<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<zmag-article>
  <about-user-id type="integer" nil="true"></about-user-id>
  <account-type-code>guest_writer</account-type-code>
  <article-number type="integer">4</article-number>
  <artist-id type="integer" nil="true"></artist-id>
  <author-id type="integer" nil="true"></author-id>
  <band-id type="integer" nil="true"></band-id>
  <book-id type="integer" nil="true"></book-id>
  <charset-fixed type="boolean" nil="true"></charset-fixed>
  <created-at type="datetime">2000-04-01T00:00:00Z</created-at>
  <css-style nil="true"></css-style>
  <custom-order type="integer" nil="true"></custom-order>
  <description>Early this year, the British Home Secretary, 
    Jack Straw, announced that he was &amp;#147;minded&amp;#148; to send General Augusto 
    Pinochet back to Chile. Pinochet has been detained in Britain for 18 months 
    awaiting extradition to Spain, there to be tried for human rights abuses committed 
    during and after the 1973 coup he led in Chile. Straw instructed a team of 
    doctors to examine Pinochet in the clear expectation that they would find 
    the ailing 84-year-old General unfit to stand trial, thus getting the British 
    government out of a tight corner. However, Sir John Grimley-Evans the Professor 
    of Gerontology at Oxford leading the team, leaked to the press that he and 
    his colleagues had not ruled out the possibility of Pinochet&amp;#146;s recovery 
    and fitness for trial at a later date. 
   
    Why would Jack Straw&amp;#151;a young socialist at the time of the coup who must 
    have been sickened by Pinochet&amp;#146;s crimes&amp;#151;want to save this wicked 
    man from extradition? The answer is that the United States wanted Pinochet 
    back in Chile and British Prime Minister Tony Blair was happy to oblige. The 
    American government &amp;nbsp;maneuvered back-stage from the moment Pinochet was 
    arrested in a private clinic in London. 
   
    The Chilean coup was bought and paid for by the CIA. This much has been established 
    for some time. Richard Nixon and his Secretary of State, Henry Kissin- ger, 
    were determined to oust the socialist President Allende that Chileans had 
    elected. The military take-over was savage, and let us not be squeamish about 
    confronting the torture that the conservative Catholic Pinochet permitted. 
    A Chilean-based journalist, Duncan Campbell, interviewed survivors of the 
    General&amp;#146;s torture chambers and had this to say: &amp;#147;What has emerged 
    is the sheer pornographic sadism of his (Pinochet&amp;#146;s) subordinates: a 
    father forced to bugger his son; a dog made to rape a woman; relatives of 
    the victims brought to watch or listen to the torture...suspects opened up 
    with carving knives before they were dumped into the sea, so that their bodies 
    would not float.&amp;#148; 
   
    If all this were to come out in a public trial, the U.S. claim to be a champion 
    of democracy and human rights would be seen as bogus. Moreover, the U.S. could 
    become liable for reparations to the families of the 3,000 or more killed 
    by Pinochet&amp;#146;s goons as well as to those who survived torture. A foreign 
    junket could expose Kissinger and others to arrest for crimes against humanity. 
    
   
    If the U.S. fears what a trial of General Pinochet might reveal about its 
    preference for murderous right-wing dictatorships in Latin America during 
    the long years of the Cold War, the Vatican also had a stake in preventing 
    his prosecution and called for his repatriation. The Church never distanced 
    itself from the Pinochet regime, which was largely comprised of Roman Catholics 
    in good standing. (One of the think tanks instrumental in planning the coup 
    was staffed by zealous, far-right Catholics.) No one was ever excommunicated, 
    and when Pope John Paul II celebrated a public Mass during his visit to Chile 
    in the late 1980s he gave the Eucharist to the General and his cronies. Some 
    of these men must have been involved in the Santiago Stadium where so many 
    Chileans were liquidated. At a rally in Chicago not long after the coup, I 
    heard Victor Jara&amp;#146;s widow describe the manner in which her husband&amp;#151;the 
    great Chilean folk-singer and poet&amp;#151;had been killed in the Stadium. His 
    hands were cut off; then a guitar was thrust at him and he was told to play. 
    
   
    Rome, understandably, wants to close the book on this chapter in Chilean history, 
    especially as it could lead to scrutiny of the Church&amp;#146;s current role 
    in the country&amp;#146;s politics. In the run-up to Chile&amp;#146;s presidential 
    election last month, the British newspaper, The Guardian, took a close 
    look a Joaquim Lavin&amp;#151;the right wing&amp;#146;s candidate. While he lost the 
    election, Lavin&amp;#146;s high profile revealed that Pinochetistas are still 
    trying to take the country back. A former Pinochet collaborator, Lavin is 
    a member of Opus Dei, which The Guardian described as &amp;#147;an ultra 
    conservative Catholic group.&amp;#148; It continued: &amp;#147;Although there are 
    only five thousand Chilean members, the group (Opus Dei) includes powerful 
    business leaders&amp;#151;the men who have financed and pushed Mr. Lavin as the 
    ideal President for their extreme free-market platform.&amp;#148; 
   
    This snippet of information is, in its way, quite stunning. Pope John Paul 
    II has from time to time made noises about the morally unacceptable aspects 
    of the free market. Yet, Opus Dei, a hive of free marketeers, has no greater 
    supporter than this Pope. He has given the sect carte-blanche in its crusade 
    to make the Church over in its own image. 
   
    The Chilean hierarchy has a full quota of Opus Dei prelates (so does the Austrian 
    Church, which is interesting given the current furor over the resurgence of 
    the fascist populism represented by Jorg Haider). 
   
    For over a century, a morbid fear of communist or socialist movements has 
    compelled the Roman Catholic Church into alliances with the political right, 
    even when this meant strategic support for fascism. As Pope Pius XII accommodated 
    Adolph Hitler on this basis, so the Vatican for the past 27 years has turned 
    a blind eye to Catholic fascists in Chile. 
   
    Some days it is hard to be an impotent bystander at history&amp;#146;s evil moments&amp;#151;having 
    to watch those with power to do good, squander or abuse it. Just when Jack 
    Straw was telling the country that he was &amp;#147;minded&amp;#148; to send Pinochet 
    home, the unctuous Cardinal Thomas Winning of Scotland was making scurrilous 
    headlines calling homosexuality a perversion. He had no comment on the real 
    pervert in our midst, the one with the blood of thousands on his hands about 
    to escape from justice. Washington and Rome got their way. Pinochet has returned 
    home and their dirty secrets are safe once more. For this act alone, Tony 
    Blair&amp;#146;s government deserves a crushing defeat at the next general election. 
    &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Z 
    
   
    Ann Pettifer is the publisher of Common Sense, 
    the alternative newspaper at the University of Notre Dame.</description>
  <director-id type="integer" nil="true"></director-id>
  <emailed-at type="datetime" nil="true"></emailed-at>
  <external-video-url nil="true"></external-video-url>
  <filename nil="true"></filename>
  <film-id type="integer" nil="true"></film-id>
  <first-name>Ann</first-name>
  <folder-id type="integer" nil="true"></folder-id>
  <format-content nil="true"></format-content>
  <generic-header nil="true"></generic-header>
  <genre nil="true"></genre>
  <id type="integer">20820</id>
  <is-debate type="boolean">false</is-debate>
  <is-excerpt type="boolean" nil="true"></is-excerpt>
  <is-featured type="boolean">false</is-featured>
  <is-fiction type="boolean" nil="true"></is-fiction>
  <is-free type="boolean" nil="true"></is-free>
  <is-interview type="boolean">false</is-interview>
  <is-lecture type="boolean" nil="true"></is-lecture>
  <is-preview type="boolean" nil="true"></is-preview>
  <is-resoc type="boolean" nil="true"></is-resoc>
  <is-review type="boolean">false</is-review>
  <is-talk type="boolean" nil="true"></is-talk>
  <isbn nil="true"></isbn>
  <issue-id type="integer">41</issue-id>
  <issue-section-id type="integer">143</issue-section-id>
  <issue-sort-index type="integer" nil="true"></issue-sort-index>
  <issued-at type="datetime">2000-04-01T00:00:00Z</issued-at>
  <last-name>Pettifer</last-name>
  <left-menu-id type="integer" nil="true"></left-menu-id>
  <media-content-type nil="true"></media-content-type>
  <media-file-name nil="true"></media-file-name>
  <media-file-size type="integer" nil="true"></media-file-size>
  <media-updated-at type="datetime" nil="true"></media-updated-at>
  <minutes-content type="integer" nil="true"></minutes-content>
  <old-coldfusion-id type="integer" nil="true"></old-coldfusion-id>
  <old-id type="integer">13454</old-id>
  <pages type="integer" nil="true"></pages>
  <parent-content-id type="integer">0</parent-content-id>
  <parent-id type="integer" nil="true"></parent-id>
  <path nil="true"></path>
  <picture nil="true"></picture>
  <publication-status type="integer">1</publication-status>
  <publisher nil="true"></publisher>
  <publisher-url nil="true"></publisher-url>
  <replies-count type="integer" nil="true"></replies-count>
  <resolution nil="true"></resolution>
  <short-title>Extradition</short-title>
  <slug>mi-general-by-ann-pettifer</slug>
  <source-name></source-name>
  <source-url></source-url>
  <subtitle>none</subtitle>
  <tags nil="true"></tags>
  <title>Mi General</title>
  <top-menu-id type="integer" nil="true"></top-menu-id>
  <updated-at type="datetime">2009-09-24T07:31:04Z</updated-at>
  <user-id type="integer">10532</user-id>
  <visibly-free type="boolean" nil="true"></visibly-free>
  <year-content nil="true"></year-content>
</zmag-article>
