While the world’s attention is focused upon the USA and the
CIA torture report, a "truth commission" investigating abuses during
Brazil's 1964-85 dictatorship has called for the prosecution of former military
officers and some private companies for their role in human rights atrocities. 377
people, including some generals, as responsible for what they described as
crimes against humanity, including the systematic use of torture, rape, forced
disappearances and murder of the military's opponents. 200 of the alleged
perpetrators are still alive. Brazil's military officers never faced trial, in
part because they negotiated an amnesty law several years before leaving power
that protected them from most future prosecution. But leaders of the truth
commission said the 1979 amnesty law should not apply to crimes against
humanity.
Brazil's military is no longer a threat to democracy but it
retains influence among some legislators in Congress, so the prospect of former
officers facing trial is uncertain. The truth commission also detailed how
private companies, including many foreign automakers, helped the military put
together "black lists" of trade union activists. Many of the
activists were harassed by police or unable to find jobs for a long period. Germany's
Volkswagen AG had been a particularly active provider of information to the
military, providing detailed accounts of union meetings. State-run oil company
Petrobras , which is currently at the centre of a corruption scandal shaking
Rousseff's government, was an "iconic" case of a company that
suppressed labour unrest with military assistance. Rosa Cardoso, one of the
truth commission's leaders, said public prosecutors should try to bring civil
lawsuits against companies whose actions directly led to serious rights
violations.
CIA and US military were the architects and mentors of
Brazil and Latin America's human rights, abuses, military juntas and torture.
All courtesy of the "School of the Americas" (SOA). A 1996 Pentagon investigation revealing its training manuals
advocated torture, false imprisonment, and executions.
During the first seven years after Castelo Branco's CIA
orchestrated coup, the US military and Intelligence services
"trained" 100,000 Brazilian police in torture and repression
including the sale of $20 million worth of torture equipment. More than 600
Brazilian police and senior military officers who were brought to the United
States. Their instruction was clear as the CIA trainer openly encouraged and
lectured on using widespread torture as means of repression and intimidating
the Brazilian population. Others conveyed a even more insidious message. Le
VanAn, a student from the South Vietnamese police, later described what his
instructors told him: "Despite the fact that brutal interrogation is strongly
criticized by moralists," they said, "its importance must not be
denied if we want to have order and security in daily life."
Brazil's political prisoners never doubted that the Americans
were involved in the torture that proliferated in their country. On their
release, they reported that they frequently had heard English-speaking men
around them, foreigners who left the room while the actual torture took place.
As the years passed, those torture victims say, the men with American.
accents became less careful and sometimes stayed on during
interrogations and started actively participating in torture, rapes and murders
of political opponents.
No comments:
Post a Comment