Demonstrators in the Argentine capital marched to the Plaza de Mayo square in front of the presidential palace to demand the government find 28-year-old Santiago Maldonado alive.
The march marked the one-month anniversary of Maldonado's disappearance. Since then, everyone -- from soccer great Diego Maradona to Oscar-winning composer Gustavo Santaolalla to politicians from opposing political parties -- have joined human rights activists in a social media campaign under the slogan: "Where is Santiago Maldonado?"
"We've gone back in time 40 years. I can't accept it," said Rosa de Roisinblit, 98, the vice president of the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo human rights groups. During the dictatorship years, she marched every week in the same square in Buenos Aires, fighting alongside other women in the group to recover their children and grandchildren.
"I can't believe that this is happening in a constitutional, democratically-elected government," she said. Today's march was largely peaceful but at the end clashes erupted between groups that had apparently infiltrated the march and police.
Maldonado's family says border police detained him when he and others were blocking a road in Chubut province, in the southern region of Patagonia. Authorities deny wrongdoing.
Maldonado's case is being investigated as a forced disappearance. But in a report published by local media authored by local prosecutor Silvina Avila to the Inter- American Commission on Human Rights, she says that there is no proof yet that border police were involved in the disappearance.
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