Pinochet accused over murder of ex-president
Jonathan Franklin in Santiago
Thursday May 18, 2006
The Guardian
Army generals and aides in Chile have accused General Augusto Pinochet of involvement in the murder of the former president Eduardo Frei Montalva, who died mysteriously in January 1982.
Judge Alejandro Madrid has received evidence that the infection that killed Frei at a hospital in Santiago was the result of a secret biological weapons programme run by Gen Pinochet's secret police.
"At first they did not believe us," said Senator Eduardo Frei, son of the former president. "We have been convinced that there was intervention by a third party in the death of President Frei."
Retired army generals asked Judge Madrid for permission to present evidence that Gen Pinochet had ordered the "disappearance" of Eugenio Berrios, a secret operative who designed his biochemical warfare programme, including production of anthrax, botulism and the nerve gas sarin. Berrios is suspected of designing the bacterial agent that struck down Frei while he was in a hospital recovering from a hernia operation. Alvaro Varela, the Frei family lawyer, called the new evidence "precise, clear and concrete" in proving that Gen Pinochet announced the order to have Barrios kidnapped and killed. According to leaked testimony, the dictator was worried that Berrios would reveal he had personally ordered the murder of senior opposition figures including Frei and Orlando Letelier, a former chancellor.
Berrios's body was found with two bullets in his head on a beach near Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1995. The subsequent investigation by Jorge Molina, a Chilean journalist, proved that Berrios had been smuggled halfway across South America, then murdered with the complicity of Chilean and Uruguayan intelligence agencies.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/chile/story/0,,1777125,00.html
Eugenio BerriosPinochet's Mad Scientist
By Samuel Blixen
On Nov. 15, 1992, a terrified scientist broke a window of a white bungalow in the Uruguayan beach town of Parque del Plata.
Chubby, in his mid-40s, the man struggled through the opening. Once outside, furtively and slowly, he picked his way to the local police station.
"I am a Chilean citizen," the scientist told the police when he finally reached the station. He pulled a folded photostatic copy of his identification papers concealed in his right shoe. "I have been abducted by the armies of Uruguay and my country," he claimed.
The scientist, rumpled with a graying beard, said he feared for his life. He insisted that his murder had been ordered by Gen. Augusto Pinochet, then the chief of Chile's army who had ruled as a dictator from 1973 to 1990.
The motive for the execution was the man's anticipated testimony at a politically sensitive trial in Chile, a case that could send reverberations all the way to Washington, D.C.
The scientist had worked as an accomplice in a terror campaign that included the bombing deaths of Chilean dissident Orlando Letelier and an American co-worker Ronni Moffitt as they drove to work in Washington in 1976.
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http://www.consortiumnews.com/1999/c011399a.html