(snip) From the December 2002 issue of World Press Review (VOL. 49, No. 12)
Latin America
Chile: Death Squad’s Defiance
Robert Taylor
World Press Review contributing editor
This undated file photo shows Chile's former president Salvador Allende (R) with his then-army commander Gen. Augusto Pinochet (L) during a ceremony in Santiago. Pinochet overthrew Allende in the bloody Sept. 11, 1973 military coup and ruled Chile with an iron fist until 1990 (Photo: AFP).
Chile’s bitter legacy of political repression during the dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet has re-emerged to cast a shadow over the nation’s democratic government. Press reports have exposed the continued existence of a feared death squad, Comando Conjunto (Joint Command). In an investigative report published in La Nación (Sept. 8), Víctor Gutiérrez revealed that members of the squad “no longer torture or murder,” but remain active in waging a rear-guard action to frustrate legal efforts to investigate their human-rights violations.
Even as Chilean courts have continued to pursue actions against retired military officers alleged to have participated in the torture and murder of political prisoners, Gutiérrez wrote, a leading participant in the Comando Conjunto asserted that members of the unit still obey “strict orders to lie, deceive, block, and hide evidence.” (snip/...)
http://www.worldpress.org/Americas/791.cfm~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
(snip) September 11, 1973 Chile's elected President Salvador Allende is deposed in a CIA backed military coup, resulting in 3175 deaths on the first day of Augusto Pinochet's reign. During Pinochet's US Backed tenure, more than 100,000 people disappeared, and hundreds of thousands were tortured using tactics taught at Fort Benning Georgia's School of Americas using the now declassified CIA Kubark Manual. (snip/...)
http://www.serendipity.li/wot/sympathy.htm~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A quaint episode in Pinochet's American-supported rule of Chile after the coup 9/11/73:
(snip) For a few days in October 1973, a self-styled military "delegation" toured provincial cities in northern and southern Chile, killing dozens of political opponents of General Augusto Pinochet's September coup.
Many of the victims of what became known as the "Caravan of Death" had voluntarily turned themselves into the military authorities.
Prisoners were taken from their cells and summarily executed, often without the knowledge or consent of the local military authorities.
More than 3,000 opponents died or disappeared during the Pinochet years
At least 72 people were killed and memories of the "caravan" endure as one of the most notorious episodes of human rights abuse during Chile's military rule.
Analysts say the events set the seal on Chile's long military dictatorship.
The army unit travelled from town to town in a Puma helicopter, armed with grenades, machine guns and knives. (snip/...)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/850932.stm~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Notorious Chilean School of the Americas Graduateshttp://www.derechos.org/soa/chile-not.html~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(snip) TALL SHIPS FROM around the world are scheduled to sail into Baltimore's
Inner Harbor on Friday for what organizers are touting as an event to
promote "cultural exchange and good will."
The ships will surely be a majestic sight. But behind the stately image
of one of these
ships, La Esmeralda, lies a terrifying history that should not be
forgotten.
In 1973, in the aftermath of a bloody coup against the democratically
elected
government, the Chilean Navy made a special contribution to the new
military junta led
by Gen. Augusto Pinochet. They allowed La Esmeralda, a four-masted
Chilean naval
ship, to be used as a prison and torture chamber. According to testimony
collected by
Amnesty International and the Organization of American States, at least
110 political
prisoners - 70 men and 40 women - were interrogated aboard the ship for
more than
two weeks without charges or trial.
The former mayor of Valparaiso, where the ship was stationed, described
being tied to
one of the ship's masts and subjected repeatedly to electric shock. "I
couldn't sleep for six days because they woke me up every six minutes,
night and day," he told Amnesty
International. "We could hear how the others were tortured right where
we were." (snip)
(snip) Times have changed in the United States as well. Back in the summer of
1976 when La
Esmeralda was last docked in Baltimore harbor, FBI investigators were
busy conducting extensive surveillance of the Americans protesting the
ship.
In hindsight, the FBI's focus appears shockingly misplaced. While they
had their
lenses on peaceful protestors, the real security threat was heading
toward our nation's
capital apparently unnoticed. On Sept. 21, 1976, Pinochet's agents
detonated a car bomb,
killing former Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier and 25-year-old
American Ronni Karpen
Moffitt in Washington as they drove to work at our organization, the
Institute for
Policy Studies. (snip/...)
http://216.239.37.104/search?q=cache:Mq8v90aODIcJ:www.mobtown.org/news/archive/msg00759.html+%22Torture+Ship+visits+Baltimore%22&hl=en&ie=UTF-8