The Guardian (USA)

The 1973 coup against democratic socialism in Chile still matters – there, in Britain and beyond

- Andy Beckett

Fifty years on, the 1973 coup in Chile still haunts politics there and far beyond. As we approach its anniversar­y, on 11 September, the violent overthrow of the elected socialist government of Salvador Allende and its replacemen­t by the brutal dictatorsh­ip of General Augusto Pinochet are already being marked in Britain, through a period of remembranc­e scheduled to include dozens of separate exhibition­s and events. Among these will be a march in Sheffield, archival displays in Edinburgh, a concert in Swansea, and a conference and picket of the Chilean embassy in London.

Few past events in faraway countries receive this level of attention. Military takeovers were not unusual in South America during the cold war. And Chile has been a relatively stable democracy since the Pinochet dictatorsh­ip ended, 33 years ago. So why does the 1973 coup still resonate?

In the UK, one answer is that roughly 2,500 Chilean refugees fled here after the coup, despite an unwelcomin­g Conservati­ve government. “It is intended to keep the number of refugees to a very small number and, if our criteria are not fully met, we may accept none of them,” said a Foreign Office memo not released until three decades afterwards.

The Chileans came regardless, partly because leftwing activists, trade unionists and politician­s including Tony Benn and Jeremy Corbyn created a solidarity movement – of a scale and duration harder to imagine in our more politicall­y impatient times – which helped the refugees build new lives, and campaigned with them for years against the Pinochet regime. Some of

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