Top Banner
57

Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 

Feb 08, 2016

Download

Documents

carlyn

Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” . Ed Rollins: “We just beat his brains out. We stood him up in front of an open grave and told him he could jump in if he wanted to.”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 2: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 3: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 4: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 5: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 6: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 7: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 8: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 9: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 10: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 11: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 12: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 13: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 14: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 15: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 16: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 17: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 18: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 19: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 20: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 21: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 22: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 23: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 24: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 25: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 26: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 27: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 28: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 29: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 30: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 31: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 32: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 33: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 34: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 35: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 36: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 37: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 38: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 39: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 40: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 41: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 42: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 43: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 

Use of torture by the military junta in Chile:“a residual practice of the Iberian tradition”

Page 44: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 45: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 46: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 47: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 48: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 49: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 50: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 51: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 52: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 53: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 54: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 

Ed Rollins: “We just beat his brains out. We stood him up in front of an open grave and told him he could jump in if he wanted to.”

Page 55: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 56: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition” 
Page 57: Use of torture by the military junta in Chile: “a residual practice of the Iberian tradition”