Rettig Report
The Rettig Report, officially the Report of the National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation, is a 1991 report by a commission designated by Chilean President Patricio Aylwin detailing human rights abuses resulting in deaths or disappearances that occurred in Chile during the military dictatorship under General Augusto Pinochet, which ran from 1973 to 1990. The report found that over 2,000 people had been killed for political reasons, and dozens of military personnel have been convicted of human rights abuses. In addition, many reforms have been made based on the recommendations of the report including an official reparations department.
Background
The National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation, the eight-member committee that later wrote the Rettig Report, was set up shortly after Patricio Aylwin, Chile's first democratically elected president since Salvador Allende, took office following the 1989 election. In addition to the eight members, the committee was chaired by Raúl Rettig, a former Chilean senator and ambassador to Brazil under Allende.The eight-members of the commission were Jaime Castillo Velasco, José Luis Cea Egaña, Mónica Jiménez, Laura Novoa Vásquez, José Zalaquett Daher, Ricardo Martin Díaz, and Gonzalo Vial Correa.
The commission was given large amounts of resources and access to official documents to ensure thoroughness, and the report was finalized in February 1991. One criticism of the report is that it only focused on politically motivated murders and disappearances that occurred while Pinochet was dictator, and did not include other human rights violations. This issue was addressed in a second report commissioned in 2003 known as the Valech Report.
Goals of the Report
On April 25, 1990, Aylwin issued Supreme Decree No. 355, officially creating the National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation with the following goals:- To create as complete a picture as possible of the most serious human rights violations
- To gather evidence to allow the creation of a list that identifies the victims' name, fate, and whereabouts
- To recommend reparations for the families of victims
- To recommend legal and administrative measures to prevent future violations
Findings
Legal Ramifications
As of May 2012, 76 agents had been condemned for violations of human rights and 67 were convicted: 36 in the Army, 27 in the Carabineros, 2 in the Air Force, one of the Navy and one in the Police. Three condemned agents died and six agents got conditional sentences. 350 cases, pertaining to disappeared persons, illegal detainees and torture, remain open. There are 700 military and civilian persons involved in these cases. While some perpetrators have been convicted, prosecution has been difficult due to an amnesty law passed by the military regime in 1978 giving full legal protection to any individual implicated in human rights violations between 1973 and 1978.Recommendations
The report included the following recommendations to prevent future human rights violations in Chile:- Ratification of international human rights treaties
- Modifying the national laws to match international standards of human rights law
- Assuring the independence of the judiciary
- Creating a society in which the armed forces, the police, and the security forces respect human rights
- Creating a permanent office to work to protect citizens from future human rights violations
Aftermath
In a speech announcing the report's findings, President Aylwin apologized on behalf of the Chilean government for the murders and disappearances detailed in the report, and asked the military to do the same. The Chilean military, still headed at the time by Pinochet, refused to apologize and much of the armed forces community openly questioned the validity of the report.The Rettig Report's listing of a disappeared person as deceased and the victim of a human rights violation created a legal determination of the victim's situation. That would give the surviving family members certain benefits such as making it possible for them to resolve property and inheritance claims, apply for social security and any reparation benefits, as well as impacting the marital status of spouses. This was made possible through the establishment of the "National Corporation for Reparation and Reconciliation".
Other actions based on recommendations from the report that were eventually taken by later Chilean governments are:
- The elimination in 1998 of the national holiday celebrating the 1973 coup.
- The Chilean military was stripped of its political power with the elimination of the military dominated National Security Council in 2005.
- The National Institute for Human Rights, a government agency that reports on human rights issues within Chile, was created in November 2009.
The human rights violations in Chile were also looked at again in the Valech Report which was conducted between 2004 and 2005.