Chilean officers charged in 1973 murder of Victor Jara
By Gene Clancy
January 8, 2013
Chilean artist, activist Victor Jara
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On the morning of Sept. 12, 1973, Victor Jara, the internationally acclaimed
folk singer/writer, theater director, activist and musician, was taken along
with thousands of prisoners to the Chile Stadium in Santiago, Chile, where he
was repeatedly beaten and tortured. The bones in his hands were broken, as were
his ribs.
Fellow political prisoners testified that his captors mockingly suggested
that he play guitar for them as he lay on the ground. Defiantly, Jara sang part
of “Venceremos” (“We Will Win”), a song supporting the
people’s movement in Chile. After further beatings, he was machine-gunned
on Sept. 16, his body dumped on a road on the outskirts of Santiago. Forty-four
bullets were found in his body.
On Dec. 27, eight retired Chilean army officers were formally charged with
Jara’s murder.
Judge Miguel Vásquez charged two of the former officers, Hugo
Sánchez and Pedro Barrientos, with committing the murder and six others as
accomplices. Sánchez, a lieutenant colonel, was second in command at Chile
Stadium. Barrientos, who was second in command at the infamous National
Stadium, currently lives in Deltona, Fla., a city southwest of Daytona Beach.
All were arrested except for Barrientos.
Four of the eight had taken courses at the infamous School of the Americas,
a combat training school for Latin American soldiers located at Fort Benning,
Ga. In 2001, it was renamed the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security
Cooperation (WHINSEC), but retained its primary character and objectives.
Since 1946, the SOA has trained more than 64,000 Latin American soldiers in
counterinsurgency techniques, commando and psychological warfare, military
intelligence and interrogation tactics. These graduates have consistently used
their skills to wage war against their own people.
Among those whom SOA graduates arrest, beat and torture are educators, union
organizers, religious workers, student leaders and others who work for the
rights of the poor. The SOA has left such a trail of blood and suffering that
it has been dubbed the “School of the Assassins.”
The 1973 coup, which killed tens of thousands of Chileans, was carried out
with the full support of the U.S. government. President Richard Nixon and
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger promised the Chilean officers U.S. backing
and provided it.
Among the top beneficiaries of the coup and the dictatorship that followed
were giant multinational corporations such as Anaconda Copper. The companies
were furious that Chilean President Salvador Allende’s Popular Unity
government had nationalized many large foreign-owned enterprises.
It remains to be seen whether or not Kissinger and other U.S. war criminals
and corporations will ever be brought to justice for their crimes. A start
could be made by closing the School of the Americas, deporting Pedro Barrientos
to face justice in Chile, freeing the Cuban Five U.S. political prisoners, and
putting an end to the illegal blockades and interventions against Cuba,
Venezuela and other progressive governments and movements in Latin America.
¡Victor Jara, Presente!