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Sergio Arellano Stark

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Birth name
  
Sergio Arellano Stark

Rank
  
General (Chilean Army)

Years of service
  
1964–1976

Service/branch
  
Chilean Army

Sergio Arellano Stark Confirman la muerte del ex militar Sergio Arellano Stark Tele 13

Born
  
10 June 1921Santiago, Chile (
1921-06-10
)

Died
  
9 March 2016, Santiago, Chile

Similar
  
Marcelo Moren Brito, Carmen Hertz, Manuel Contreras, Gustavo Leigh, José Toribio Merino

Jos soza como sergio arellano stark en ecos del desierto


Sergio Arellano Stark (10 June 1921 – 9 March 2016) was a Chilean military officer. He led the so-called “Caravan of Death,” which killed many Chileans from helicopters and established Augusto Pinochet’s hold on power.

Contents

Sergio Arellano Stark Chile 39Caravan of Death39 commander Gen Arellano Stark dies BBC News

El sangriento legado de sergio arellano stark


Biography

Sergio Arellano Stark Muere Sergio Arellano Stark cabeza de la Caravana de la Muerte

Born on June 10, 1921 in Santiago, Arellano Stark quickly advanced through the ranks of the military. He trained at the Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. In the 1960s, he was an aide to President Eduardo Frei Montalva and served in Spain.

Sergio Arellano Stark Suprema confirma sobreseimiento por demencia de Sergio Arellano

Arellano Stark was one of the key officers involved in the September 11, 1973 coup that deposed democratically elected President Salvador Allende and led to the installment of Pinochet. After the coup, Arellano Stark handpicked a squad to spend two months going from town to town searching for dissidents under the military junta. Once the rebels were killed, their names were crossed off a list. The “Caravan of Death" was estimated to have killed 75 political prisoners. The helicopter squad surprised several commanders, who were not expecting it to brandish heavy firearms and instead were planning a grand parade. Soldiers were ordered to perform summary killings, and bodies were dumped in mine shafts or in the Atacama Desert.

Sergio Arellano Stark httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsaa

Arellano Stark's squad helped maintain Pinochet in power for 17 years. Arellano Stark retired from the military in 1976 and got involved in a number of business ventures. In 1978, Pinochet pardoned members of the military from prosecution for human rights abuses. However, in 1999, the Chilean Supreme Court made an exception for missing victims. In 2001, in an interview with a television network, retired general Joaquin Lagos Osorio said that General Arellano Stark showed him paperwork in 1973 that revealed his role as Pinochet’s delegate in order to “review and accelerate” the judicial process for rebels. Osorio described the death squad in detail:

Sergio Arellano Stark Sergio Arellano Stark driver of the 39Caravan of Death39 under

They cut eyes out with daggers. They broke their jaws and legs. They shot them to pieces, first the legs, then the sexual organs, then the heart, all with machine guns. . . . They were no longer human bodies. I wanted to at least put the bodies back together again, to leave them more decent, but you couldn’t.

Arellano Stark disputed these claims, saying garrisons were disobedient to his commands. Nonetheless, in 2008 the Supreme Court convicted Arellano Stark for his role in the deaths of four people in San Javier. He was sentenced to six years in prison, which was not carried out due to his declining mental health. He died on March 9, 2016. The cause of death was complications from Alzheimer's disease.

References

Sergio Arellano Stark Wikipedia