Boca Juniors pays tribute to their partners who disappeared during the Los Angeles dictatorship

Buenos Aires, Mar 22 (EFE). – Argentine club Boca Juniors has become the home of its members who disappeared during the South American country’s last military dictatorship (1976-1983).

In a ceremony held at the Alberto J. Armando “La Bombonera” house in Buenos Aires, the house of Benjamín Isaac Dricas, who disappeared on August 21, 1976; Daniel Lázaro Rus, July 15, 1977; and José Luis Lucero on March 20, 1976.

“The club to make reparations to the families for the imbecile violence perpetrated according to the last dictate,” Buenos Aires prosecutor Alejandro Veiga told public television.

The Xeneize joined the families of those involved with a wallet and a blue and gold silk-screened T-shirt, after one or the other evoked what is planned for the disappeared. “It’s bringing him present, restoring and bringing present his militancy and his love for Boca Juniors,” said Dricas’ sister.

This rite is really vital because it is celebrated only two days of the Day of Remembrance, which every March 24 commemorates the anniversary of the 1976 coup d’état, incorporated into the month of Memory, Truth and Justice in Argentina.

That year, the march marked, for the negative, which component of the executive of the libertarian Javier Milei, who proclaimed the sum of 30,000 disappeared, under the dictate of human rights organizations.

In 2022, the entity presided over by former footballer Juan Román Riquelme joined the notebooks of missing relatives, coinciding with the popularity of Argentine entities such as River Plate, Racing Club, Huracán, Ferro Carril Oeste, Rosario Central and Deportivo Morón. . EFE

RSR/CMM/CAV

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