Operation Condor: Former Argentine junta leader jailed Published duration 28 May 2016

image copyright AFP/Getty image caption The trial in the Operation Condor case lasted three years

Former Argentine junta leader Reynaldo Bignone has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for crimes committed under Operation Condor - a conspiracy between South America's dictators in the 1970s.

Bignone and 14 other military officers were found guilty by a court in Argentina after a three-year trial.

Many left-wing activists were kidnapped and killed in Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Bolivia.

Human rights activists have hailed the ruling.

image copyright AFP image caption South American states colluded to crack down on left-wing opponents

Judges at the court in Buenos Aires announced the sentencing of Bignone, Argentina's last dictator, on Friday.

Former Uruguayan Col Manuel Cordero - the only non-Argentine defendant - was jailed for 25 years.

The judges are continuing to deliberate the sentencing of the rest of the former military officers.

Since the trial started in 2013, five defendants, including Jorge Rafael Videla, the head of Argentina's junta during its first three years, have died.

"This ruling, about the co-ordination of military dictatorships in the Americas to commit atrocities, sets a powerful precedent to ensure that these grave human rights violations do not ever take place again in the region," Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director for Human Rights Watch, said.

At the scene: Irene Caselli, BBC News

The verdict hearing took place in the largest courtroom in Buenos Aires and it lasted over an hour.

The hall was full of survivors and relatives of victims who had travelled from neighbouring countries.

A Uruguayan flag was hanging in the hall, marking the first time a former Uruguayan officer had gone on trial for torture in Argentina.

The only defendant present was Angel Furci, who was found guilty of illegal kidnapping in 67 cases and 62 cases of torture - for his actions at the Automotores Orletti illegal detention centre.

At the end of the sentencing process, families of victims shouted "Presente!" (present), the chant dedicated to those who disappeared.

Operation Condor - named after the largest vulture in South America - began in 1975 at a meeting of intelligence chiefs from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay.

It later came to include Brazil, and - in a more peripheral role - Ecuador and Peru.

The operation, which continued in the 1980s, brought together the military of neighbouring nations that had previously been at war with each other in order to fight a new common enemy - the spread of Marxist ideology throughout the region.

Operation Condor - the facts

Co-operation between the military dictatorships in Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Bolivia, Uruguay and Brazil in the 1970s and 1980s

Eliminated opponents and leftists across the continent

The "targets" were interrogated and tortured in seven clandestine prisons

Best known case was the 1976 assassination in Washington DC of Orlando Letelier, foreign minister under Chile's socialist President Salvador Allende

Operation Condor had 376 victims: 177 Uruguayans, 72 Argentines, 64 Chileans, 25 Paraguayans, 15 Peruvians, 12 Bolivians, five Brazilians, three Cubans, two Americans and a Spaniard (source: UNESCO)