Asheville Daily Planet
RSS Facebook
Chileës transition deserves praise
Wednesday, 17 January 2007 07:09
Active Image"Hey Mr. Pinochet, youëve sown a bitter crop. Itës foreign money that supports you ǃÓone day that moneyës going to stop. No wages for your torturers, no budget for your guns. Can you think of your own mother dancing with her invisible son?"
ÇƒÓ Sting, "They Dance Alone."
ï
Sting wrote those words in 1987, in a song about  the so-called Mothers of the Disappeared, a group of women whose sons and daughters had been kidnapped, never to be seen again, by the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile.

During the nearly 20 years after Pinochet seized power in a military coup, more than 3,000 people were executed and far more were kidnapped, tortured or exiled.


Last month, however, Pinochet met his own end, at the ripe old age of 91.

In Chile, news of the former dictatorës death was marked with widespread celebrations and demonstrations in the streets. Those protests quickly turned violent, with police using tear gas and water cannons to deter demonstrators.

Nontheless, the country has enjoyed a steadily increasing degree of democracy and respect for human rights in the years since 1988, when voters rejected a plea by Pinochet to grant him another eight-year term in office.


Furthermore, Chile has flourished economically, with an average GDP-growth rate of six percent per year since the 1980s ÇƒÓ the strongest growth of any country in Latin America.


Meanwhile, Pinochet watched his influence steadily decline and in recent years has been the subject of a number of investigations, both internationally and within Chile, into his human rights abuses.


In many ways, it must be less than satisfying to the Chilean people that Pinochet was never brought to justice. Like Slobodan Milosevic, Pinochet died before he could be convicted for his crimes against humanity.


Still, we congratulate the people of Chile for reaching an end to their long national nightmare. In a world where far too many people have suffered the brutality of totalitarian governments, the success of Chile in coming out of such a system should be seen as a positive example.


One significant step ÇƒÓ and one which was also employed in post-Apartheid South Africa ÇƒÓ was the establishment of a National Commission on Truth and Reconciliation, which investigated and documented Pinochetës atrocities, so that families of victims could know the details of their loved onesë deaths and the public could confront the full scope of the tragedy.


The country also stands as an example to the world in another regard ÇƒÓ unlike Serbia or Iraq, Chileës movement from dictatorship to democracy was not imposed by force from the outside, but from the will of its people.


The world will always have dictators and power-hungry despots with no concern for human rights. Fortunately, it will also always have people willing to stand up such tyrants, despite immense risks. Chile has much to teach the world about the importance of democracy.

 



 


contact | home

Copyright ©2005-2015 Star Fleet Communications

224 Broadway St., Asheville, NC 28801 | P.O. Box 8490, Asheville, NC 28814
phone (828) 252-6565 | fax (828) 252-6567

a Cube Creative Design site