panarmenian
21 Sep 2023, 23:18 GMT+10
After the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende was displaced by violence on September 11, 1973, and replaced by the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, the junta began to imprison, torture and murder the people whom they suspected of having participated in the administration of Allende's government, had been important supporters of it, or whom they otherwise perceived as threatening to them. Thousands of people were arrested, tortured, imprisoned, and murdered. In the beginning, the persecutions were more indiscriminate but later, when interrogations and torture of arrested people gave the junta more information, they became more selective.
Chile is surrounded by the Pacific Ocean on the west, the Andes Mountains on the east, the Atacama Desert on the north, and icebergs on the south and therefore there was no easy way out of the country for those who feared losing their freedom or life. As the ropes around their necks began to tighten, they often had no choice but to try to find help from people they trusted and who might be able to get them out of the country. UNHCR opened refugee camps for those who lost their livelihoods, but to the misfortune of those who needed protection for political reasons, it gave access to junta forces to search for "criminals" from the camps. Soon foreign embassies were noted as safer hiding places for those forced to flee Chile - either with permission or by smuggling.
The US and its close allies did not offer help to those sought by the junta. Embassies of Latin American countries were soon filled with refugees. Cuba's embassy was attacked and its personnel were expelled. All diplomats of Mexico left Chile. Other Latin American countries refused permitting travel and accepting the entry of refugees. In this peculiar situation, the staff of the embassies of a few countries, mainly European, faced a situation where they had to act or abandon those seeking help. Some chose the latter option, but several decided to help despite the risk of acting contrary to the laws and instructions of their motherland. Perhaps now, after 50 years, it's time to remember some people who opposed the junta nonviolently and helped those in need.
These people mentioned were not the only ones who were important to those who needed and found a way to escape from a dangerous situation. Many wanted to act quietly and nonviolently. We may not be faced every day with a violent coup d'etat, but we are faced with acts of violence in all forms, economic, religious, psychological, loneliness, political, physical, etc., and like these few faces we have choices to make in daily bases, giving direction to our own life. Hope these short testimonies will present the possibility of favoring peace and nonviolence.
Source: Pressenza
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