#1
| |
Campo De Mayo
Look it up on Wikipedia, interesting. Quote:
|
The Following User Says Thank You to HeadLessHorseman7 For This Useful Post: | ||
dasplague |
#2
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
Sad... ![]() |
#3
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
Whats to look up? Her alligator mouth overran her parakeet ass.
|
#4
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
Give us a clue then ![]() |
#5
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
Would have been better with some info or more pics.
|
#6
| ||||||||
So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:1151 female Join Date: Dec 2007 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 0 Post(s)
| ||||||||
Re: Campo De Mayo
boo hiss ![]() |
#7
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
lol copy and paste is too hard to do? just messin ;) |
#8
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
Sorry all the info was in spanish, if you want information just look up Campo De Mayo
|
#9
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
![]() |
#10
|
Re: Campo De Mayo
Campo de Mayo is a military base located in Greater Buenos Aires, Argentina, 30 km (19 mi) northwest of Buenos Aires. Campo de Mayo covers an area of 8,000 ha (19,768 acres) and is one of the most important military bases in Argentina, site of the General Lemos Non-Commissioned Officers' School of the Argentine Army.[1]. It is also home of the Argentine Army Aviation [edit] History Development of the base was authorized by a Congressional bill sponsored by the Minister of War, General Pablo Riccheri, and signed by President Julio Roca on August 8, 1901. A site was later chosen northwest of Buenos Aires, for which land was purchased from Eugenio Mattaldi in 1910. Between 1976 and 1982, during the Dirty War, there were four secret detention centres inside the base. The most notorious were "La Casita", "Prisión Militar de Encausados", "El Campito" and the "Hospital Militar," where newborn babies were confiscated from pregnant women among the disappeared by the regime.[2] The Campo de mayo was also the site of an April 1987 mutiny by Lt. Col. Aldo Rico and executed by men loyal to him known as Carapintadas ("painted faces," from their use of camouflage paint). Instigated despite the passage of the Full Stop Law, which limited prosecutions of nearly 600 officers implicated in the Dirty War, the incident was tantamount to a coup attempt against President Raúl Alfonsín, who successfully stayed the mutiny. But nothing about this woman so, I dunno. |