The pandemic has raised questions about how our investments as a society reflect our values. That鈥檚 come up in the context of U.S. nursing homes, where there鈥檚 often a dearth of senior nursing expertise.
Even in the context of El Salvador鈥檚 brutal civil war, the was shocking, spurring global calls for justice. On Friday, 31 years later, those calls were answered as Spain鈥檚 top criminal court handed a life sentence to Inocente Orlando Montano, a former Salvadoran army colonel and security minister,听听
The case was argued in Madrid because of universal jurisdiction, which allows one country to investigate human rights crimes in another. And it speaks to the world continues to assign to the promise of international justice.
Staff writer Howard LaFranchi has written frequently about international justice, most recently regarding the arrest of a fugitive complicit in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Cases can be a long slog, he says, and in addition to global institutions, individuals play important roles. He recalls visiting Argentina years after the Dirty War of the 1970s, and going to the home of a father whose daughter was disappeared. 鈥淲hat struck me was how people stuck with it,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e relentlessly pursued the case. So did mothers who for years gathered every Thursday in Buenos Aires鈥 Plaza de Mayo demanding answers.鈥
In Mr. Montano鈥檚 case, prosecutor Almudena Berab茅u echoed that, lauding the persistence of Salvadorans. She听,听鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 really matter if 30 years have passed. I think people forget how important these active efforts are to formalise鈥 that someone was tortured or executed.
As Howard says, 鈥淭he principle of justice remains in people鈥檚 beating hearts.鈥