Latin America
Related: About this forumParaguayan policeman on trial for torture meted out decades ago
February 17, 2024
MNA International
By AFP
Five decades ago, he was a feared policeman nicknamed the Whip, an enforcer of Paraguays military dictatorship. Today, aged 87, Eusebio Torres is finally standing trial on torture allegations dating to 1976.
Some 20 witnesses testified against Torres in a court in Asuncion this past week, detailing his alleged cruelty and opening a rare window onto crimes committed under the 1954-1989 rule of strongman Alfredo Stroessner South Americas longest-serving dictatorship.
Torres, under house arrest, attended the hearings online, listening stoically as witnesses detailed allegations of extreme brutality committed against dissidents real and suspected of the Stroessner regime.
He (Torres) ordered me to undress and, with his leather-braided whip, he began to hit me hard, with rage
One of the impacts burst my eye, one of them, Carlos Arestivo, told the court of an incident 47 years ago.
. . .
This was a year of mass arrests at the height of Operation Condor that saw South Americas military dictatorships club together to hunt down and eliminate left-wing dissidents across national borders.
The right-wing Colorado Party that was in power in Paraguay at the time continues to dominate politics today, and Torres was honored by the state in 2014 for a half-century career an event that sparked much anger.
More:
https://www.macaubusiness.com/paraguayan-policeman-on-trial-for-torture-meted-out-decades-ago/
(By the way, Washington has always been just fine with Paraguay's Colordo Party, and totally accepted the 35 year presidency of right-wing genocidal torturer, murderer, racist fascist President Stroessner.)
Below, image of Eusebio Torres' boss, genocidal, homocidal racist fascist General Alfredo Stroessner
Judi Lynn
(162,381 posts)Alfredo Stroessner, Paraguayan Ex-Dictator, Dies
Diana Jean Schemo
Aug. 17, 2006
General Stroessner, a tall, husky artilleryman proud of his crisp military bearing, seized power in Paraguay in 1954, through a coup. He quickly won American help in establishing his secret police, but hopes that his dictatorship would give way to democracy faded during a string of elections in which he faced token or no opposition and which were generally considered to be fraudulent. During his long rule, Paraguay was the country with the most uneven distribution of land and wealth.
Under General Stroessner, Paraguays security forces became so efficient at intimidating potential opposition figures that eventually fear itself fear of arrest, torture, exile and murder became one of his prime levers for staying in power.
The country became a haven for Nazis, with new passports and visas sold for a price. Among those sheltered was Josef Mengele, the Angel of Death who selected victims for the gas chambers at Auschwitz and conducted medical experiments on humans. In addition, hundreds of political prisoners and their families were imprisoned at concentration camps like Emboscada, about 20 miles outside the capital city of Asunción, in the 1970s.
The other keys to Generals Stroessners longevity as president were his alliance with the Colorado Party, which remains in power today; his grip on the military; and his skill at exploiting the weaknesses of others. The general also found help in Paraguays authoritarian past, which effectively paved the way for dictatorship by one figure or another. He didnt break any prior democratic tradition, as existed in other countries, said Alfredo Boccia Paz, a physician in Asunción who has written several books on the Stroessner era.
. . .
John Vinocur, writing in The New York Times Magazine in 1984, offered this snapshot of Paraguay as its army goose-stepped down the boulevards to celebrate General Stroessners 30 years in power: A continual state of siege over the entire period that literally places the president above the law; people with occasionally uncontrollable urges to fall into rivers or jump from planes with their arms and legs bound; serenades in front of the presidential palace featuring the ever-popular Forward, My General and Congratulations, My Great Friend; foreign thieves, brutes and madmen hidden at a price; an economy administered so corruptly it is officially explained away as the cost of peace; a United Nations voting record on so-called key issues more favorable to the United States than any other ally; a party newspaper that prints six front-page color pictures of the general every day.
. . .
Martín Almada, a schoolteacher imprisoned during the 1970s as an intellectual terrorist, said General Stroessners legacy was terror and corruption. Mr. Almadas wife died at the age of 33 after, he said, security agents played her a tape of his screams under torture.
In 1992, Mr. Almada discovered a trove of government documents that came to be known as the Archives of Terror, which detailed the political arrests of thousands of Paraguayans and unveiled the workings of Operation Condor. Fear became our second skin, Mr. Almada said.
More:
https://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/17/learning/newssummaries/17stroessner_LN.html
Judi Lynn
(162,381 posts)Repression under Alfredo Stroessner
Between 1956 and 1989, while under the military rule of General Alfredo Stroessner, the indigenous population had more territory taken than at any other period in Paraguay's history and were subjected to systematic human rights abuses. In 1971, Mark Münzel, a German anthropologist accused Stroessner of attempted genocide against the indigenous peoples of Paraguay[1] and Bartomeu Melià, a Jesuit anthropologist stated that the forced relocations of the indigenous peoples was ethnocide.[2] In the early 1970s the Stroessner regime was charged by international groups of being complicit in genocide. However, because of the repressive actions undertaken by the state the indigenous tribes organized themselves politically and had a major role in bringing about the end of the military dictatorship and the eventual transition to democracy.[3][2][4] The state financed these repressive actions with U.S. aid, which totaled $146 million from 1962 to 1975 to Paraguay.[5]
Destruction of the Ache tribe
During the 1960s and 1970s, 85 percent of the Aché tribe died, with many hacked to death with machetes to make room for the timber industry, mining, farming and ranchers.[6] One estimate posits this amounts to 900 deaths.[7] According to Jérémie Gilbert, the situation in Paraguay has proven that it is difficult to provide the proof required to show "specific intent", in support of a claim that genocide had occurred. The Aché, whose cultural group is now seen as extinct, fell victim to the development by the state, who had promoted the exploration of Aché territory by transnational companies for natural resources. Gilbert concludes that though planned and voluntary destruction had occurred, it is argued by the state that there was no intent to destroy the Aché, as what had happened was due to development.[8]
Assessment of persecution as a genocide
The allegation of genocide by the state was brought before the Inter-American Hu man Rights Commission which has jurisdiction on allegations of genocide carried out by a state. The commission gave a provisional ruling that Paraguay had not carried out a genocide, but stated it had concerns over "possible abuses by private persons in remote areas of the territory of Paraguay".[9] The Whitaker Report of the United Nations listed the persecution of the Aché as an example of genocide.[10]
Whether or not genocide occurred in this case is contingent on the definition of genocide being used. If we use the definition used by Raphael Lemkin who coined the term, then there were genocides of indigenous peoples in Paraguay. The current Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide definition does not include political groups in their definition of genocide.[11][12]
. . .
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocide_of_Indigenous_peoples_in_Paraguay
As you may have noticed, reports of savage, sadistic, bloodthirsty treatment of people unpopular with dictators always appear long after the actual crimes have occurred.