    -1.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0930

    22.393

    +0.42%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    9.09

    +0.22%

  • AZN

    -1.1550

    67.795

    -1.7%

  • GSK

    -0.8890

    36.481

    -2.44%

  • BTI

    -0.2000

    40.78

    -0.49%

  • BP

    0.5450

    30.735

    +1.77%

Oscar hopeful 'Argentina, 1985' offers lessons on democracy: prosecutor
Oscar hopeful 'Argentina, 1985' offers lessons on democracy: prosecutor / Photo: © AFP

Oscar hopeful 'Argentina, 1985' offers lessons on democracy: prosecutor

Luis Moreno Ocampo was just 32 years old and had no trial experience when he was summoned to prosecute Argentina's generals in 1985 after a disastrous military dictatorship -- a story retold in an Oscar-nominated film.

Text size:

Moreno Ocampo, who went on to become the first prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, says "Argentina, 1985" can help teach global audiences about the risks of losing democracy -- and the importance of public opinion.

"You've got to win your case in court. But then it's a battle for the memory," the 70-year-old Ocampo told AFP in an interview in Malibu, California, where he currently lives.

"I won the battle... in 1985. But (with this movie), Santiago Mitre and Ricardo Darin are winning the battle for memory in 2023, and that's unique."

Mitre is the director of "Argentina, 1985," one of five nominees for the Academy Award for best international feature.

It tells the story of one of the most important trials in the country's history, and puts the focus on the tensions as the Latin American nation groped its way back to democracy after seven years of murderous military government from 1976 to 1983.

Moreno Ocampo (Peter Lanzani), who himself hailed from a traditional military family, is appointed by lead prosecutor Julio Strassera (Darin) to help try nine of the uniformed men who had ordered thousands of killings and disappearances.

The trial led to the convictions of six men including former dictator Jorge Videla and key junta member Emilio Massera, who were jailed for life.

The proceedings, compared to the Nuremberg trials after World War II, also sharply divided Argentines -- and even Moreno Ocampo's own family.

"The movie shows how my mother was against me," said Moreno Ocampo, who is now a visiting professor at the University of Southern California and a senior fellow at Harvard.

"My mother went to church with the dictator general Videla!"

But as one of the film's most painful scenes reveals, the harrowing first testimony of the trial -- that of a woman who is forced by her captors to give birth handcuffed in the back seat of a patrol car -- changed her mind.

"The next day she called me... She told me: 'I still love General Videla, but you are right, he has to go to jail'."

- Torture -

"Argentina, 1985" shows how the military regime set up detention, torture and extermination camps, with people being thrown alive into the sea from airplanes, shot or detained indefinitely.

Some 30,000 Argentines disappeared, and it is estimated that hundreds of babies born in captivity were given to other families, including military families.

Moreno Ocampo says holding those responsible to account is vital if a country is to come to terms with its past and become a stable and secure democracy -- something he says Brazil, for example, did not do.

"They did not investigate the past... this has an impact. In Brazil, they feared that the military could get involved in a coup in the near future," he explained.

"The problem is not the military, because they follow orders. It's the elites -- if your elites support a coup, you have a problem," he says.

"It's something that Brazil, and even the United States, hasn't understood," he adds, referring to the 2021 assault on the US Capitol in the waning days of Donald Trump's presidency.

"When journalists ask me how to avoid coups d'etat... the issues are not those involved in the sedition, the issue is who was supporting them," he told AFP.

"The elite supporting civilian sedition, like in Washington -- they are the problem."

- 'Power of youth' -

Argentina has won two Oscars previously, both for films that tackled the years of military terror: "The Official Story" in 1986 and "The Secret in Their Eyes" in 2010.

Moreno Ocampo -- who will attend the Oscars on Sunday -- says he hopes that this year's offering, with its focus on the role young people played in achieving justice, will bring the four-decade-old story of Argentina's emergence from dictatorship to a new audience.

"My 23-year-old son didn't know what had happened. Now he's learning," he said.

"This film is about the risk of (losing) democracy. But it's also about the power of youth -- how young people are the ones who change the world and how you have to continue to battle for justice.

"Justice is a never-ending job."

Q.Moore--ThChM