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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Genaro Arriagada

Interviewed May 20, 2024

At the time of the coup d’état there were clashes in the streets and, consequently, one could suppose that there were a few deaths due to those confrontations. The truth is that within forty-eight hours the army had control over the entire country.

What followed was extreme violence against those persons who were defeated. They were neither judged nor put on trial. They were simply suppressed either by assassination or worse, to the extent in which the regime became organized, by the creation of concentration camps (of which there were many), or by expulsion into exile…

It is estimated that during those months, twenty thousand people went in exile. People that belonged to the Movement of the Revolutionary Left, the Communist Party, and the Socialist Party were detained and subjected to torture. At least three thousand people disappeared whose bodies were never found.

The consensus in Chile is that these three thousand people were those that died in the torture chambers and whose bodies were later made to disappear.

We are facing a regime with a brutal degree of criminality. And I tell you today, we always opposed that regime.

It was a brutal regime. We are talking about assassination and torture. We are talking about exile. Besides that it is a regime that prohibited political parties; that dissolved all powers of local government, that seized the universities, and that established a curfew that lasted twelve years.

It censored books, impeded the existence of a free press with (it is necessary to say) a few small media exceptions that survived the persecution. One of them was the Radio Cooperativa, of which I was the president for fourteen years during the military regime.