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  1. 10 de sept. de 2023 · 09/10/2023 September 10, 2023. Fifty years after the military coup in Chile, historians describe why Augusto Pinochet's coup had such a huge impact in Europe. A major factor was the power of images.

  2. 10 de sept. de 2023 · During the ensuing 17-year rule of Gen. Augusto Pinochet, more than 3,000 people would be disappeared or killed and some 38,000 would become political prisoners — most of them victims of torture.

  3. 8 de sept. de 2023 · 3 of 10 | . Photographed through a plastic window, an entrance leads to the center of “El Buen Pastor,” or The Good Shepherd, originally built to hold detained, female minors and run by Catholic nuns, that was turned into a detention center for political prisoners during the dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet, in La Serena, Chile, Friday, Sept. 1, 2023.

  4. 7 de ago. de 2013 · When Augusto Pinochet seized power in Chile, 40 years ago, law Professor José Zalaquett was lecturing at the Universidad de Chile. Even though the news didn’t surprise him at the time, the days that followed seemed more like a film script. “We could see the coup coming. It was like an announced Greek tragedy, where everybody knows the end ...

  5. Ben Fuller: Well Pinochet had two views of the Church, either they were going to be an ally or an enemy. Pinochet had tried to get the Church support him and his military regime and his policies. For example, he had invited the pope to visit Chile. The Church was one of the biggest social institutions in Chile and Pinochet wanted them on his ...

  6. 3 de dic. de 2023 · Chile has experienced more than thirty years of democracy at the shadow of the seventeen-year dictatorship led by Augusto Pinochet (1973–1990). This chapter provides an overview of the dictatorial legacies with an emphasis on the distribution of economic and political power, as viewed from the most recent literature in economics.

  7. 5 de sept. de 2023 · 2 of 17 | . FILE - Statues of the faces of men who led the 1973 military coup against Chile’s late President Salvador Allende, from left to right, Jose Toribio Merino of the Navy, late dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet, Gustavo Leight of the Air Force and Cesar Mendoza of the police sit in a showcase along with other items in a museum exhibiting Pinochet’s memorabilia in Santiago, Dec. 12, 2008.