The Palm Beach Post

Ex-soldiers convicted of killing singer Victor Jara

- By Eva Vergara

SANTIAGO, CHILE — Eight retired soldiers have been sentenced to 18 years in prison for one of the most e mblemat ic murd e rs of Chile’s military dictatorsh­ip: the murder of folk singer Victor Jara and a government official.

The office of the court system announced the ruling on Tuesday, and it said a ninth veteran was sentenced to five years for cover-up.

Jara, a popular singer and university professor, was a fervent supporter of Marxist President Salvador Allende and he was seized only hours after Gen. Augusto Pino- chet assaulted the presiden- tial palace and overthrew Allende on Sept. 11, 1973.

Jara was taken to a stadium, where thousands of prisoners were being held. His hands and head were beaten and he was shot with at least 44 bullets as a warning to those who challenged Pinochet’s authority.

Allende’s prisons chief Littre Quiroga also was tortured and killed at the stadium, apparently because of alleged mistreatme­nt of an officer who had earlier attempted a coup.

Jara and Quiroga were among the earliest of more than 3,000 suspected leftists slain during the 1973-90 dictatorsh­ip of Gen. Augusto Pinochet.

The bodies of the two men were dumped on a dusty street near the Metropolit­an Cemetery and taken to the morgue, where someone recognized Jara and secretly informed his wife, the British dancer Joan Turner Jara.

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