| SANTIAGO- A
U.S. Senate Subcommittee report released
in July linking former Gen. Augusto Pinochet
to suspected money-laundering activities
at the Washington-based Riggs Bank has
roused Chileans of various political factions,
as well as the country's traditionally
conservative media and up-and-coming centrist
and liberal publications. Most
agree with the need for the government
here to investigate the source of the
former dictator's wealth.
"The potential
political scandal surrounding this case
is significant, especially because we
are close to election time," the
leading conservative daily El Mercurio
said in a July 18 editorial. "This
is all the more reason why the facts
relating to the case should be carefully
and speedily determined."
La Tercera, Chile's
second-largest newspaper, also with
a traditional, conservative editorial
line, said of the scandal (July 18):
"Given the seriousness of the report,
authorities and a wide segment of our
population have been correct in calling
for an investigation. This is the correct
response: our justice system should
determine where this money came from,
if there are other deposits and if they
originated from some kind of illegal
action."
President Ricardo
Lagos ordered an internal investigation
into the secret bank accounts within
a week of the U.S. Senate report's release.
The Supreme Court assigned Judge Sergio
Muñoz, who is also investigating
a high-profile pedophilia case, to investigate
the former general's wealth.
According to the
report, Pinochet hid between $4 and
$8 million in at least six different
accounts at Riggs. He opened his first
account at the bank in 1994.
Pinochet, who was
known for his financial and political
austerity during the country's 17-year
military regime, is largely credited
with putting Chile on track to becoming
South America's most stable and successful
country. But now, even the country's
ultra-conservative factions are demanding
an explanation to the Pinochet family
wealth.
"This would
be the end of his efforts to be remembered
as a man of integrity, who gave his
body and soul to serve his country,"
said an Aug. 2 editorial in the conservative
magazine Ercilla. "If there is
not a plausible explanation for the
origin of the millions of dollars, Pinochet
will go into history as the president
who broke with the tradition of honor
of all those who at one point or another
have passed through the presidential
palace (La Moneda)."
"Morally, his
image will be buried," added the
weekly publication.
Following the same
posture on the need for an investigation,
the state-run newspaper La Nación
said in a July 27 editorial: "The
case of Pinochet's bank accounts is
a new test for our institutionalism,
in particular with the administration
of the justice system. What's important
is the truth and that the courts meet
their responsibility.
"Given the negative
aspect (of the accusations), the case
has forced some sectors that until today
have defended the figure of Pinochet,
to step back," La Nación
said.
Meanwhile, El Mercurio
published a controversial column on
July 21 by Hermógenes Pérez
de Arce-- a well-known Pinochet supporter--
in which Pérez suggested there
are strong political undertones in the
money-laundering investigation and compared
it to similar cases that have never
been investigated. He cites the use
of the presidential reserve funds during
the Salvador Allende administration
as an example and says that unlike other
cases, "the four million dollars
that, according to a North American
accusation, Augusto Pinochet maintained
in a bank over there are investigable,"
Pérez said. "The government
uses a leftist lawyer to chase after
him. Now, the National Defense Council
decides to mobilize."
La Nación
responded in an editorial saying: "In
Pérez de Arce's column, he highlights
the idea that if something was not investigated
in the past, then its better not to
investigate it in the present. That
is not exactly what the country needs.
On the contrary, what it's about is
that Chileans don't convert cynicism
into a doctrine and that we do whatever
possible not to be ashamed of ourselves
in the future."
"[The column]
was reproduced as a Sunday insert by
ex-officials of the Pinochet regime,"
La Nación said.
The money-laundering
case continues to overlap with other
investigations involving the former
general, including the recent Supreme
Court decision to uphold a lower court's
order to strip the general of his immunity
in 'Operation Condor', a brutal intelligence-gathering
system conducted by the military dictatorships
of six South American countries in the
mid-1970s.
"When the general's
defense and his family allowed Judge
Muñoz to interrogate him on his
hidden fortune, they knew it could provoke
the removal of the general's immunity
in the Operation Condor case: the act
would reveal that he is indeed capable
of facing a trial," said El Mercurio
in an Aug. 29 special report.
Pinochet, 88, was
diagnosed with a mild case of dementia
that has led courts in the past to deem
him unfit to stand trial. |