Warrants May Shed Light on South American Dirty War

Governments colluded to murder adversaries
By Peter Fearon,  Newser Staff
Posted Dec 25, 2007 8:04 PM CST
Warrants May Shed Light on South American Dirty War
Chile's history of military dictatorship still causes tensions in the South American nation. Demonstrators stand by fire barricades set by protesters in Santiago, early Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2007, during protests on the 34th anniversary of the military coup led by the late Gen. Augusto Pinochet. Pinochet...   (Associated Press)

An Italian judge has issued arrest warrants for nearly 150 people in Latin America accused of helping their governments hunt down and kill leftist opponents in the 1970s. The warrants could shed new light on the so-called Operation Condor, an extraordinary scheme in which South American governments cooperated with each other to kill their political adversaries.

Italian authorities became involved because some of the Condor victims were Italian citizens. One suspect, a former Uruguayan naval intelligence officer, already is in custody. Others named include former Argentine military leader Jorge Rafael Videla, former Argentine naval chief Emilio Eduardo Massera, and ex-Uruguayan junta leader Jorge Maria Bordaberry. (More Operation Condor stories.)

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