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FOUR former soldiers charged with committing crimes against humanity during Argentina's 1976-1983 military dictatorship have said they will admit guilt and help to identify victims and burial sites.
Presiding judge Diaz Gavier said on Wednesday that the men had “voluntarily expressed their intention to provide information that will facilitate the location of some human remains.”
The four are on trial for participation in crimes committed at clandestine detention centres in Cordoba province during the US-backed dictatorship that cost the lives of 30,000 people.
Ernesto Barreiro, who is accused by human rights groups of being the chief torturer at the La Perla detention centre, indicated places on Wednesday where 25 missing people might have been buried.
Mr Barreiro led a 1987 military rebellion that forced the elected government of President Raul Alfonsin to pass an amnesty law for accused human rights abusers.
The amnesty law was overturned almost two decades later, allowing prosecutors to reopen hundreds of cases.