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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Ricardo Lagos

Interviewed May 20, 2024

To begin with, quite a number of my friends who remained in the Presidential Palace died right after they were taken prisoners. So I know that some of them had been killed two or three days after the coup.

[In 1973, General Augusto Pinochet led a military coup and established a dictatorship in Chile from 1973 to 1990.]

Others simply disappeared. And the question about those people who disappeared was a really tough question to talk about.

The question is that during those days habeas corpus did not exist. If somebody would take you during the night, the following day –it’s true- they [friends or family of the victim] would go to the Vicaría [Vicariate of Solidarity] (the Vicaría was a part of the Catholic Church) and they had quite a number of lawyers there and normally they would present a habeas corpus in order to see what had happened to them.

[Habeas corpus is a legal concept, meaning a person being held by the government must be brought before a judge or court and is used as a protection against illegal imprisonment. The Vicariate of Solidarity, an agency of the Chilean Catholic Church, was a human rights organization in Chile during the military regime of Augusto Pinochet that opposed the government’s abduction and mistreatment of Chilean citizens.]

And always the tribunal would ask the Government: “do you know what happened to Mr. So and So?” The answer was: “No, we have no idea”. And that was it.

Nevertheless, when democracy was restored, those people had, because of the habeas corpus, the statement of the day and in what conditions they had been taken to prison.

So, when many, many years later, as a President, I established a political presidential commission to register those who had been tortured and those who had been in prison, normally the first point [document] of the paper that they had was the habeas corpus that was sent during those days in Chile.