-- Marcela and Felipe's attorney said the siblings had agreed to the DNA tests because of years-long "persecution" by Cristina's government and kirchnerismo for nearly a decade. The pair said they wanted their DNA comparison resolved as quickly as possible. (A report I saw said it could be in about three weeks.)
-- The Genetic Data Bank that was begun by the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo was nationalized by kirchnerismo a few years back. So that is how the government got involved.
-- Clarin (tabloid sized) is one of the largest and most important media empires (newspapers, TV and radio stations) in Latin America and the world. The government is trying to break the empire up. (Clarin even publishes a New York Times weekly supplement in English.) It has by far the largest circulation in Argentina.
-- Clarin during the dictatorship was granted exclusive rights to produce and sell newsprint (paper pulp). So Clarin controls higher newsprint prices it sets for other Argentine newspapers, magazines etc. The government's efforts to break this monopoly is currently working its way through the courts.
-- Marcela and Felipe said (through their attorney) that they were not interested in who their parents had been. Being heirs to a billion dollar industry, it is understandable why they would assume that (brainwashed and callous) position.
-- In a similar thread on LBN about this, there were some DUers who insisted that Marcela and Felipe should belong to the only mother they had known. (Ernestina's husband died in 1979 when Marcela and Felipe were tots, she is now 86 years old.)
-- But what those DUers did not consider were the grandparents (and other relatives) of the fathers and mothers who were tortured and killed by the military. Marcela and Felipe's parents were killed at the beginning of the military dictatorship in 1976.
-- The Madres de la Plaza de Mayo yesterday lauded the decision by Marcela and Felipe.
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So maybe for at least some of the grandmothers, there will be closure after 35 years.