A former
mayor and retired military official has been arrested in connection with human
rights abuses committed under Pinochet's dictatorship. Cristian Labbe has
denied any involvement in the crimes.
Deutsche Welle, 20 Oct 2014
A retired
military official who served under Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet was
arrested on Monday in connection with human rights abuses.
Cristian
Labbe, who served as mayor of an upscale Santiago neighborhood from 1996 to
2012, was arrested with nine other former officials for the kidnapping and
murder of 13 people after a 1973 military coup that brought Pinochet to power
and kept him there until 1990.
He was
questioned by a judge, who said there was evidence Labbe had been part of a
"hierarchical organization" that became the country's feared secret
police National Intelligence Directorate, or DINA by its Spanish initials.
The crimes
were allegedly committed at the Tejas Verdes military base 120 kilometers west
of Santiago. The DINA-run camp was used as a torture and detention center,
where prisoners were said to have undergone torture methods such as mock
shootings, beatings, electric shocks and the removal of fingernails.
Alvaro
Elizalde, a government spokesman, told reporters on Monday that the
investigation into human rights abuses was ongoing.
"We
hope this can be cleared up and it's the courts that have to determine any
responsibilities (in the case)," he said.
A source
not authorized to speak on the matter told Reuters news agency that Judge
Marianela Cifuentes was prosecuting the ten former military members.
"Cifuentes
determined that the DINA had become an unlawful organization for committing
crimes against humanity, and as such has prosecuted Labbe as a member of that
unlawful organization."
Though the
military coup which brought in the military dictatorship happened over four
decades ago, there has been a recent push to bring those accused of human
rights violations to justice.
Last month,
Reuters reported that Santiago sought to overturn a law that protects military
personnel who served during the military regime from legal prosecution.
An
estimated 3,000 people were kidnapped and killed or disappeared during the
17-year dictatorship, and another 28,000 people were tortured. Augusto Pinochet
died at the age of 91 in 2006, never having faced a full trial for the crimes
committed during his rule.
sb/slk (Reuters, AP, AFP, dpa)

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