Ref: Bila dibandingkan negara-negara kafir dengan NKRI yang berazaskan 
Pancasila, pada umumnya  hanya negara-negara kafir yang mengadili militer yang 
melakukan kekejaman terhadap kemanusian.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/may/09/chilean-officers-reyes-lopez-guilty-murder-priest

Chilean ex-navy officers found guilty of murdering priest
Jose Manuel Garcia Reyes and Hector Palomino Lopez given three-year sentences 
for killing Michael Woodward 40 years ago

  a.. 
  a.. Giles Tremlett 
  b.. The Guardian, Thursday 9 May 2013 18.59 BST 
 
Patricia Bennets holds up a placard with a picture of her brother priest 
Michael Woodward at a press conference in 1999. Photograph: Christophe Simon/AFP
Four decades after British Roman Catholic priest Michael Woodward was arrested, 
tortured and murdered by Chilean navy personnel during a coup led by notorious 
dictator general Augusto Pinochet, two of his killers have at last been found 
guilty by a local court.

But while the sentence provides final recognition that he was kidnapped and 
taken to the four-masted navy training ship Esmeralda to be tortured, it does 
not provide a solution to one of the most painful mysteries left over from his 
murder – the whereabouts of his clandestine grave, which Chile's armed forces 
have done nothing to find.

The three-year sentences handed down to non-commissioned officers Jose Manuel 
Garcia Reyes and Hector Palomino Lopez fell far short of the aims of a tireless 
campaign by his sister Patricia Bennetts.

"The truth about what happened to Michael has been revealed," his sister said 
in a statement on Thursday. "We regret that Michael's body, hidden by the 
Chilean Navy, has still not been found."

The original court investigation involved 33 navy personnel, including four 
vice-admirals, but only seven were eventually brought to trial.

Threats of violence by supporters of Pinochet were part of a concentrated 
attempt to intimidate his septuagenarian sister and those who backed her quiet 
but tenacious campaign for justice.

On one occasion protesters tried to kick her when she arrived at court. On 
another, prosecutor Karina Fernandez had her house broken into and her laptop 
stolen, while the thieves deliberately left her jewellery and money on her bed. 
Investigating magistrate Eliana Quezada received regular death threats.

Those involved were charged with kidnapping rather than murder, in order to get 
around the country's amnesty laws that cover crimes previous to 1978. 
Kidnapping is considered a continuous crime that is still being committed today 
and so is not covered by the amnesty laws.

On Thursday Patricia Bennetts called for urgent legal reforms in Chile to allow 
for further investigation of the navy's role in the abuse of human rights both 
during and after the violent coup which ushered in 17 years of Pinochet 
dictatorship.

Woodward, a former public schoolboy who embraced liberation theology, was one 
of thousands of victims of a military coup that saw Pinochet's troops bomb the 
presidential palace and kill democratically elected leftwing president Salvador 
Allende.

Woodward was targeted by military personnel in the navy port city of Valparaiso 
because of his well-known leftwing sympathies.

When General Pinochet was detained in London for human rights crimes on a 
Spanish arrest warrant in 1998, the existence of British victims of his 
regime's brutality – including murdered stockbroker William Beausire and 
tortured doctor Sheila Cassidy – formed an important part of the legal debate. 
The law lords approved his extradition, but he was sent back to Chile by home 
secretary Jack Straw on health grounds.

Evidence that Pinochet amassed a huge fortune in the Riggs Bank in the US 
tarnished his reputation before his 2006 death, but court cases against his 
thugs have proceeded slowly and with varied results.


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