<P> In 2005, under Nestor Kirchner presidency, the trials where opened again . Most of the Junta's members are currently in prison by charges of crimes against humanity and genocide . </P> <P> Foreign governments whose citizens were victims of the Dirty War (which included citizens of Czechoslovakia, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Germany, the United States, the United Kingdom, Paraguay, Bolivia, Spain, Chile, Uruguay, Peru and several other nations) are pressing individual cases against the former military regime . France has sought the extradition of Captain Alfredo Astiz for the kidnapping and murder of its nationals, among them nuns Léonie Duquet and Alice Domon . </P> <P> On 23 January 1989, an armed group of around 40 guerrillas, a faction of the Movimiento Todos por la Patria (MTP or All for the Fatherland Movement), attacked the La Tablada army barracks on the outskirts of Buenos Aires to "prevent" a military coup . The attack resulted in 28 of the guerrillas killed, five "disappeared" and 13 imprisoned . Eleven police and military died, and 53 were wounded in the fighting . The guerrillas claimed to have acted to prevent a military coup . Among the dead at La Tablada was Jorge Baños, a human rights lawyer who had joined the guerrillas . The MTP attack to prevent a military coup has been suspected to be lead by infiltrated Intelligence military service . </P> <P> In 2002, Máxima, daughter of Jorge Zorreguieta, a civilian cabinet minister of Argentina during the early phase of the Dictatorship, married Willem - Alexander, crown prince of the Netherlands . All Holland had wrestled in controversy over her suitability, but ultimately the marriage took place without the presence of her parents . Máxima thus became Queen when her husband ascended to the throne in 2013 . In August 2016, Argentine President Mauricio Macri was widely condemned by human rights group for calling into question the number of 30,000 disappeared and for referring to the period as a "Dirty War". </P>

What happened to argentina after the dirty war