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Santiago Pampillón (1942–1966) was an Argentine student and activist. He was shot and killed by security forces during a protest in downtown Córdoba in September 1966.[ citation needed]
Santiago Pampillón was a second-year engineering student, activist, and part-time employee of Industrias Kaiser Argentina (IKA). [1] [2]
On the night of 7 September 1966, thousands of students responded to the call for a strike, including Santiago Pampillón. The police were ordered to prevent and suppress the protest and a battle ensued, spanning more than twenty blocks from downtown.[ citation needed] Amid the struggle, Pampillón received three shots to the head, fired at close range by a policeman.[ citation needed] He was taken to a hospital, where he died on 12 September.[ citation needed]
In solidarity with the student movement, the CGT of Córdoba organized a silent march that was later repressed by the police.[ citation needed]
Santiago Pampillón was the first casualty in a long series of murders that occurred during the course of the military regime (1966-1973), among others such as Juan José Cabral, Adolfo Bello, Luis Norberto White and Silvia Filler.[ citation needed] His death anticipated an escalation of violence that eventually led to full-fledged state terrorism in Argentina.[ citation needed] Since then, the Argentine student movement has vindicated his name as a symbol of university activism and worker-student unity.[ citation needed]
![]() | You can help expand this article with text translated from
the corresponding article in Spanish. (January 2023) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Santiago Pampillón (1942–1966) was an Argentine student and activist. He was shot and killed by security forces during a protest in downtown Córdoba in September 1966.[ citation needed]
Santiago Pampillón was a second-year engineering student, activist, and part-time employee of Industrias Kaiser Argentina (IKA). [1] [2]
On the night of 7 September 1966, thousands of students responded to the call for a strike, including Santiago Pampillón. The police were ordered to prevent and suppress the protest and a battle ensued, spanning more than twenty blocks from downtown.[ citation needed] Amid the struggle, Pampillón received three shots to the head, fired at close range by a policeman.[ citation needed] He was taken to a hospital, where he died on 12 September.[ citation needed]
In solidarity with the student movement, the CGT of Córdoba organized a silent march that was later repressed by the police.[ citation needed]
Santiago Pampillón was the first casualty in a long series of murders that occurred during the course of the military regime (1966-1973), among others such as Juan José Cabral, Adolfo Bello, Luis Norberto White and Silvia Filler.[ citation needed] His death anticipated an escalation of violence that eventually led to full-fledged state terrorism in Argentina.[ citation needed] Since then, the Argentine student movement has vindicated his name as a symbol of university activism and worker-student unity.[ citation needed]