Pinochet: Diktator Chile, ia ke Inggris atas undangan dan sekalian berobat;
namun sekarang ia dikenakan tahanan rumah di Inggris. Hakim Spanyol masih
berusaha mengextradisinya.




August 22, 1999

Dictators Face The Pinochet Syndrome
By BARBARA CROSSETTE


UNITED NATIONS -- A new malady is stalking the presidential palaces and
bunkers of the world. Call it the Pinochet Syndrome. Last week, it surfaced
in
Austria and Indonesia.

The Austrian case involved Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri, regarded as the No. 2 man
in Iraq after Saddam Hussein. A Vienna city councilman, Peter Pilz,
discovered that Mr. Ibrahim, who is accused of directing the mass murder
of Kurds in 1988 and torturing and killing other Iraqi citizens, was in a
Vienna
hospital for treatment. Following the precedent set by a Spanish judge who
was able to have Gen. Augusto Pinochet of Chile arrested while in London
last year for medical care, Mr. Pilz filed a criminal complaint with Austrian
authorities on Monday.

Less than 48 hours later, Mr. Ibrahim made a hasty exit and Austria, to
the consternation of human rights groups, let him go. So did Jordan, since
Mr. Ibrahim had to pass through Amman on his way back to Iraq. From now
on, however, Mr. Ibrahim may have to settle for hospitals in Baghdad.

In Jakarta, a leading newspaper said the Pinochet Syndrome also haunts
President Suharto of Indonesia, who was forced from office last year after
three decades of autocratic rule. Mr. Suharto, who is under investigation
by the new Indonesian Government, has been living at his home in relative
peace. But he is 78 years old and seriously ill, having suffered both a
stroke
and intestinal bleeding in the last month.

Like other strongmen who tolerate inferior health care for everyone but
themselves, Mr. Suharto had been expected to seek medical treatment in
Germany, as he has done in the past. Not likely, people close to his family
told The Jakarta Post. A host of people would be waiting with warrants.

If the trend continues, says Reed Brody, advocacy director for Human
Rights Watch, former dictators will have almost nowhere to go, in
sickness or in health. Some might even feel less secure about where
they are now, with human rights lawyers showing a new, post-Pinochet
interest in pursuing them.

Human Rights Watch has compiled a list of ex-tyrants who have
fled their battered countries for what they thought were safer addresses.
Idi Amin of Uganda is still in Saudi Arabia; Jean-Claude Duvalier of Haiti
is in France and one of his successors, Raul Cedras, is in Panama;
Paraguay's Alfredo Stroessner is in Brazil, and Hissan Habre of Chad
is in Senegal.

The spread of the Pinochet Syndrome, says Human Rights Watch,
"shows how far we have come from the days when despots could
terrorize their own populations, secure in the knowledge that at worst
they would face a tranquil exile."

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