Still searching for justice, Chile marks the 42nd anniversary of military coup

Still searching for justice, Chile marks the 42nd anniversary of military coup
By Joanna Gill with Telesur, AP, AFP
Share this articleComments
Share this articleClose Button
Copy/paste the article video embed link below:Copy to clipboardCopied

Remembering a painful past, Chile’s President Michelle Bachelet said the truth must be told and justice be served for thousands of victims of the

ADVERTISEMENT

Remembering a painful past, Chile’s President Michelle Bachelet said the truth must be told and justice be served for thousands of victims of the country’s dictatorship. She made the statement as Chileans marked the 42nd anniversary of the coup which ousted democratically-elected President Salvador Allende and began the 17-year-long dictatorship of General Pinochet on September 11, 1973.

In total 40,018 people were either killed, tortured or imprisoned for political reasons. Around 75 of 1073 ex-Pinochet era agents are serving prison sentences for human rights violations.

“It has not been easy, but we have been able to transform a tragedy like the one we had to live 42 years ago into a victory of democracy, a defeat of death in the hands of life,” said Bachelet during a ceremony paying tribute to former President Allende. She also announced the creation of a special Human Rights Unit, which awaits approval from Congress.

Bachelet’s father was a victim of the Pinochet regime. In November 2014 two retired colonels were jailed for the crime of torture of Air Force General Alberto Bachelet Martinez.

Also at the ceremony Allende’s daughter, Isabel, spoke of the difficult memories the anniversary evokes, saying “we remembered those 38 people (personal bodyguards) who were with him, who accompanied him, who remained (with him in La Moneda), which today are missing, were killed, executed. I think that causes a lot of emotion.”

In 2011, it was confirmed that Allende committed to suicide rather than submit to the military coup makers.

Vigils and violence

People gathered outside one of the stadiums in Santiago where many people were tortured and disappeared following the coup. Many of the families of the victims never knew what happened to their loved ones.

“I came to remember what happened here, I mean, really so we don’t forget, and to place some candles, and remember friends,” said one citizen attending the vigil.

The crimes committed by the Pinochet regime continue to blight the country with many marching for justice for the victims.

The anniversary is often marked by violence, and this year was no different as police clashed with vandals. One officer was injured, but authorities said that demos were less fierce than previous years.

#Chile: Tear gas & rubber pellets now in Villa Francia in Santiago on anniversary of 1973 coup. Via rvfradiopopular</a> <a href="http://t.co/D4TmVSdSMy">pic.twitter.com/D4TmVSdSMy</a></p>&mdash; ѕyndιcalιѕт (syndicalisms) September 12, 2015

Share this articleComments

You might also like

Swing to the right as Chile to re-write constitution

Chile's former president Sebastián Piñera dies in helicopter crash

Prosecutors in Germany charge 27 in far-right coup plot