Museum stirs up Chile's troubled past Published: 4:30
PM Tuesday January 12, 2010
Source: Reuters
Chile has inaugurated a museum to thousands murdered, "disappeared" and tortured during General Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship, stirring up bitter memories just days before a presidential vote that is expected to pave the way for a new rightist government.
Chile's current centre-left government says 3,195 people were killed or "disappeared" during Pinochet's 1973-1990 rule and about 28,000 people, including President Michelle Bachelet, were tortured.
"The inauguration of this museum is a powerful sign of the strength of a united country, a union based on a shared commitment that we will never again suffer a tragedy like that which this place will always remind us of," Bachelet told an audience of about 1,000 guests.
"In democracy, justice is done, and there will be justice ... which we never had in those years."
The guests included three former presidents from the centre-left coalition that has governed Chile since Pinochet's dictatorship ended two decades ago.
But the event has revived raw sensitivities and anger.
Some in the crowd heckled visiting Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa, a prominent supporter of conservative billionaire Sebastian Pinera, who is expected to win a presidential run-off on Sunday and end the centre-left's rule.
"He should leave!" people chanted, referring to Vargas Llosa.
"There are many people, important men like this writer, who don't know the story and have no right to give lessons to our people," said 84-year-old Ana Gonzales, whose two sons, husband and pregnant daughter-in-law all "disappeared" during Pinochet's rule.
More:
http://tvnz.co.nz/world-news/museum-stirs-up-chile-s-troubled-past-3328626