Chile arrests scores over abuses
A Chilean judge has ordered the arrest of almost 100 former soldiers and secret police over rights abuses dating from General Augusto Pinochet's government.
Victor Montiglio ordered the detentions as part of a probe into the kidnappings and murder of scores of opponents of Pinochet during "Operation Colombo" in 1975.
A total of 119 people died during the operation, but 42 were never found, and the judge said that they should be considered victims of kidnapping.
It is thought to be the largest mass arrest of suspects relating to rights abuses from the period.
"This is excellent news, because Operation Colombo was also a case in which General Pinochet's immunity from prosecution was stripped and -- given the number of victims -- is an emblematic case," said Sergio Laurenti, executive director of Amnesty International in Chile.
"But it is important that the police now furnish the necessary information to enable the courts to proceed," he said.
"There is a lack of cooperation from the armed forces and security forces."
Also on May 26, Michelle Bachelet, the Chilean president, attended a ceremony to inaugurate a human rights memorial in the town of Paine near the capital, Santiago, to commemorate 70 people who were either executed or detained and later "disappeared" in the town during Pinochet's rule.
According to court documents, Pinochet's secret service, known as Dina, seized the 119 activists and Pinochet opponents in July 1975 and killed them.
However, in a bid to counter media reports about repression in the country, the agency claimed falsely that they had either left the country or died fighting different opposition factions.
Investigators later accounted for the bodies or whereabouts of many of the dead, but at least 42 were never found and Montiglio said they should still be considered kidnapping victims.
Among those being sought is the former head of Dina, Manuel Contreras, who is already in prison for other abuses.
Pinochet himself was briefly indicted on kidnapping charges in the same case, before his death in December 2006.
During his military government's rule, from 1973 until 1990, about 3,000 people died or disappeared, 28,000 were tortured and about 200,000 fled into exile. Rights groups suggest the number of disappeared may actually reach 10,000.