Princess’ dad has Argentine dictatorship history

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Prince Willem-Alexander’s ascension to the Dutch throne in April promises to be a shining moment on the world stage for his wife, Maxima, and her home country of Argentina. But there will be a glaring absence at the ceremony.

Queen Beatrix’s announcement this week that she’ll step aside and let her son become king raised new questions about the future queen’s father, Jorge Zorreguieta, one of the longest-serving civilian ministers in Argentina’s 1976-1983 military dictatorship.

Maxima’s parents already missed out on their daughter’s 2002 wedding to avoid offending Dutch sensibilities about human rights violations by the South American junta. Anticipating more unpleasant questions, Maxima told the prime minister that her parents won’t attend her swearing-in as queen, either.

Zorreguieta is 85 now, and Argentina has been a democracy for nearly 40 years, but the country’s violent history remains an open wound.

Lawyers in both countries are trying to determine whether Zorreguieta had any personal responsibility for forced disappearances at a time when Argentina’s top business executives supported the junta’s “dirty war” against leftists, union members and other so-called “subversives,” killing as many as 30,000 people.

In The Hague on Thursday, lawyers for a group of victims formally asked prosecutors to reopen a case against Zorreguieta.

In Buenos Aires, an investigative judge is working to determine whether allegations raised by Zorreguieta’s former employees merit the filing of criminal human rights charges.

Maxima grew up in Buenos Aires and had a successful career in banking before meeting the prince. She’s now the most popular member of the royal family, a mother of three whose personal touch has won over the Dutch. Argentines have followed her story closely, fascinated to see one of their own reach such heights.

Yet her father’s past has overshadowed the news.

Zorreguieta led the Rural Society, a bastion of Argentina’s landowning elite, before the 1976 military coup, and later ran the junta’s Agriculture Ministry, where several employees were killed and hundreds were forced to resign for supposed leftist tendencies. Known as more of a technocrat, Zorreguieta limited most of his public statements to cattle production and other statistics.

In his only comments about the dictatorship since then, he has denied knowing anything about crimes against humanity.

Still, Zorreguieta had a close working relationship for many years with Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz, who ran Argentina’s economy for dictator Jorge Videla. That background caused such unease in the Netherlands before his daughter’s 2002 marriage that the Dutch Parliament ordered historian Michiel Baud to prepare a secret report on what skeletons might emerge from his closet.

Baud’s conclusions, which Argentines later published as a book titled “The Father of the Bride,” provided just enough reassurances to allow the wedding to go forward, while making clear that Zorreguieta still has much to answer for.

In an Associated Press interview, Baud said the concerns he raised back then remain just as worrisome.

“I didn’t find any proof that he was directly connected to human rights violations, but it was clear that in his position as director of the `Societal Rural,’ he was part of the group of people that at least stimulated the coup, and it’s significant that he stayed with the dictatorship for the whole five years, until Videla himself left the government,” Baud said.

“It was inconceivable that he did not know about what was happening in Argentina. That was my strongest conclusion,” said Baud, who met with Zorreguieta in 2001, and included his written denials in the report he presented to parliament.

Before her wedding, Princess Maxima had said she accepted her father’s decision not to attend.

“I regret that he did his best in a bad regime,” she said in a media interview. “He had the best intentions.”

Zorreguieta wrote an open “letter to the people of the Netherlands” that was published in Argentina’s La Nacion newspaper, saying he wouldn’t go to his daughter’s wedding because he wanted to avoid “controversies” that could hurt her future.

In the letter, he also listed 10 “truths” about his role in the dictatorship, claiming that “in the Agriculture Ministry there was no knowledge of the repression” and that “only after 1984, did the excesses committed during the repression become known.”

These claims were immediately challenged in Argentina.

In the left-leaning newspaper Pagina12, journalist Miguel Bonasso wrote a blistering, point-by-point response, noting that Argentina’s human rights violations were known around the world while Zorreguieta served the junta.

Bonasso also wrote that when Argentina hosted the 1978 World Cup in a stadium just down the street from a clandestine terror center, members of the Dutch team met publicly with the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo to support their effort to find detainees.

Still, as his daughter prepares to be sworn in as queen, Zorreguieta has made no apologies for his past, said Baud, who directs the Centre for Latin American Research and Documentation in Amsterdam.

“What’s remarkable is that since that moment, 12 years have passed, he’s never made any excuse or any statement to the victims. He’s sticking to his story. He has not in any way shown any remorse or second thoughts or whatever,” Baud said.

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