At the front, with her head held high, the granddaughter of Luisa Cuesta, a historic fighter for human rights, led the March and took up the flag that her grandmother carried for years, this time the flag of Luisa with Luisa and the flag of her son, Nebio Melo Cuesta. Luisa Cuesta died in 2018, without knowing the whereabouts of her son.
And the march continued throughout July 18 with the thunderous silence, as is only perceived every May 20.
The long silent procession with the faces of the disappeared and the thousands of incomplete daisies arrived at Plaza Libertad, resisting, as always resisting, the cold or fatigue. There they named each of the disappeared and a strong present.
The march ended with the intonation of the verses of the National Anthem that resonated with the trembling tyrants that shook the walls of the buildings and with a thunderous applause that was heard from north to south, from east to west and put an end to a new claim for truth, memory, justice and never again state terrorism.
The date recalls the murders of Zelmar Michelini, Héctor Gutiérrez Ruiz, William Whitelaw and Rosario Barredo, and the disappearance of Manuel Liberoff, in Buenos Aires and calls for truth and justice for the 197 disappeared, many of them in the framework of the Condor Plan of repressive coordination of the dictatorships of the Southern Cone.