Quicklime

A commando from the new organization known as the Montoneros, which takes its name from the irregular parties of gauchos who resisted pro-British liberalism during the nineteenth century, kidnaps former dictator Aramburu on May 29. The Montoneros' members emerged from the group known as Catholic Action and participated in social work camps led by priests in the country's poorest regions. The Montoneros combine personal attacks against members of the military and union leaders with community work among the poor and political organizing of the Peronist Youth. After a mock trial for the 1956 shootings, Aramburu is killed in a cellar, and his corpse is submerged in quicklime. From his exile in Madrid, Peron approves of the deed and congratulates the Montoneros, whose first communication commends Aramburu's soul to God.

Horacio Verbitsky's Confessions of an Argentine Dirty Warrior