![]() |
www.ictj.org |
While reading the book this week, I was struck by something that Cardenas said about Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet (177).
Pinochet was not extradited to Spain or ever sentenced in Chile, but it would be misguided to assume that the case waged against him had no repercussions. It challenged impunity for human rights crimes, both by lifting a wall of silence in society and showing the possibilities of legal prosecution.
If there is any poetic justice in Pinochet having died on International Human Rights Day, it is this: Pinochet may not have been punished for his crimes, but the atrocities he committed turned him into a global symbol of a dictator on trial: even national leaders can be pursued for crimes against humanity.While I am somewhat pessimistic that a Guatemalan court will once against find Efrain Rios Montt guilty on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity, the aborted sentence of the former leader still has contributed to furthering the cause of justice for victims of the repression and the genocide.
They have shared their suffering with their fellow Guatemalans and the world. Prosecutions against other Guatemalans involved in human rights atrocities continue. We are still talking about the suffering in Guatemala. And, finally, history will still remember Rios Montt as the first former leader convicted of genocide in a national court.
No comments:
Post a Comment