ADVERTISEMENT

Uruguay's last dictator dies at 91

He was serving a 25-year prison sentence for human rights violations committed during the dictatorship

General Gregorio El Goyo Alvarez -- who was Uruguay's last dictator from 1981-1985 -- arrives at a Montevideo courthouse to testify during a 2007 trial into the transfer of political prisoners from Argentina

Alvarez, who played a central role in a 1973 coup that installed a military regime in Uruguay, ruled the country from 1981 to 1985.

He was serving a 25-year prison sentence for human rights violations committed during the dictatorship.

Suffering from dementia and respiratory problems, he was transferred two weeks ago to the Montevideo Military Hospital, where he died.

ADVERTISEMENT

Human rights activists called on Uruguayans to remember victims of the regime on the occasion of his death.

"With the greatest respect, a rapist, a murderer, a torturer, a 'disappearer' doesn't redeem himself by dying," said lawyer Oscar Lopez Goldaracena, who took part in Alvarez's trial for the kidnapping and presumed murder of 40 regime opponents.

Thousands of people were jailed, tortured or killed by the regime in Uruguay, one of many Latin American countries where the military ruled with brutal repression during the Cold War.

Some 6,000 people were jailed for political reasons.

Around 230 people abducted by the regime in cooperation with other South American dictatorships are missing and presumed dead, according to a Peace Commission that investigated rights abuses by the regime.

ADVERTISEMENT

Many of them disappeared without a trace.

"The first thing I thought is, he died with the secret of all the people he 'disappeared' and killed," said activist Beatriz Benzano, one of 28 women imprisoned by the regime who in 2010 publicly accused their jailers of sexual assault.

"Kidnapping children, robbing babies, disappearances, raping men and women.... He had an interminable list of crimes," she told AFP.

There was no love lost on Alvarez's side.

His brother Artigas, an army colonel, was killed by the leftist Tupamaro guerrillas in 1972. His killing deeply marked Alvarez, shaping his brutally hardline stance.

ADVERTISEMENT

Uruguay returned to democracy in 1985, after swelling protests forced the regime to agree to elections.

Rather than transfer power to the democratically elected president, Julio Maria Sanguinetti, Alvarez stepped down two weeks before and named a civilian interim.

Today, Uruguay is governed by a leftist coalition that includes ex-Tupamaro guerrillas and other former opponents of the military regime.

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

Tinubu, Bill Gates says technology will curb corruption, aid Govt transparency

Tinubu, Bill Gates says technology will curb corruption, aid Govt transparency

Comply with EFCC's arrest, avoid disgracing former Benue Governors - Ortom

Comply with EFCC's arrest, avoid disgracing former Benue Governors - Ortom

UniAbuja female final year student declared missing

UniAbuja female final year student declared missing

JAMB releases fresh update on 2024 results

JAMB releases fresh update on 2024 results

Coalition lauds Speaker for pro-masses forum on State Police

Coalition lauds Speaker for pro-masses forum on State Police

Tinubu secures $600m seaport investment from Danish company

Tinubu secures $600m seaport investment from Danish company

‘Warri Boys in Lagos’ launches ₦1bn appeal fund for multipurpose complex

‘Warri Boys in Lagos’ launches ₦1bn appeal fund for multipurpose complex

Tinubu grants approval for design of Sokoto-Badagry Coastal Highway - Umahi

Tinubu grants approval for design of Sokoto-Badagry Coastal Highway - Umahi

Ganduje: IGP lauded for withdrawing police attached to Kano anti-graft commission

Ganduje: IGP lauded for withdrawing police attached to Kano anti-graft commission

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT