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The 1973 Chilean coup and the origins of transnational human rights activism*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2013

Patrick William Kelly*
Affiliation:
Department of History, The University of Chicago, 1126 E. 59th St, Chicago IL 60637, USA E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

The 1973 Chilean coup gave rise to an unprecedented growth in a global human rights consciousness. In its aftermath, transnational activists from a diverse array of political and ideological backgrounds found common cause – indeed, a common language of human rights – in campaigns to ameliorate the repressive acts of the Chilean military junta. This article focuses on two models of activism in particular: Amnesty International, whose 1973 investigative mission set the terms of the global debate about human rights in Chile; and transnational solidarity activists, especially Chilean exiles from leftist parties, whose vision of social activism narrowed as their interest in human rights surged. These campaigns – while not without tensions over the role of politics in the moral appeal to human rights – both articulated a transnational discourse of human rights and created new activist techniques to foment moral outrage by revealing the prevalence of torture through the power of personal testimony.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

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Footnotes

*

For his unwavering support of this article and all else, I am indebted to Mark Philip Bradley. The article also draws on wise advice from Michael Geyer, Mauricio Tenorio, Sam Moyn, Jan Eckel, Jim Green, Diana Schwartz, Elizabeth Dale and her legal history webinar, and the Latin American History Workshop at Chicago. For sharing their time and stories, I would like to thank José (Pepe) Zalaquett, Roger Plant, Tracy Ulltveit-Moe, and Tom Quigley. The research for this article was funded by the Social Science Research Council–ACLS International Dissertation Research Fellowship.

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35 For the press release, see AI-USA, series II.5, box 3, AMR-22; see more generally the resolution passed at the 6th International Council Meeting, held just days after the coup, 13–16 September 1973, in AI-USA, series I.3, box 1.

36 For a summary of Amnesty's activities, see AI-USA, series II.5, box 3, AMR-22, International Secretariat (henceforth IS) to all National Sections, ‘Urgent Action Campaign: Chile’, 12 October 1973.

37 Interview with José Zalaquett.

38 California State Archives, State Government Oral History Program, Frank C. Newman, oral history interview, conducted in 1989 and 1991 by Carole Hicke, Regional Oral History Office, University of California at Berkeley.

39 Interview with Roger Plant.

40 Newman, oral history interview, p. 287.

41 Interview with Roger Plant; Newman, oral history interview, p. 291.

42 Newman, oral history interview, p. 299.

43 Interview with Roger Plant.

44 AI-USA, series II.5, box 3, AMR-22, ‘Report of the mission to Santiago, Chile, 1–8th November 1973’ (henceforth Amnesty Report on Chile).

45 On Amnesty's evolving mandate, see Amnesty International: a chronology, 1961–1976, London: Amnesty International, 1976; see also Amnesty International, Report on torture, London: Gerald Duckworth, 1973.

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52 Interview with Roger Plant; interview with Tracy Ulltveit-Moe, 29 June 2012, London.

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54 AI-USA, series II.5, box 3, AMR-22, AI Research Department to all National Sections, ‘Second anniversary of the coup in Chile’, 5 August 1975.

55 AP, PEL/4/CH/4, interview with Gabriel Gaspar, conducted by Gabriela Díaz in Santiago de Chile, 13 August 1999.

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60 FSA, ASI, 9, 1, Comisión Investigadora de los Crímenes de la Junta Militar en Chile, Primera Sesión, Helsinki, 1974; The complete list of countries that attended the first session is: Belgium, Finland, France, Denmark, Greece, Guatemala, Hungary, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Vietnam, Panama, Ecuador, the United States, Brazil, the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, Chile, Argentina, Great Britain, Bolivia, Uruguay, Canada, Sweden, Austria, the German Democratic Republic, Japan, Cuba, Venezuela, the Federal Republic of Germany, India, Norway, Poland, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Algeria, and Australia.

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62 The Commission continued to meet throughout the early 1980s, but it never held another full session. Smaller audiences were held in Denmark (1979), Rome (1980), Athens (1982), and Helsinki (1983). See FSA, ASI, 20, 1.

63 Jacob Söderman, correspondence with author, 31 January 2010.

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68 These events are discussed in more detail in my PhD dissertation. See also FSA, ASI, 22.

69 Jacob Söderman, correspondence with author, 31 January 2010.

70 FSA, ASI, 9, 1, testimony of Alberto Míguez, undated.

71 FSA, ASI, 9, 1, testimony of Marta Olivares Gómez, undated.

72 FSA, ASI, 9, 6, ‘Meeting of the Secretariat, Helsinki Finland’, 4 August 1974.

73 FSA, ASI, 13, 2, ‘To save the lives of people kidnapped by DINA’, undated.

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91 ‘La Sra. Echeverría’.

92 AP, PEL/1/CH/15, interview with Rogelio de la Fuente.

93 AP, PEL/1/CH/12, interview with Jorge Witker. The Casa de Chile was primarily seen in a political light. In early 1975, Mexican newspapers carried stories of a dynamite bomb that failed to detonate at the Casa. Many linked the potential attack to officials from the Chilean Junta: see ‘Atribuyen a la Junta Militar el atentado contra la Casa de Chile’, El Día, 24 January 1975; interview with Beatriz Torres, 29 September 2011.

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95 ‘Repudio en Europa y América a la Junta Chilena’, El Excélsior, 12 September 1974.

96 AGN, 1808 C, Exp. 6, ‘Gran mitin de masas arena México – con la resistencia chilena, por el socialismo!’

97 AGN, 1808 D, Exp. 9, ‘Plan de Acción’ of the Mitin Internacional de Solidaridad con Chile, undated.

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101$$$\vskip-7pt\rotate180{!!!}$$$Solidaridad con el pueblo Chileno!!!’ El Excélsior, 28 November 1974. This same confusion can be seen in documents from Brazilian leftists in the same period.

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