|

I’m still looking for you – Argentina’s ongoing struggle for truth and memory

Between 1976 and 1983, Argentina’s military dictatorship carried out a systematic campaign of state terrorism that left an estimated 30,000 people missing. One of the regime’s most notorious practices was the death flights, in which prisoners were drugged and thrown alive into the sea or rivers. These flights became a symbol of the dictatorship’s brutality and deliberate effort to erase all traces of its victims.

Decades later, the search for memory, truth, and justice continues. The families of the disappeared bring the faces of their loved ones to public spaces and courtrooms, demanding accountability. Trials such as Puente 12, which investigates clandestine detention centers, offer opportunities for justice to be served, but they also highlight the persistence of impunity when those responsible are acquitted.

This project documents the ongoing efforts to confront the legacy of the dictatorship: the families’ struggle to obtain answers, the judicial process that seeks to establish responsibility, and the role of collective memory in keeping alive the history of the death flights in Argentine democracy. It is a record of how a society continues to grapple with the crimes of its past and the lasting impact on generations still waiting for the truth.