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Share Share on Twitter Adriana Rivas, an agent during the Pinochet dictatorship, is one step closer to facing justice in Chile. The Federal Court on Thursday rejected the appeal by which Rivas tried to avoid her extradition. With her ruling, Justice Wendy Abraham confirmed the previous decision taken by the New South Wales Court Magistrate Philip Stewart, who last October gave the green light for the Chilean to be sent to face trial in her country. The application for review is dismissed, the previous decision is confirmed, Justice Abraham said. The applicant is eligible for surrender for aggravated kidnapping for which her extradition is sought. ....
A New Jersey resident and former National Police lieutenant has penned a memoir detailing how he survived being kidnapped and tortured by the Peruvian National Intelligence Service.“The Unknown Basement: Based on a Real-Life Story,” detail… ....
Former Lieutenant of the National Police in Peru Chronicles Survival of Being Kidnapped and Tortured by the Peruvian National Intelligence Service in Gripping New Memoir Share Article ‘The Unknown Basement’ by Salomon H. Soria presents his autobiographical account of the most important and painful episode of his life after leading the police strike of May 1987 in Huancayo, Peru By sharing his own violation of human rights, Soria hopes his story helps find justice and healing for others impacted by similar experiences. BERGEN COUNTY, N.J. (PRWEB) April 05, 2021 In Salomon H. Soria’s compelling new memoir, “The Unknown Basement: Based on a Real-Life Story,” the author details his painful experience of being kidnapped, interrogated, tortured, and imprisoned in the basement of the National Intelligence Service of Peru. His story begins with the events that led up to his kidnapping, chr ....
“to be helpful in this area,” such as providing “discreet aid,” on the basis that “we must try and prevent new Allendes and Castros and try, where possible, to reverse these trends.” A contemporary CIA intelligence memorandum noted that, to Brazilian military top brass, Washington “obviously” wanted Brasilia to “do the dirty work” in Chile and elsewhere in Latin America. By July the next year, Brazil had established back-channel communications with Chilean army officers, covertly flying them into the country to meet with high-ranking authorities and begin plotting the downfall of Allende. An August 1973 Brazilian intelligence report details a summit at an airbase in Santiago, at which high-level Chilean military officials were given extensive briefings on Brazil’s own military coup nine years earlier, in the process learning ....