Former
Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega has broken his silence in a jailhouse
interview with a local TV channel. The 81-year-old asked to be forgiven, but
did not specify any abuses.
Deutsche Welle, 25 June 2015
Noriega
began the interview, which was conducted in prison, by reading a statement he
had prepared after talking to his family and members of the church
"Before
the altar of my conscience I've come to express myself in the spirit of
forgiveness," the former military dictator said, his hand shaking but
otherwise appearing in good health for his 81 years.
He said he
had had plenty of time to reflect in jail and came to the conclusion that it
was appropriate to ask for forgiveness. But he refused to answer questions on
any specific abuses and did not offer any clarification on the still unresolved
disappearance of two opponents.
Referring
to himself as the "last general of the military era," Noriega
apologized to those "offended, affected, injured or humiliated" by
his own actions or those of his superiors and subordinates during Panama's
military regime.
Panama was
under military rule from the late 1960s until the US invasion in 1989, which
many Panamaians supported.
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Noriega
ruled Panama from 1983 to 1989
|
He returned
to Panama in 2011 to complete a 60-year sentence for murder, corruption and
embezzlement during the military's three-decade rule. Among the atrocities he
was involved in or was responsible for is the violent suppression of public
protests and the 1989 Albrook massacre that saw 12 people executed for their
part in a coup attempt.
Noriega had
not spoken to a journalist since his 1996 interview with CNN's Larry King,
which took place in a Miami prison.
ng/msh (AP, AFP, dpa)


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