Argentinian flag flying near a building, for article on crimes against trans women

In first, an Argentine court convicts ex-officers of crimes against trans women during dictatorship

For the first time in Argentine legal history — and arguably in the world — a court has convicted former military officials specifically for crimes against humanity committed against transgender women. On Tuesday, judges in La Plata handed down verdicts against 11 former officials from the era of Argentina’s right-wing military dictatorship, which ruled from 1976 C.E. to 1983 C.E. and is estimated to have disappeared roughly 30,000 people.

At a glance

  • Trans women as victims: For the first time in any Argentine human rights trial, transgender women took the witness stand, with eight plaintiffs testifying about being raped and tortured at the Banfield Pit, one of the country’s largest clandestine detention centers.
  • Crimes against humanity convictions: Ten defendants received life sentences and one received 25 years in prison for offenses including killing, torture, sexual violence, and the abduction of children born in captivity across four detention centers in Buenos Aires province.
  • Stolen children: A former police doctor who oversaw births of women held captive was among those sentenced to life, part of a broader scheme in which soldiers stole newborns from detained mothers and handed them to dictatorship loyalists for adoption.

Why this verdict is historic

The trial in La Plata spanned nearly four years and involved 600 victims and testimony from hundreds of witnesses. What set it apart from Argentina’s previous human rights proceedings was its explicit focus on the systematic targeting of transgender women — a chapter of the dictatorship’s violence that had long gone unacknowledged in formal legal settings.

“What is different about this trial is that for the first time in Argentina and in the world, crimes against humanity committed against trans women in the context of state terrorism are condemned,” prosecutor Ana Oberlín told the Associated Press.

The military government promoted traditional Catholic values and treated LGBTQ Argentines as subversives. Being openly gay could result in imprisonment. Transgender women were especially vulnerable to state-sanctioned sexual violence, yet their experiences were largely absent from earlier prosecutions. Tuesday’s verdict changes that record permanently.

Argentina’s long road to accountability

Since Argentina repealed amnesty laws in 2004 C.E. that had shielded former soldiers from prosecution, the country’s courts have handed down 321 sentences for crimes against humanity and convicted 1,176 people. More than a dozen trials remain underway. That sustained legal effort, built over two decades, is among the most ambitious national reckoning with state violence anywhere in the world.

The verdict arrived as that effort faces political headwinds. Far-right President Javier Milei and Vice President Victoria Villarruel have publicly questioned the widely cited figure of 30,000 disappeared, pointing instead to an independent commission that documented 8,960 identifiable cases. Human rights organizations have raised concern about Villarruel’s family ties to the military and her advocacy for victims of leftist guerrilla violence in the early 1970s — which critics say implicitly frames the dictatorship’s repression as a justified response. The tension between the verdict and the current government’s stance underscores that Argentina’s historical reckoning remains contested, even as it advances in the courts.

What it means for Argentina’s trans community

Activists described the verdict as a long-overdue recognition of harm that the transgender community had borne in near-silence for decades. Their visibility in these proceedings is part of a broader arc: Argentina has been a regional leader in gender identity rights, passing a landmark Gender Identity Law in 2012 C.E. that allows people to change their legal gender without surgery or psychiatric diagnosis.

When the verdict was read, the courtroom — packed with survivors and relatives — erupted in shouts of “Genocidal, genocidal!” People wept and embraced. Many held portraits of disappeared loved ones alongside posters reading “There are 30,000” and “It was a genocide.” The moment captured something that legal proceedings rarely do: a community that had been rendered invisible by the state, made fully visible at last.

Hundreds of Argentines have grown up with false identities, unaware that they are the children of the disappeared, handed as newborns to dictatorship loyalists. The court’s attention to that practice — and to the doctor who oversaw captive births — signals that the full scope of the dictatorship’s cruelty is still being mapped, documented, and judged.

The decades-long process of bringing these cases to trial has relied heavily on the work of Argentine human rights organizations, many of them founded and sustained by mothers and grandmothers of the disappeared. Their persistence created the institutional infrastructure that eventually allowed transgender survivors to be heard. Amnesty International and other groups have noted that Argentina’s model — repealing amnesty, building specialized tribunals, centering survivor testimony — offers a framework other nations have studied.

For now, one trial has concluded. The record has been corrected. And a community that spent decades outside the frame of official memory has been placed, at last, inside it. Human Rights Watch has long documented the gap between Argentina’s legal advances and the lived reality of trans people; this verdict narrows that gap in a way that no previous ruling had.

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For more on this story, see: The Times Union

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