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Argentine vows to keep fighting after finding grandson

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Her face aglow after finding her grandson 36 years after he was stolen by Argentina's military regime, activist Estela Carlotto vowed Wednesday to keep fighting to find hundreds of others still missing.

Carlotto, the 83-year-old head of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, said she had still not met her grandson Ignacio Hurban a day after news that he had been found through DNA testing.

But she said the 36-year-old, who was taken from his mother Laura after she gave birth to him in detention during the dictatorship's "dirty war," had spoken with relatives on the phone.

"I don't want to force the situation," the white-haired grandmother told journalists outside her house in La Plata, around half an hour south of Buenos Aires.

But she beamed with grandmotherly pride as she recounted how he had asked an aunt "How is Estela?" during a phone call.

"You can tell he's an exceptional boy," said Carlotto, who got the news from a federal judge after Hurban went in for genetic testing at a national commission that identifies missing people.

She said "many details of the story" were still being investigated, but that it appeared her grandson had been taken by an agent of the regime and given to a couple in the countryside to raise.

"I think they were workers and he was their boss," she said.

"They must have raised him well in the countryside. They were very good people. Well, you can see that he's good anyway, so there's something of that in him."

Estela de Carlotto  the president of Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo (Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo) is pic...
Estela de Carlotto, the president of Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo (Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo) is pictured on August 5, 2014
Ezequiel Amigo, AFP

The story revived deep emotions in Argentina, where some 500 children were taken from political prisoners during the 1976-1983 military regime.

Carlotto, whose grandson became the 114th stolen child to be found, said she would keep working to locate the nearly 400 others who are still missing.

"It doesn't end here. I will keep up the struggle. I'm going to keep working... to find all the others who are missing," she said.

- 'Took him by surprise' -

Carlotto's son, lawmaker Remo Carlotto, said the family would meet Hurban for the first time later Wednesday in La Plata.

The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo would not confirm. A source there said the first meeting would be "strictly for the family," but that a public event may be held later at the group's Buenos Aires headquarters if Hurban agreed.

Hurban's other grandmother, 91-year-old Hortensia Ardua, broke into tears describing how he resembled his father, Walmis Oscar, in photos.

"Seeing him was like seeing my son, because they're exactly alike. It's overwhelming to know he's ours. I want to see him, to hug him, to know he's my grandson," she told radio network Red.

There were joyous reactions to the news throughout Argentina, including from football stars and national icons Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi.

"Football isn't the only thing that can unite us," Maradona posted on Facebook alongside a photo of Carlotto giving him a hug.

"Happy and excited about Estela Carlotto's grandson," Messi wrote on Facebook. "We must keep up the fight, there are many more! You have our full support."

Friends said Hurban, a jazz musician and composer who lives in Olavarria, a city about 350 kilometers (215 miles) southwest of Buenos Aires, had gone in for testing on a hunch and was himself caught off guard by the news.

He had been told the test results would take three months, a friend told newspaper La Nacion.

Instead, they came back in 10 days.

"They took him by surprise," said the friend, who asked not to be named.

He said Hurban was "calm" but also worried how the news would affect the parents who raised him.

- Parents killed in captivity -

Laura Carlotto, a leftist militant, was three months pregnant when she was taken to a prison camp by the rightwing authoritarian regime in 1977.

She gave birth on June 26, 1978, while in captivity. She named the boy Guido but was killed two months after he was born. Her body was later handed to her mother.

The boy's father was also killed in captivity.

Many children taken from political prisoners during the dictatorship were raised by military and police officials. Others were even taken in by their parents' killers.

In 2012, former dictators Jorge Videla, who has since died, and Reynaldo Bignone were sentenced to 50 years and 15 years in prison, respectively, over the regime's theft of babies.

An estimated 30,000 people were killed or abducted and presumed killed during the dictatorship.

Her face aglow after finding her grandson 36 years after he was stolen by Argentina’s military regime, activist Estela Carlotto vowed Wednesday to keep fighting to find hundreds of others still missing.

Carlotto, the 83-year-old head of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, said she had still not met her grandson Ignacio Hurban a day after news that he had been found through DNA testing.

But she said the 36-year-old, who was taken from his mother Laura after she gave birth to him in detention during the dictatorship’s “dirty war,” had spoken with relatives on the phone.

“I don’t want to force the situation,” the white-haired grandmother told journalists outside her house in La Plata, around half an hour south of Buenos Aires.

But she beamed with grandmotherly pride as she recounted how he had asked an aunt “How is Estela?” during a phone call.

“You can tell he’s an exceptional boy,” said Carlotto, who got the news from a federal judge after Hurban went in for genetic testing at a national commission that identifies missing people.

She said “many details of the story” were still being investigated, but that it appeared her grandson had been taken by an agent of the regime and given to a couple in the countryside to raise.

“I think they were workers and he was their boss,” she said.

“They must have raised him well in the countryside. They were very good people. Well, you can see that he’s good anyway, so there’s something of that in him.”

Estela de Carlotto  the president of Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo (Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo) is pic...

Estela de Carlotto, the president of Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo (Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo) is pictured on August 5, 2014
Ezequiel Amigo, AFP

The story revived deep emotions in Argentina, where some 500 children were taken from political prisoners during the 1976-1983 military regime.

Carlotto, whose grandson became the 114th stolen child to be found, said she would keep working to locate the nearly 400 others who are still missing.

“It doesn’t end here. I will keep up the struggle. I’m going to keep working… to find all the others who are missing,” she said.

– ‘Took him by surprise’ –

Carlotto’s son, lawmaker Remo Carlotto, said the family would meet Hurban for the first time later Wednesday in La Plata.

The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo would not confirm. A source there said the first meeting would be “strictly for the family,” but that a public event may be held later at the group’s Buenos Aires headquarters if Hurban agreed.

Hurban’s other grandmother, 91-year-old Hortensia Ardua, broke into tears describing how he resembled his father, Walmis Oscar, in photos.

“Seeing him was like seeing my son, because they’re exactly alike. It’s overwhelming to know he’s ours. I want to see him, to hug him, to know he’s my grandson,” she told radio network Red.

There were joyous reactions to the news throughout Argentina, including from football stars and national icons Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi.

“Football isn’t the only thing that can unite us,” Maradona posted on Facebook alongside a photo of Carlotto giving him a hug.

“Happy and excited about Estela Carlotto’s grandson,” Messi wrote on Facebook. “We must keep up the fight, there are many more! You have our full support.”

Friends said Hurban, a jazz musician and composer who lives in Olavarria, a city about 350 kilometers (215 miles) southwest of Buenos Aires, had gone in for testing on a hunch and was himself caught off guard by the news.

He had been told the test results would take three months, a friend told newspaper La Nacion.

Instead, they came back in 10 days.

“They took him by surprise,” said the friend, who asked not to be named.

He said Hurban was “calm” but also worried how the news would affect the parents who raised him.

– Parents killed in captivity –

Laura Carlotto, a leftist militant, was three months pregnant when she was taken to a prison camp by the rightwing authoritarian regime in 1977.

She gave birth on June 26, 1978, while in captivity. She named the boy Guido but was killed two months after he was born. Her body was later handed to her mother.

The boy’s father was also killed in captivity.

Many children taken from political prisoners during the dictatorship were raised by military and police officials. Others were even taken in by their parents’ killers.

In 2012, former dictators Jorge Videla, who has since died, and Reynaldo Bignone were sentenced to 50 years and 15 years in prison, respectively, over the regime’s theft of babies.

An estimated 30,000 people were killed or abducted and presumed killed during the dictatorship.

AFP
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