Grandson of Chile's Salvador Allende Demands Henry Kissinger's Arrest

Edited by Pavel Jacomino
2016-12-13 20:45:47

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Santiago de Chile, December 13 (RHC)-- As the legacy of Chile’s former CIA-backed dictator Augusto Pinochet still haunts the South American country 10 years after his death, a grandson of ousted socialist President Salvador Allende called on Norwegian authorities to arrest former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger during his visit to the Scandinavian nation for his support of the 1973 coup in Chile and the brutal repression it unleashed. 

Pablo Sepulveda Allende’s call joined the voices of thousands who have demanded Kissinger’s arrest in Norway since the Nobel Peace Prize Committee announced that the notorious hardline former national security heavyweight — who oversaw an expansion of war in Vietnam and Southeast Asia and U.S. intervention in Latin America — would deliver a speech on peace in Oslo over the weekend. 

“When a government claims to defend peace and human rights like Norway does,” wrote Sepulveda in a letter, “is it too much to ask that a war criminal with direct responsibility for genocide, torture and military coups be declared persona non grata or be detained and stand trial according to international law?” 

Kissinger, who has a notorious track record of supporting U.S. intervention, dictatorships, torture and brutal counterinsurgency strategy in Latin America, was also awarded the Nobel Peace Prize together with his Vietnamese counterpart Le Duc Tho in 1973 — the same year the then-secretary of state backed a coup against Chile’s Allende. 

In the letter, titled “Dear Norway, arrest Henry Kissinger, the man that planned the coup d’etat in which my grandfather was killed,” Sepulveda added that he was “shocked” by the “tribute” to Kissinger that he argued “belittles millions of victims” of the former secretary of state’s abuses. 

He noted that Kissinger, together with the CIA, supported and helped orchestrate “ political terror campaigns and murder of leftist, Indigenous people, trade unionists and others who stood in the way of U.S. objectives for control of the region." 

In the days immediately following the 1973 coup that installed the brutal dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet, military intelligence agents rounded up and killed or tortured thousands of supporters of Allende’s socialism. Over the 17 years of Pinochet's bloody rule, the military regime killed or disappeared more than 3,200 people and tortured more than 28,000. 

Meanwhile, across Latin America, a CIA-backed Dirty War known as Operation Condor, aimed at wiping out opposition to U.S.-supported dictatorships in the 1970s and 1980s, killed and forcibly disappeared an estimated 50,000 people across Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay. 

“Norway opened its doors to thousands of Chileans who fled the regime in terror,” continued Sepulveda in his letter.  “That’s why it is incomprehensible that Kissinger be received and honored in Norway on the occasion of awarding the Nobel Peace Prize.” 



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