Calgary Herald

Law professor restored democratic rule in Chile

- EVA VERGARA

Patricio Aylwin, a lanky law professor who played a decisive role in restoring Chile’s democracy after 17 years of brutal dictatorsh­ip and was later elected president, died on April 19. He was 97.

Interior Minister Jorge Burgos said the former president’s health had deteriorat­ed in recent days but did not give a cause of death.

Aylwin was at the centre stage of Chilean politics for more than half a century. Despite being president, senator and seven times head of his centrist Christian Democratic Party, he often insisted he didn’t see himself as a leader.

Chileans, however, viewed him as a key figure in efforts to prevent the bloody military coup that brought Gen. Augusto Pinochet to power and they later elected him as the first president to follow the 197390 dictatorsh­ip.

President Michelle Bachelet declared three days of national mourning and said Aylwin would receive a state funeral.

“Chile has lost a man who always knew how to place the unity of democrats above their difference­s, which helped him build a democratic country once he assumed the presidency, and in this sense, we owe a lot to don Patricio,” Bachelet said. The legacy of his 1990-94 government includes strong economic growth and the continuati­on of Pinochet’s free-market policies, but with more government control “because the market is cruel,” as well as his efforts to learn the truth about the human-rights violations that bloodied Chile.

Aylwin appointed the independen­t commission that found that 3,197 people were killed for political reasons under Pinochet. The report opened the way for the first trials of military men for abuses, which years later would reach Pinochet himself.

“I hereby ask for forgivenes­s from the victims and their relatives in the name of the Chilean state,” Aylwin said in a broken voice, with tears in his eyes, as a presented the findings on national television.

Still, when Aylwin stepped down, he said one of his main frustratio­ns was that he hadn’t made greater progress in the human rights field.

Born Nov. 26, 1918, Aylwin trained as a lawyer. An avowed democrat, he was an opposition leader during 1970-73 government of Salvador Allende, the Western Hemisphere’s first freely elected Marxist president.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Augusto Pinochet, left, and Patricio Aylwin in 1993. Aylwin helped restore democracy in Chile after Pinochet’s brutal dictatorsh­ip.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Augusto Pinochet, left, and Patricio Aylwin in 1993. Aylwin helped restore democracy in Chile after Pinochet’s brutal dictatorsh­ip.

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