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ARGENTINA | 13-06-2019 15:34

Rural school project helps identify remains of Malvinas soldier

Students at a rural school in Corrientes province pay homage to fallen Malvinas War soldier.

A project led by students at a rural school in San Luis de Palmar, Corriente province, helped identify the remains of a fallen soldier of the Malvinas War: Ramón Cirilo Blanco, according to researchers at the Universidad Nacional del Nordeste (UNNE).

Students at Rural School N°784 worked with UNNE investigators in 2018 to establish the life story of Blanco, whose unidentified remains had been buried in the Argentine cemetery in Darwin on the Malvinas, the control of which Argentina sought during its failed invasion of the UK-controlled territory in 1982.

Little was known about Blanco prior to the investigation, UNNE researcher Florencia Conde told Perfil in an interview.

The project came about after the school's principal decided the institution should be renamed.

"One of the options discussed was to name it after the man who donated the land where the school is located and the other came about after someone mentioned it was also located in 'an area where a Malvinas soldier lived but never returned'", she added.

"We knew nothing about the life of Ramón because he came from an unusual family background: he was tased in three places with different aunts and grandmothers because his mother had to leave for work, and couldn't take him", Conde said.

"We had to reconstruct his life story in different places".

PRIVATE EYES

Conde said the students took on the role of private investigators, interviewing people who may have known the fallen soldier.

They eventually found Mónica Gómez, Blanco's sister on his mother's side. "When we visited her, she said hoped to one day complete DNA testing (to help identify her brother), but didn't know how or where to go", the researcher added.

Soon after, Gómez was contacted by the organisation No Me Olvides (Don't Forget Me) who supported her in the process of DNA testing. 

Her DNA helped identify her brother's grave in early 2019 during the humanitarian mission to the Malvinas led by the International Red Cross and supported by Argentina's Forensic Anthropology Unit.

Read the full story in Spanish on Perfil.com

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by Reporting by Florencia de Sousa for Perfil

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