The Manila Times

Chile to reopen probe into poet Neruda’s death

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Chile will once again try to resolve the mystery of what really killed Nobel Prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda, who many believe was poisoned by the regime of the late dictator Augusto Pinochet, a court said on Tuesday.

An appeals court in the capital Santiago ordered the reopening of the investigat­ion into the death of Neruda, who was a prominent member of Chile’s Communist Party when Pinochet took power in 1973.

In a statement, the court said the “investigat­ion has not been exhausted as there are precise procedures that can be carried out to clarify the facts.”

Neruda had been preparing to flee into exile in Mexico to lead the resistance against the Pinochet regime when he died in the hospital just 12 days after the coup.

The government claimed that the 69-year-old had died of prostate cancer.

An investigat­ion into the cause of Neruda’s death began in 2011 when Manuel Araya, his driver and personal assistant, asserted that the poet was given a mysterious injection in his chest just before he died.

Araya died last June at age 77. Neruda’s remains were exhumed in 2013 to be tested for traces of poison and returned for burial three years later.

In 2017, a group of Chilean and internatio­nal experts concluded that Neruda did not die of cancer, but said they could not determine what did kill him.

And in 2023, a scientific panel investigat­ing Neruda’s death was also unable to determine whether he had been poisoned, even though they detected dangerous botulism-causing bacteria in his system.

Two members of the panel, Hendrik and Debi Poinar, from McMaster University in Canada, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) they did not know why the clostridiu­m botulinum DNA was present in his body.

Researcher­s were only able to reconstruc­t a third of the bacterium’s genome, but the Poinars believed it would be possible to recreate the rest of it without exhuming Neruda’s body again.

Their findings were delivered to Judge Paola Plaza, who ordered the probe closed last December.

Neruda’s family and the Communist Party appealed that decision soon after, meaning Plaza’s final report was never made public.

Among the measures ordered by the appellate court is “a new analysis of the handwritin­g of the death certificat­e,” saying Neruda had died from prostate cancer.

The court also ordered the “meta-analysis” of the results of the experts who analyzed Neruda’s remains and for new witnesses and an expert in clostridiu­m botulinum bacteria to testify.

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