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> The 125th grandchild is the daughter of Lucía Tartaglia, who was > 24 when she was kidnapped by Argentina's last dictatorship > in 1977. pic.twitter.com/LMI5UxfGgh > —
Santiago del Carril (@delcarril) 27 October 2017 It is understood the woman is being offered counseling and the option of meeting her birth mother's family. "Today we find another
granddaughter," said Estela de Carlotto, 87, who is one of the leaders of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo. YEARS OF NOT KNOWING De Carlotto described the family's ordeal
after Lucia went missing in the town of La Plata, where she was studying law. "During the next year the efforts to locate Lucia by her family were in vain, they had no news of her until
in November 1978, a year after her disappearance. Her brother, Aldo Tartaglia, received a first letter from Lucia where she reported that she was detained. In another letter she said that
she was pregnant and that she expected to give birth in early 1979," she said. It is not known when Lucia died but between 1976, when the military ousted President Isabel Peron, and
1983, when democracy was restored after the Falklands (Malvinas) war, more than 5,000 people were "disappeared." Many women were pregnant when they went into custody and it is
thought that Lucia may have given birth during 1978, well before the letter arrived. BODIES DUMPED IN THE OCEAN Hundreds of Peronist or left-wing activists, suspected of belonging to a
guerrilla group called the Montoneros, "disappeared," eventually being dumped into the Atlantic Ocean from Navy helicopters and planes.