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Indictment and arrest of Augusto Pinochet

General Augusto Pinochet was indicted for human rights violations committed in his native Chile by Spanish magistrate Baltasar Garzón in 1998. He was arrested in London six days later and held on house arrest for a year and a half before being released by the British government in 2000. Authorised to return to Chile, Pinochet was subsequently indicted by judge Juan Guzmán Tapia and charged with several crimes. He died in 2006 without having been convicted. His arrest in London made the front pages of newspapers worldwide; not only did it involve the head of the military dictatorship that ruled Chile between 1973 and 1990, it marked the first time judges had applied the principle of universal jurisdiction, declaring themselves competent to judge crimes committed in a country by former heads of state, despite the existence of local amnesty laws.

Augusto Pinochet
Criminal statusDeceased
Criminal charge

Pinochet led a 1973 coup which deposed Socialist President Salvador Allende. His 17-year regime was notorious for many human rights violations, some of which were committed as part of Operation Condor, an illegal effort to suppress left-wing political opponents in Chile and abroad in coordination with foreign intelligence agencies. Pinochet was also accused of using his position to pursue personal enrichment through embezzlement of government funds, the illegal drug trade and illegal arms trade. The Rettig Report found that at least 2,279 people were conclusively murdered by the Chilean government for political reasons during Pinochet's regime, and the Valech Report found that at least 30,000 people were tortured by the government for political reasons.

Pinochet's attorneys, headed by Pablo Rodríguez Grez (former leader of the far-right group Fatherland and Liberty), argued that he was entitled to immunity from prosecution first as a former head of state, then under the 1978 amnesty law passed by the military junta. They also claimed that his alleged poor health made him unfit to stand trial. A succession of judgments by various Courts of Appeal, the Supreme Court, medical experts, etc., led to Pinochet's subsequent house arrest and release, before he died on 10 December 2006, just after having been again put under house arrest on 28 November 2006 in the Caravan of Death case.[1]

At the time of his death in 2006, Pinochet had been implicated in over 300 criminal charges for many human rights violations,[2] including the Caravan of Death case (case closed in July 2002 by the Supreme Court of Chile, but re-opened in 2007 following new medical advice), Carlos Prats's assassination (case closed on 1 April 2005), Operation Condor (case closed on 17 June 2005), Operation Colombo, the Villa Grimaldi, Carmelo Soria, Calle Conferencia, Antonio Llidó and Eugenio Berrios cases, tax evasion and passport forgery.[2][3]

Timeline edit

Arrest in London edit

In 1998, Pinochet, who at the time continued to wield considerable influence in Chile, travelled to the United Kingdom for medical treatment; allegations have been made that he was also there to negotiate arms contracts.[4] While in London, he was arrested on 16 October 1998[5] under an international arrest warrant issued by judge Baltasar Garzón of Spain,[6] before he was placed under house arrest: initially in the London Clinic where he had just undergone back surgery, later in a rented house. The charges included 194 counts of killings of Spanish citizens, the 1975 assassination of Spanish diplomat Carmelo Soria, in addition to one count of conspiracy to commit torture – allegations of abuses had been made numerous times before his arrest, including since the beginning of his rule, but had never been acted upon. Grappling with the conditions set by Chile's turbulent transition to democracy, the coalition government known as Concertación and headed by President Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle opposed his arrest, extradition to Spain, as well as trial.

A hard-fought 16-month-long legal battle ensued in the House of Lords, then the highest court of the United Kingdom.[7] Pinochet claimed immunity from prosecution as a former head of state under the State Immunity Act 1978. This was rejected by a majority of the Law Lords (3–2), who ruled that some international crimes, such as torture, did not grant a former head-of-state immunity.[8] However, the judgement was set aside in a subsequent, unprecedented case on the basis that one of the judges involved was potentially biased due to his ties to Amnesty International, a human rights organization that had campaigned against Pinochet for decades and acted as an intervenor in the case. A third ruling in March 1999 confirmed the original verdict; this time, the Lords held that Pinochet could only be prosecuted for crimes committed after 1988, the year in which the United Kingdom implemented legislation ratifying the United Nations Convention Against Torture in the Criminal Justice Act 1988.[8][9] This invalidated most, but not all, of the charges against Pinochet and gave the green light for his extradition to Spain to proceed.

In April 1999, former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and former US President George H. W. Bush called upon the British government to release Pinochet.[10][11] They argued that Pinochet should be allowed to return to his homeland rather than be extradited to Spain. On the other hand, United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights, Mary Robinson, hailed the Lords' ruling, declaring that it was a clear endorsement that torture is an international crime subject to universal jurisdiction.[9] Furthermore, Amnesty International and the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture demanded his extradition to Spain.[12] In protest against Spain's action, Chile withdrew its ambassador from Madrid for a time.[13] Thatcher sent Pinochet a bottle of single malt whisky during this time, with a note saying "Scotch is one British institution that will never let you down".[14]

Meanwhile, questions began to emerge in the media about Pinochet's allegedly fragile health. After medical tests were conducted, Home Secretary Jack Straw ruled in January 2000 that the former dictator should not be extradited to Spain. This triggered protests from human rights NGOs; it led the Belgian government, along with six human rights groups (including Amnesty International), to file a complaint against Straw's decision before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in January 2000.[15] Belgium, as well as France and Switzerland, had deposed extradition requests in the wake of Spain's demand.[15] Despite protests by legal and medical experts from several countries, Straw finally ruled, in March 2000, that Pinochet had to be set free and authorized his return to Chile.[16] On 3 March 2000, Pinochet returned to Chile. His first act upon landing in Santiago de Chile's airport was to triumphantly stand up from his wheelchair to the acclaim of his supporters.[17][18] The first person to greet him was his successor as head of the Chilean Armed Forces, General Ricardo Izurieta.[18] President Ricardo Lagos, who had just been sworn into office on 11 March, said the retired general's televised arrival had damaged Chile's international reputation, while thousands held demonstrations against the ex-dictator.[19]

Despite his release on grounds of ill health, the unprecedented detention of Pinochet in a foreign country for crimes against humanity committed in his own country, without a warrant or request for extradition from his own country, marked a watershed in international law. Some scholars[20][21] consider it one of the most important events in legal history since the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals. Judge Garzón's case was largely founded on the principle of universal jurisdiction – that certain crimes are so egregious that they constitute crimes against humanity and can therefore be prosecuted in any court in the world. The British House of Lords ruled that Pinochet had no right to immunity from prosecution as a former head of state, and could be put on trial.[22] In Spain, the Court of Appeal of the Audiencia Nacional affirmed Spanish jurisdiction over Argentine and Chilean cases, declaring that domestic amnesty laws (in the case of Chile, the 1978 amnesty law passed by Pinochet's regime) could not bind the Spanish courts.[8] Both for matters concerning the "Dirty War" in Argentina and for Chile, they characterized the crimes as genocides.[8] However, both the Spanish and British rulings relied not on international law, but on domestic legislation: "They talked about universal jurisdiction, but grounded their decision in domestic statutory law."[8]

The arrest of Pinochet has been characterized as a watershed moment in the international justice regime. According to Daniel Krcmaric, the arrest "marked the first time in the modern international system that a current or former head of state was arrested in a foreign country for international crimes."[23]

Return to Chile edit

In March 2000, after Pinochet's return, the Chilean Congress approved a constitutional amendment creating the status of "ex-president", which granted Pinochet immunity from prosecution and guaranteed him a financial allowance. In exchange, it required him to resign his seat of senator-for-life. 111 legislators voted for; 29 against.[24] Despite this political move, on 23 May 2000, the Court of Appeal of Santiago lifted Pinochet's parliamentary immunity concerning the Caravan of Death case. This was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Chile, which voted on 8 August 2000, by 14 votes against 6, to strip Pinochet of his parliamentary immunity. On 1 December 2000, judge Juan Guzmán Tapia indicted Pinochet for the kidnapping of 75 opponents in the Caravan of Death case – Guzmán advanced the charge of kidnapping on the grounds that the victims were officially "disappeared": even though they were most likely dead, the absence of their corpses made any charge of homicide difficult.[25] Shortly after, on 11 December 2000, the ruling was suspended by the Court of Appeal of Santiago on medical grounds. In addition to the Caravan of Death, 177 other complaints were filed against Pinochet.[25]

In January 2001, medical experts stated that Pinochet was suffering from "mild dementia", which did not impede him from being prosecuted before the courts.[26] Subsequently, judge Guzmán ordered his arrest in late January 2001.[27] However, the judiciary procedures were again suspended on 9 July 2001 because of alleged health reasons. In July 2002, the Supreme Court dismissed Pinochet's indictment in the various cases on medical grounds (an alleged "vascular dementia"). That same year, the prosecuting attorney Hugo Guttierez, who headed the Caravan of Death case, declared that "Our country has the degree of justice that the political transition permits us to have."[28] Shortly after the verdict, Pinochet resigned from the Senate, thus benefiting from the 2000 constitutional amendment granting him immunity from prosecution. Thereafter, he lived a quiet life, rarely made public appearances and was notably absent from events marking the 30th anniversary of the coup on 11 September 2003.

House arrest edit

On 28 May 2004, a Court of Appeals voted 14 to 9 to revoke Pinochet's dementia status and, consequently, his immunity from prosecution. In arguing its case, the prosecution presented a recent television interview Pinochet had given for a Miami-based television network. The judges found that the interview raised doubts about the alleged mental incapacity of Pinochet. On 26 August, in a 9 to 8 vote, the Supreme Court upheld the decision. On 2 December, a Santiago Appeals Court stripped Pinochet of immunity from prosecution over the 1974 assassination of General Carlos Prats, his predecessor as Army Commander-in-Chief, who was killed by a car bomb while in exile in Argentina. On 13 December, Judge Juan Guzmán Tapia placed Pinochet under house arrest and indicted him over the disappearance of nine opposition activists and the murder of one of them during his regime. However, the Supreme Court reversed the Appeals Court ruling in the Carlos Prats case on 24 March 2005, thereby upholding Pinochet's immunity. Later that year, on 14 September, the Supreme Court decided to strip Pinochet of his immunity in the Operation Colombo case involving the killing of 119 dissidents.[29] The following day, he was then acquitted of the human rights case due to his purported ill health. In late November, he was once again deemed fit to stand trial by the Chilean Supreme Court and indicted, this time for the disappearance of six dissidents who had been detained by Chile's security forces in late 1974. He was placed under house arrest on the eve of his 90th birthday.

In July 2006, the Supreme Court upheld a January judgment by the Court of Appeal of Santiago, which argued that the 2002 Supreme Court's ruling stating that Pinochet could not be prosecuted in the Caravan of Death case did not apply to two of its victims, who were former bodyguards of Salvador Allende.[30][31] On 9 September, Pinochet was stripped of his immunity by the Supreme Court.[32] Judge Alejandro Madrid was thus able to indict him for the kidnappings and tortures at Villa Grimaldi.[32] Furthermore, Pinochet was indicted in October 2006 for the assassination of DINA biochemist Eugenio Berríos in 1995.[33] On 30 October, Pinochet was charged with 36 counts of kidnapping, 23 counts of torture, and one of murder for the torture and disappearance of opponents of his regime at Villa Grimaldi. On 28 November 2006, judge Víctor Montiglio, charged with overseeing the Caravan of Death case, ordered Pinochet's house arrest.[1] However, Pinochet died a few days later on 10 December, without having been convicted of any crimes committed during his administration.

Tax fraud and foreign bank accounts edit

The U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations released a report on 15 July 2004 concerning Riggs Bank, which had solicited Pinochet and controlled between US$4 million and US$8 million of his assets. According to the report, Riggs participated in money laundering for Pinochet, setting up offshore shell corporations (referring to Pinochet as only "a former public official"), and hiding his accounts from regulatory agencies. The report said the violations were "symptomatic of uneven and, at times, ineffective enforcement by all federal bank regulators, of bank compliance with their anti-money-laundering obligations". In 2006, Pinochet's total wealth was estimated to be at least $28 million.[34]

Five days later, a Chilean court formally opened an investigation into Pinochet's finances for the first time, on allegations of fraud, misappropriation of funds and bribery. A few hours later, the state prosecutor, Chile's State Defense Council (Consejo de Defensa del Estado), presented a second request for the same judge to investigate Pinochet's assets, but without directly accusing him of crimes. On 1 October 2004, Chile's Internal Revenue Service ("Servicio de Impuestos Internos") filed a lawsuit against Pinochet, accusing him of fraud and tax evasion, for the amount of US$3.6 million in investment accounts held at Riggs between 1996 and 2002. Furthermore, a lawsuit against the Riggs Bank and Joe L. Allbritton, chief executive of the bank until 2001, was closed after the bank agreed in February 2005 to pay $9 million to Pinochet's victims in compensation for its money-laundering activities on behalf of Pinochet.[35]

Pinochet could have faced fines in Chile totaling 300% of the amount owed, and prison time, if he had been convicted before his death. Aside from the legal ramifications, this evidence of financial impropriety severely embarrassed Pinochet. According to the State Defense Council, his hidden assets could never have been acquired solely on the basis of his salary as president, Chief of the Armed Forces, and Life Senator.

BAE Systems edit

In September 2005, a joint-investigation by The Guardian and La Tercera revealed that the British arms firm BAE Systems had been identified as having paid more than £1m to Pinochet through a front company in the British Virgin Islands, which BAE has used to channel commissions on arms deals.[36] The payments began in 1997 and lasted until 2004.[36][37] BAE had tried to conclude a deal in the 1990s to sell Chile a rocket system and as of 2005 was trying to sell it naval electronics.[36] The Chilean Army reportedly spent $60 million on the Rayo rocket system on a joint-venture with BAE Systems starting in 1994, before abandoning the project in 2003.[37] Since 2001, British legislation outlaws corruption of foreign public officials (part 12 of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001).[37]

Charges against Pinochet and family members edit

In November 2005, Pinochet was deemed fit to stand trial by the Chilean Supreme Court and was indicted and put under house arrest on tax fraud and passport forgery charges but was released on bail; however, he remained under house arrest due to unrelated human rights charges.

This tax fraud filing, related to Pinochet's and his family's secret bank accounts in the United States and in Caribbean islands, for an amount of US$27 million, shocked the pro-Pinochet wing of Chilean public opinion more than the accusations of human rights abuses. Ninety percent of these funds would have been raised between 1990 and 1998, when Pinochet was Commander-in-Chief of the Army, and would essentially have come from weapons traffic (when purchasing Belgian Mirage fighter aircraft in 1994, Dutch Léopard tanks, Swiss Mowag tanks or by illegal sales of weapons to Croatia, in the middle of the Balkan war; the later case has been linked by Chilean justice with the assassination of Colonel Gerardo Huber in 1992). General Pinochet was reported to have owed the Chilean tax administration a total of $16.5 million.

In that case, Pinochet's immunity was stripped by the Appeal Court of Santiago, and confirmed by the Supreme Court on 19 October 2005. The legal proceedings could have eventually led to a trial against Pinochet, his wife Lucia Hiriart and one of his sons, Marco Antonio Pinochet, who was sued for complicity. Judge Juan Guzmán Tapia was skeptical, however, of the probability of a trial, either for human rights violations or for financial fraud. Nonetheless, indications from a number of medical examinations suggested that the physical and mental condition of the former dictator would have allowed him to be prosecuted. On 23 November 2005, judge Carlos Cerda charged Pinochet for fraud and ordered his arrest. Pinochet was freed under caution on the grounds that "his freedom did not represent a danger for the security of the society". This was the fourth time in seven years that Pinochet was indicted and charged for illegal behavior.

On 23 February 2006, Pinochet's wife Lucia Hiriart, children Augusto, Lucía, Jacqueline, Marco Antonio, and Maria Verónica, daughter-in-law, and personal secretary were indicted on charges of tax fraud, including failing to declare bank accounts overseas, and using false passports. Lucía fled to the US, but was detained and returned to Argentina, her country of departure, after attempting unsuccessfully to claim political asylum.[38] Pinochet's wife, five children, and 17 other persons (including two generals, one of his ex-lawyer and his ex-secretary) were arrested in October 2007 on charges of embezzlement and use of false passports in the context of the Riggs affair. They are[needs update] accused of having illegally transferred $27m (£13.2m) to foreign bank accounts during Pinochet's rule.[39][40]

Impact in Chile edit

In Chile where most of the politics was organized around the parties' position on Pinochet's dictatorship the arrest came as a "shock".[41] The arrest of Pinochet strained Chile's centre-left governing coalition Concertación. President Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle's government that handled the case up to March 11, 2000, had three ministers who had been victims of Pinochet's regime.[42] Pinochet was also suspected to have had a hand in the death of Eduardo Frei Montalva, the president's father.[42] To appear to be defending Pinochet abroad was reportedly an uncomfortable situation, but this depended on considerations of the internal politics of Chile and in particular the governments relation with the Chilean Army.[42] Minister of the General Secretary of Government Jorge Arrate, who had been an exile in the Netherlands[42] during the dictatorship saw positively on the news, while former president Patricio Aylwin considered that crimes committed in Chile should not be judged abroad.[41] The Chilean government's lawyer involved in the case declared explicitly that the country was not defending Pinochet but its "judicial sovereignty".[41] On May 21, 1999, there were disturbances in and outside the Congress of Chile in Valparaíso.[43]

On June 22, 1999, in what is judged a direct consequence of the arrest and indictment of Pinochet, Frei Ruiz-Tagle shuffled his cabinet.[41] Arrate was changed for Carlos Mladinic and Edmundo Pérez Yoma was appointed minister of National Defense, among other changes.[41] In the Socialist Party, Arrate was part of a larger group that was contrary to the government's position.[41][42] The polarized atmosphere the detention had caused in Chile is reported to have been detrimental to the Socialist Party's candidate for the 1999–2000 Chilean presidential election, Ricardo Lagos.[42] Lagos went nevertheless to on to win the Concercación primaries defeating the Christian Democrat Andrés Zaldívar,[citation needed] and the narrowly defeated Alliance's Joaquín Lavín in the second round.[44]

Allegations during Pinochet's last days edit

In 2006, General Manuel Contreras, head of the Chilean secret police DINA under Pinochet, alleged in a testimony sent to Judge Claudio Pavez (overseeing the Huber case) that Pinochet and his son Marco Antonio Pinochet had been involved in the clandestine production of chemical and biological weapons, and in the production (under Eugenio Berríos's direction), sale and trafficking of cocaine.[45] These allegations were never fully investigated by the Chilean courts, nor by a government commission set up to establish their veracity.

Fifteen years of investigations also revealed that Pinochet was at the center of an illegal arms trade organized around FAMAE (Factories and Arsenals of the Army of Chile), which received money from various offshore and front companies, including the Banco Coutts International in Miami.[46] One of the deals notably included the transfer of 370 tons of weapons to Croatia, which was under UN embargo because of the war against Serbia.[46] Another involved a 1995 arms contract with Ecuador which gave rise to kickbacks, some of which ended up in Pinochet's bank accounts abroad.[47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Procesan a Pinochet y ordenan su arresto por los secuestros y homicidios de la "Caravana de la Muerte" 5 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine, 20minutos, 28 November 2006.
  2. ^ a b Más de 300 querellas abiertas 1 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine, El Periódico, URL accessed on 10 September 2007 (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Descubren 9.000 kilos de oro ocultados por Pinochet en un banco de Hong Kong 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, EFE, published by 20 Minutos, 25 October 2006 (in Spanish)
  4. ^ ¿En qué negocios andaba Pinochet en Londres?. El secreto mundo de los armamentos." 17 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Punto Final, 18 December 1998 (in Spanish)
  5. ^ "Pinochet arrested in London". The Guardian. 18 October 1998. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  6. ^ "Europe | Pinochet arrested in London". BBC News. 17 October 1998. from the original on 7 September 2017. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
  7. ^ The judgements of the House of Lords and the other British Courts which considered Pinochet's case can be found on the British and Irish Legal Information Institute 28 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine website.
  8. ^ a b c d e Naomi Roht-Arriaza (Professor of Law, University of California, Hastings College of Law), The Pinochet Precedent and Universal Jurisdiction 1 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine in New England Law Review Vol. 35:2 (9 pages)
  9. ^ a b "Straw considers Pinochet case" 12 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 25 March 1999 (in English)
  10. ^ "Thatcher pleads Pinochet's case" 7 June 2004 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 6 October 1999 (in English)
  11. ^ Former U.S. President Bush urges Pinochet release 29 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine, CNN, 12 April 1999 (in English)
  12. ^ "Pinochet must go to Spain, says Amnesty" 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 21 January 1999 (in English)
  13. ^ Talks set to ease Pinochet rift 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 20 June 2000 (in English)
  14. ^ Youkee, Mat (4 October 2019). "Thatcher sent Pinochet finest scotch during former dictator's UK house arrest". The Guardian. from the original on 6 October 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
  15. ^ a b Belgium begins Pinochet challenge 12 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 25 January 2000 (in English)
  16. ^ Pinochet set free 16 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 2 March 2000 (in English)
  17. ^ Alex Bellos and Jonathan Franklin, Pinochet receives a hero's welcome on his return, The Guardian, 4 March 2000 (in English)
  18. ^ a b Pinochet arrives in Chile 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 3 March 2000 (in English)
  19. ^ Thousands march against Pinochet 26 May 2004 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 4 March 2000
  20. ^ Bianchi, Andrea (1999). "Immunity versus human rights: the Pinochet case" (PDF). European Journal of International Law. 10 (2): 237–277. doi:10.1093/ejil/10.2.237. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  21. ^ Wuerth, Ingrid (4 October 2012). "Pinochet's Legacy Reassessed". The American Journal of International Law. 106 (4): 731–768. doi:10.5305/amerjintelaw.106.4.0731. JSTOR 10.5305/amerjintelaw.106.4.0731. S2CID 146429081.
  22. ^ The Ripple Effect of the Pinochet Case 23 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Global policy.org, 2004 (in English)
  23. ^ Krcmaric, Daniel (2020). The Justice Dilemma: Leaders and Exile in an Era of Accountability. Cornell University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-5017-5021-2. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctvrs90j0.
  24. ^ Chile offers Pinochet new immunity 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 25 March 2000 (in English)
  25. ^ a b Pinochet charged with kidnapping 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 1 December 2000 (in English)
  26. ^ Pinochet 'fit enough' for trial 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 16 January 2001 (in English)
  27. ^ "Pinochet arrest ordered" 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 30 January 2001 (in English)
  28. ^ "The Appeals Court Ruling Is Negotiated Out for Pinochet" 24 June 2002 at the Wayback Machine, Interview with Attorney Hugo Gutierrez, by Memoria y Justicia, 21 February 2002 (in English)
  29. ^ Court strips Pinochet of immunity 13 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 14 September 2005 (in English)
  30. ^ Chile high court allows Pinochet 'Caravan of Death' case to proceed 8 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine, 17 July 2006 (in English)
  31. ^ Chile court upholds Pinochet bail in one case, removes immunity in another 7 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, 11 January 2006 (in English)
  32. ^ a b Court 'lifts Pinochet immunity', BBC, 8 September 2006.
  33. ^ Levée de l'immunité de Pinochet pour le meurtre d'un chimiste 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, news agency cable, 12 October 2006 (in French)
  34. ^ Larry Rohter, Colonel's Death Gives Clues to Pinochet Arms Deals 8 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, 19 June 2006 (in English)
  35. ^ Terence O'Hara, Allbrittons, Riggs to Pay Victims Of Pinochet 3 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post, 25 February 2005 (in English)
  36. ^ a b c David Leigh and Rob Evans, Revealed: BAE's secret £1m to Pinochet, The Guardian, 15 September 2005 (in English)
  37. ^ a b c David Leigh, Jonathan Franklin and Rob Evans, Detective story that linked £1m Pinochet cash to BAE, The Guardian, 15 September 2005 (in English)
  38. ^ "U.S. sends back Pinochet daughter" 11 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, CNN, 18 January 2006 (in English)
  39. ^ Pinochet family arrested in Chile 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, BBC, 4 October 2007 (in English)
  40. ^ "Cobertura Especial: Detienen a familia y principales colaboradores de Pinochet" 11 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, La Tercera, 4 October 2007 (in Spanish)
  41. ^ a b c d e f Dávila, Mireya, 2019. Veinte años de la detención de Pinochet en Londres y sus efectos en el sistema político chileno. Conference paper. University of Chile.
  42. ^ a b c d e f Huneeus, Carlos (2007). Las consecuencias del caso Pinochet en la política chilena. Centro de. Estudios de la Realidad Contemporánea.
  43. ^ A demonstration on 21 May 1999 in Valparaiso in front of the National Congress and treatment of participants by the authorities [CHL36536.E] (Report). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 27 February 2001.
  44. ^ "Votación País Presidencial 2ª v 1999". Electoral Service. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  45. ^ Jonathan Franklin, Pinochet 'sold cocaine to Europe and US', The Guardian, 11 July 2006 (in English)
  46. ^ a b Andrea Chaparro Solís, Generales (R) y civiles de Famae procesados en caso armas a Croacia Archived 29 June 2012 at archive.today, La Nación, 13 June 2006 (in Spanish)
  47. ^ Andrea Chaparro Solís, Consejo de Defensa del Estado se hace querellante en caso armas a Ecuador Archived 16 January 2013 at archive.today, La Nación, 5 June 2006 (in Spanish)

External links edit

  • (Amnesty International)
  • Pinochet Real – For Supporters of General Pinochet 29 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  • (several case studies)
  • BBC coverage (special report)
  • Article: "Doubts Remain over Pinochet's Fate: Chile's 'antiquated penal code' could be his undoing"
  • Valech report on political imprisonment and torture, November 2004 24 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  • BBC News report: "Banks accused over Pinochet cash"
  • Amnesty International
  • George Washington University article

indictment, arrest, augusto, pinochet, general, augusto, pinochet, indicted, human, rights, violations, committed, native, chile, spanish, magistrate, baltasar, garzón, 1998, arrested, london, days, later, held, house, arrest, year, half, before, being, releas. General Augusto Pinochet was indicted for human rights violations committed in his native Chile by Spanish magistrate Baltasar Garzon in 1998 He was arrested in London six days later and held on house arrest for a year and a half before being released by the British government in 2000 Authorised to return to Chile Pinochet was subsequently indicted by judge Juan Guzman Tapia and charged with several crimes He died in 2006 without having been convicted His arrest in London made the front pages of newspapers worldwide not only did it involve the head of the military dictatorship that ruled Chile between 1973 and 1990 it marked the first time judges had applied the principle of universal jurisdiction declaring themselves competent to judge crimes committed in a country by former heads of state despite the existence of local amnesty laws Augusto PinochetCriminal statusDeceasedCriminal chargeCaravan of Death Assassination of Carlos Prats Operation Condor Operation Colombo Villa Grimaldi Carmelo Soria Calle Conferencia Antonio Llido Eugenio Berrios Tax evasion Passport forgeryPinochet led a 1973 coup which deposed Socialist President Salvador Allende His 17 year regime was notorious for many human rights violations some of which were committed as part of Operation Condor an illegal effort to suppress left wing political opponents in Chile and abroad in coordination with foreign intelligence agencies Pinochet was also accused of using his position to pursue personal enrichment through embezzlement of government funds the illegal drug trade and illegal arms trade The Rettig Report found that at least 2 279 people were conclusively murdered by the Chilean government for political reasons during Pinochet s regime and the Valech Report found that at least 30 000 people were tortured by the government for political reasons Pinochet s attorneys headed by Pablo Rodriguez Grez former leader of the far right group Fatherland and Liberty argued that he was entitled to immunity from prosecution first as a former head of state then under the 1978 amnesty law passed by the military junta They also claimed that his alleged poor health made him unfit to stand trial A succession of judgments by various Courts of Appeal the Supreme Court medical experts etc led to Pinochet s subsequent house arrest and release before he died on 10 December 2006 just after having been again put under house arrest on 28 November 2006 in the Caravan of Death case 1 At the time of his death in 2006 Pinochet had been implicated in over 300 criminal charges for many human rights violations 2 including the Caravan of Death case case closed in July 2002 by the Supreme Court of Chile but re opened in 2007 following new medical advice Carlos Prats s assassination case closed on 1 April 2005 Operation Condor case closed on 17 June 2005 Operation Colombo the Villa Grimaldi Carmelo Soria Calle Conferencia Antonio Llido and Eugenio Berrios cases tax evasion and passport forgery 2 3 Contents 1 Timeline 1 1 Arrest in London 1 2 Return to Chile 1 3 House arrest 2 Tax fraud and foreign bank accounts 2 1 BAE Systems 2 2 Charges against Pinochet and family members 3 Impact in Chile 4 Allegations during Pinochet s last days 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTimeline editArrest in London edit See also R v Bow Street Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate ex parte Pinochet In 1998 Pinochet who at the time continued to wield considerable influence in Chile travelled to the United Kingdom for medical treatment allegations have been made that he was also there to negotiate arms contracts 4 While in London he was arrested on 16 October 1998 5 under an international arrest warrant issued by judge Baltasar Garzon of Spain 6 before he was placed under house arrest initially in the London Clinic where he had just undergone back surgery later in a rented house The charges included 194 counts of killings of Spanish citizens the 1975 assassination of Spanish diplomat Carmelo Soria in addition to one count of conspiracy to commit torture allegations of abuses had been made numerous times before his arrest including since the beginning of his rule but had never been acted upon Grappling with the conditions set by Chile s turbulent transition to democracy the coalition government known as Concertacion and headed by President Eduardo Frei Ruiz Tagle opposed his arrest extradition to Spain as well as trial A hard fought 16 month long legal battle ensued in the House of Lords then the highest court of the United Kingdom 7 Pinochet claimed immunity from prosecution as a former head of state under the State Immunity Act 1978 This was rejected by a majority of the Law Lords 3 2 who ruled that some international crimes such as torture did not grant a former head of state immunity 8 However the judgement was set aside in a subsequent unprecedented case on the basis that one of the judges involved was potentially biased due to his ties to Amnesty International a human rights organization that had campaigned against Pinochet for decades and acted as an intervenor in the case A third ruling in March 1999 confirmed the original verdict this time the Lords held that Pinochet could only be prosecuted for crimes committed after 1988 the year in which the United Kingdom implemented legislation ratifying the United Nations Convention Against Torture in the Criminal Justice Act 1988 8 9 This invalidated most but not all of the charges against Pinochet and gave the green light for his extradition to Spain to proceed In April 1999 former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and former US President George H W Bush called upon the British government to release Pinochet 10 11 They argued that Pinochet should be allowed to return to his homeland rather than be extradited to Spain On the other hand United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights Mary Robinson hailed the Lords ruling declaring that it was a clear endorsement that torture is an international crime subject to universal jurisdiction 9 Furthermore Amnesty International and the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture demanded his extradition to Spain 12 In protest against Spain s action Chile withdrew its ambassador from Madrid for a time 13 Thatcher sent Pinochet a bottle of single malt whisky during this time with a note saying Scotch is one British institution that will never let you down 14 Meanwhile questions began to emerge in the media about Pinochet s allegedly fragile health After medical tests were conducted Home Secretary Jack Straw ruled in January 2000 that the former dictator should not be extradited to Spain This triggered protests from human rights NGOs it led the Belgian government along with six human rights groups including Amnesty International to file a complaint against Straw s decision before the International Court of Justice ICJ in January 2000 15 Belgium as well as France and Switzerland had deposed extradition requests in the wake of Spain s demand 15 Despite protests by legal and medical experts from several countries Straw finally ruled in March 2000 that Pinochet had to be set free and authorized his return to Chile 16 On 3 March 2000 Pinochet returned to Chile His first act upon landing in Santiago de Chile s airport was to triumphantly stand up from his wheelchair to the acclaim of his supporters 17 18 The first person to greet him was his successor as head of the Chilean Armed Forces General Ricardo Izurieta 18 President Ricardo Lagos who had just been sworn into office on 11 March said the retired general s televised arrival had damaged Chile s international reputation while thousands held demonstrations against the ex dictator 19 Despite his release on grounds of ill health the unprecedented detention of Pinochet in a foreign country for crimes against humanity committed in his own country without a warrant or request for extradition from his own country marked a watershed in international law Some scholars 20 21 consider it one of the most important events in legal history since the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals Judge Garzon s case was largely founded on the principle of universal jurisdiction that certain crimes are so egregious that they constitute crimes against humanity and can therefore be prosecuted in any court in the world The British House of Lords ruled that Pinochet had no right to immunity from prosecution as a former head of state and could be put on trial 22 In Spain the Court of Appeal of the Audiencia Nacional affirmed Spanish jurisdiction over Argentine and Chilean cases declaring that domestic amnesty laws in the case of Chile the 1978 amnesty law passed by Pinochet s regime could not bind the Spanish courts 8 Both for matters concerning the Dirty War in Argentina and for Chile they characterized the crimes as genocides 8 However both the Spanish and British rulings relied not on international law but on domestic legislation They talked about universal jurisdiction but grounded their decision in domestic statutory law 8 The arrest of Pinochet has been characterized as a watershed moment in the international justice regime According to Daniel Krcmaric the arrest marked the first time in the modern international system that a current or former head of state was arrested in a foreign country for international crimes 23 Return to Chile edit In March 2000 after Pinochet s return the Chilean Congress approved a constitutional amendment creating the status of ex president which granted Pinochet immunity from prosecution and guaranteed him a financial allowance In exchange it required him to resign his seat of senator for life 111 legislators voted for 29 against 24 Despite this political move on 23 May 2000 the Court of Appeal of Santiago lifted Pinochet s parliamentary immunity concerning the Caravan of Death case This was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Chile which voted on 8 August 2000 by 14 votes against 6 to strip Pinochet of his parliamentary immunity On 1 December 2000 judge Juan Guzman Tapia indicted Pinochet for the kidnapping of 75 opponents in the Caravan of Death case Guzman advanced the charge of kidnapping on the grounds that the victims were officially disappeared even though they were most likely dead the absence of their corpses made any charge of homicide difficult 25 Shortly after on 11 December 2000 the ruling was suspended by the Court of Appeal of Santiago on medical grounds In addition to the Caravan of Death 177 other complaints were filed against Pinochet 25 In January 2001 medical experts stated that Pinochet was suffering from mild dementia which did not impede him from being prosecuted before the courts 26 Subsequently judge Guzman ordered his arrest in late January 2001 27 However the judiciary procedures were again suspended on 9 July 2001 because of alleged health reasons In July 2002 the Supreme Court dismissed Pinochet s indictment in the various cases on medical grounds an alleged vascular dementia That same year the prosecuting attorney Hugo Guttierez who headed the Caravan of Death case declared that Our country has the degree of justice that the political transition permits us to have 28 Shortly after the verdict Pinochet resigned from the Senate thus benefiting from the 2000 constitutional amendment granting him immunity from prosecution Thereafter he lived a quiet life rarely made public appearances and was notably absent from events marking the 30th anniversary of the coup on 11 September 2003 House arrest edit On 28 May 2004 a Court of Appeals voted 14 to 9 to revoke Pinochet s dementia status and consequently his immunity from prosecution In arguing its case the prosecution presented a recent television interview Pinochet had given for a Miami based television network The judges found that the interview raised doubts about the alleged mental incapacity of Pinochet On 26 August in a 9 to 8 vote the Supreme Court upheld the decision On 2 December a Santiago Appeals Court stripped Pinochet of immunity from prosecution over the 1974 assassination of General Carlos Prats his predecessor as Army Commander in Chief who was killed by a car bomb while in exile in Argentina On 13 December Judge Juan Guzman Tapia placed Pinochet under house arrest and indicted him over the disappearance of nine opposition activists and the murder of one of them during his regime However the Supreme Court reversed the Appeals Court ruling in the Carlos Prats case on 24 March 2005 thereby upholding Pinochet s immunity Later that year on 14 September the Supreme Court decided to strip Pinochet of his immunity in the Operation Colombo case involving the killing of 119 dissidents 29 The following day he was then acquitted of the human rights case due to his purported ill health In late November he was once again deemed fit to stand trial by the Chilean Supreme Court and indicted this time for the disappearance of six dissidents who had been detained by Chile s security forces in late 1974 He was placed under house arrest on the eve of his 90th birthday In July 2006 the Supreme Court upheld a January judgment by the Court of Appeal of Santiago which argued that the 2002 Supreme Court s ruling stating that Pinochet could not be prosecuted in the Caravan of Death case did not apply to two of its victims who were former bodyguards of Salvador Allende 30 31 On 9 September Pinochet was stripped of his immunity by the Supreme Court 32 Judge Alejandro Madrid was thus able to indict him for the kidnappings and tortures at Villa Grimaldi 32 Furthermore Pinochet was indicted in October 2006 for the assassination of DINA biochemist Eugenio Berrios in 1995 33 On 30 October Pinochet was charged with 36 counts of kidnapping 23 counts of torture and one of murder for the torture and disappearance of opponents of his regime at Villa Grimaldi On 28 November 2006 judge Victor Montiglio charged with overseeing the Caravan of Death case ordered Pinochet s house arrest 1 However Pinochet died a few days later on 10 December without having been convicted of any crimes committed during his administration Tax fraud and foreign bank accounts editThe U S Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations released a report on 15 July 2004 concerning Riggs Bank which had solicited Pinochet and controlled between US 4 million and US 8 million of his assets According to the report Riggs participated in money laundering for Pinochet setting up offshore shell corporations referring to Pinochet as only a former public official and hiding his accounts from regulatory agencies The report said the violations were symptomatic of uneven and at times ineffective enforcement by all federal bank regulators of bank compliance with their anti money laundering obligations In 2006 Pinochet s total wealth was estimated to be at least 28 million 34 Five days later a Chilean court formally opened an investigation into Pinochet s finances for the first time on allegations of fraud misappropriation of funds and bribery A few hours later the state prosecutor Chile s State Defense Council Consejo de Defensa del Estado presented a second request for the same judge to investigate Pinochet s assets but without directly accusing him of crimes On 1 October 2004 Chile s Internal Revenue Service Servicio de Impuestos Internos filed a lawsuit against Pinochet accusing him of fraud and tax evasion for the amount of US 3 6 million in investment accounts held at Riggs between 1996 and 2002 Furthermore a lawsuit against the Riggs Bank and Joe L Allbritton chief executive of the bank until 2001 was closed after the bank agreed in February 2005 to pay 9 million to Pinochet s victims in compensation for its money laundering activities on behalf of Pinochet 35 Pinochet could have faced fines in Chile totaling 300 of the amount owed and prison time if he had been convicted before his death Aside from the legal ramifications this evidence of financial impropriety severely embarrassed Pinochet According to the State Defense Council his hidden assets could never have been acquired solely on the basis of his salary as president Chief of the Armed Forces and Life Senator BAE Systems edit In September 2005 a joint investigation by The Guardian and La Tercera revealed that the British arms firm BAE Systems had been identified as having paid more than 1m to Pinochet through a front company in the British Virgin Islands which BAE has used to channel commissions on arms deals 36 The payments began in 1997 and lasted until 2004 36 37 BAE had tried to conclude a deal in the 1990s to sell Chile a rocket system and as of 2005 was trying to sell it naval electronics 36 The Chilean Army reportedly spent 60 million on the Rayo rocket system on a joint venture with BAE Systems starting in 1994 before abandoning the project in 2003 37 Since 2001 British legislation outlaws corruption of foreign public officials part 12 of the Anti terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001 37 Charges against Pinochet and family members edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Indictment and arrest of Augusto Pinochet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message In November 2005 Pinochet was deemed fit to stand trial by the Chilean Supreme Court and was indicted and put under house arrest on tax fraud and passport forgery charges but was released on bail however he remained under house arrest due to unrelated human rights charges This tax fraud filing related to Pinochet s and his family s secret bank accounts in the United States and in Caribbean islands for an amount of US 27 million shocked the pro Pinochet wing of Chilean public opinion more than the accusations of human rights abuses Ninety percent of these funds would have been raised between 1990 and 1998 when Pinochet was Commander in Chief of the Army and would essentially have come from weapons traffic when purchasing Belgian Mirage fighter aircraft in 1994 Dutch Leopard tanks Swiss Mowag tanks or by illegal sales of weapons to Croatia in the middle of the Balkan war the later case has been linked by Chilean justice with the assassination of Colonel Gerardo Huber in 1992 General Pinochet was reported to have owed the Chilean tax administration a total of 16 5 million In that case Pinochet s immunity was stripped by the Appeal Court of Santiago and confirmed by the Supreme Court on 19 October 2005 The legal proceedings could have eventually led to a trial against Pinochet his wife Lucia Hiriart and one of his sons Marco Antonio Pinochet who was sued for complicity Judge Juan Guzman Tapia was skeptical however of the probability of a trial either for human rights violations or for financial fraud Nonetheless indications from a number of medical examinations suggested that the physical and mental condition of the former dictator would have allowed him to be prosecuted On 23 November 2005 judge Carlos Cerda charged Pinochet for fraud and ordered his arrest Pinochet was freed under caution on the grounds that his freedom did not represent a danger for the security of the society This was the fourth time in seven years that Pinochet was indicted and charged for illegal behavior On 23 February 2006 Pinochet s wife Lucia Hiriart children Augusto Lucia Jacqueline Marco Antonio and Maria Veronica daughter in law and personal secretary were indicted on charges of tax fraud including failing to declare bank accounts overseas and using false passports Lucia fled to the US but was detained and returned to Argentina her country of departure after attempting unsuccessfully to claim political asylum 38 Pinochet s wife five children and 17 other persons including two generals one of his ex lawyer and his ex secretary were arrested in October 2007 on charges of embezzlement and use of false passports in the context of the Riggs affair They are needs update accused of having illegally transferred 27m 13 2m to foreign bank accounts during Pinochet s rule 39 40 Impact in Chile editIn Chile where most of the politics was organized around the parties position on Pinochet s dictatorship the arrest came as a shock 41 The arrest of Pinochet strained Chile s centre left governing coalition Concertacion President Eduardo Frei Ruiz Tagle s government that handled the case up to March 11 2000 had three ministers who had been victims of Pinochet s regime 42 Pinochet was also suspected to have had a hand in the death of Eduardo Frei Montalva the president s father 42 To appear to be defending Pinochet abroad was reportedly an uncomfortable situation but this depended on considerations of the internal politics of Chile and in particular the governments relation with the Chilean Army 42 Minister of the General Secretary of Government Jorge Arrate who had been an exile in the Netherlands 42 during the dictatorship saw positively on the news while former president Patricio Aylwin considered that crimes committed in Chile should not be judged abroad 41 The Chilean government s lawyer involved in the case declared explicitly that the country was not defending Pinochet but its judicial sovereignty 41 On May 21 1999 there were disturbances in and outside the Congress of Chile in Valparaiso 43 On June 22 1999 in what is judged a direct consequence of the arrest and indictment of Pinochet Frei Ruiz Tagle shuffled his cabinet 41 Arrate was changed for Carlos Mladinic and Edmundo Perez Yoma was appointed minister of National Defense among other changes 41 In the Socialist Party Arrate was part of a larger group that was contrary to the government s position 41 42 The polarized atmosphere the detention had caused in Chile is reported to have been detrimental to the Socialist Party s candidate for the 1999 2000 Chilean presidential election Ricardo Lagos 42 Lagos went nevertheless to on to win the Concercacion primaries defeating the Christian Democrat Andres Zaldivar citation needed and the narrowly defeated Alliance s Joaquin Lavin in the second round 44 Allegations during Pinochet s last days editIn 2006 General Manuel Contreras head of the Chilean secret police DINA under Pinochet alleged in a testimony sent to Judge Claudio Pavez overseeing the Huber case that Pinochet and his son Marco Antonio Pinochet had been involved in the clandestine production of chemical and biological weapons and in the production under Eugenio Berrios s direction sale and trafficking of cocaine 45 These allegations were never fully investigated by the Chilean courts nor by a government commission set up to establish their veracity Fifteen years of investigations also revealed that Pinochet was at the center of an illegal arms trade organized around FAMAE Factories and Arsenals of the Army of Chile which received money from various offshore and front companies including the Banco Coutts International in Miami 46 One of the deals notably included the transfer of 370 tons of weapons to Croatia which was under UN embargo because of the war against Serbia 46 Another involved a 1995 arms contract with Ecuador which gave rise to kickbacks some of which ended up in Pinochet s bank accounts abroad 47 See also editOperation Condor Chile under Pinochet Chilean transition to democracy Chilean political scandals Leonard Hoffmann Baron Hoffmann Pinocheques Pinochet in Suburbia 2006 docudramaReferences edit a b Procesan a Pinochet y ordenan su arresto por los secuestros y homicidios de la Caravana de la Muerte Archived 5 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine 20minutos 28 November 2006 a b Mas de 300 querellas abiertas Archived 1 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine El Periodico URL accessed on 10 September 2007 in Spanish Descubren 9 000 kilos de oro ocultados por Pinochet en un banco de Hong Kong Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine EFE published by 20 Minutos 25 October 2006 in Spanish En que negocios andaba Pinochet en Londres El secreto mundo de los armamentos Archived 17 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Punto Final 18 December 1998 in Spanish Pinochet arrested in London The Guardian 18 October 1998 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Europe Pinochet arrested in London BBC News 17 October 1998 Archived from the original on 7 September 2017 Retrieved 9 March 2015 The judgements of the House of Lords and the other British Courts which considered Pinochet s case can be found on the British and Irish Legal Information Institute Archived 28 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine website a b c d e Naomi Roht Arriaza Professor of Law University of California Hastings College of Law The Pinochet Precedent and Universal Jurisdiction Archived 1 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine in New England Law Review Vol 35 2 9 pages a b Straw considers Pinochet case Archived 12 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine BBC 25 March 1999 in English Thatcher pleads Pinochet s case Archived 7 June 2004 at the Wayback Machine BBC 6 October 1999 in English Former U S President Bush urges Pinochet release Archived 29 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine CNN 12 April 1999 in English Pinochet must go to Spain says Amnesty Archived 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine BBC 21 January 1999 in English Talks set to ease Pinochet rift Archived 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC 20 June 2000 in English Youkee Mat 4 October 2019 Thatcher sent Pinochet finest scotch during former dictator s UK house arrest The Guardian Archived from the original on 6 October 2019 Retrieved 6 October 2019 a b Belgium begins Pinochet challenge Archived 12 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine BBC 25 January 2000 in English Pinochet set free Archived 16 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine BBC 2 March 2000 in English Alex Bellos and Jonathan Franklin Pinochet receives a hero s welcome on his return The Guardian 4 March 2000 in English a b Pinochet arrives in Chile Archived 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC 3 March 2000 in English Thousands march against Pinochet Archived 26 May 2004 at the Wayback Machine BBC 4 March 2000 Bianchi Andrea 1999 Immunity versus human rights the Pinochet case PDF European Journal of International Law 10 2 237 277 doi 10 1093 ejil 10 2 237 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 December 2015 Wuerth Ingrid 4 October 2012 Pinochet s Legacy Reassessed The American Journal of International Law 106 4 731 768 doi 10 5305 amerjintelaw 106 4 0731 JSTOR 10 5305 amerjintelaw 106 4 0731 S2CID 146429081 The Ripple Effect of the Pinochet Case Archived 23 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine Global policy org 2004 in English Krcmaric Daniel 2020 The Justice Dilemma Leaders and Exile in an Era of Accountability Cornell University Press p 41 ISBN 978 1 5017 5021 2 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctvrs90j0 Chile offers Pinochet new immunity Archived 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC 25 March 2000 in English a b Pinochet charged with kidnapping Archived 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC 1 December 2000 in English Pinochet fit enough for trial Archived 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC 16 January 2001 in English Pinochet arrest ordered Archived 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC 30 January 2001 in English The Appeals Court Ruling Is Negotiated Out for Pinochet Archived 24 June 2002 at the Wayback Machine Interview with Attorney Hugo Gutierrez by Memoria y Justicia 21 February 2002 in English Court strips Pinochet of immunity Archived 13 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine BBC 14 September 2005 in English Chile high court allows Pinochet Caravan of Death case to proceed Archived 8 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine 17 July 2006 in English Chile court upholds Pinochet bail in one case removes immunity in another Archived 7 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine 11 January 2006 in English a b Court lifts Pinochet immunity BBC 8 September 2006 Levee de l immunite de Pinochet pour le meurtre d un chimiste Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine news agency cable 12 October 2006 in French Larry Rohter Colonel s Death Gives Clues to Pinochet Arms Deals Archived 8 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 19 June 2006 in English Terence O Hara Allbrittons Riggs to Pay Victims Of Pinochet Archived 3 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post 25 February 2005 in English a b c David Leigh and Rob Evans Revealed BAE s secret 1m to Pinochet The Guardian 15 September 2005 in English a b c David Leigh Jonathan Franklin and Rob Evans Detective story that linked 1m Pinochet cash to BAE The Guardian 15 September 2005 in English U S sends back Pinochet daughter Archived 11 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine CNN 18 January 2006 in English Pinochet family arrested in Chile Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine BBC 4 October 2007 in English Cobertura Especial Detienen a familia y principales colaboradores de Pinochet Archived 11 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine La Tercera 4 October 2007 in Spanish a b c d e f Davila Mireya 2019 Veinte anos de la detencion de Pinochet en Londres y sus efectos en el sistema politico chileno Conference paper University of Chile a b c d e f Huneeus Carlos 2007 Las consecuencias del caso Pinochet en la politica chilena Centro de Estudios de la Realidad Contemporanea A demonstration on 21 May 1999 in Valparaiso in front of the National Congress and treatment of participants by the authorities CHL36536 E Report Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada 27 February 2001 Votacion Pais Presidencial 2ª v 1999 Electoral Service Retrieved 6 October 2022 Jonathan Franklin Pinochet sold cocaine to Europe and US The Guardian 11 July 2006 in English a b Andrea Chaparro Solis Generales R y civiles de Famae procesados en caso armas a Croacia Archived 29 June 2012 at archive today La Nacion 13 June 2006 in Spanish Andrea Chaparro Solis Consejo de Defensa del Estado se hace querellante en caso armas a Ecuador Archived 16 January 2013 at archive today La Nacion 5 June 2006 in Spanish External links editThe Pinochet Case in London 1998 2000 at Augusto Pinochet 1915 2006 A Biography TRIAL Pinochet s trials Timeline of Pinochet Prosecution Amnesty International Pinochet Real For Supporters of General Pinochet Archived 29 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish The crimes of Augusto Pinochet several case studies BBC coverage special report Article Doubts Remain over Pinochet s Fate Chile s antiquated penal code could be his undoing Reconcile Chile Valech report on political imprisonment and torture November 2004 Archived 24 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish BBC News report Banks accused over Pinochet cash Amnesty International George Washington University article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indictment and arrest of Augusto Pinochet amp oldid 1203366391, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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