Podcasts about Augusto Pinochet

Former dictator of the republic of Chile

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  • Oct 7, 2025LATEST
Augusto Pinochet

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Best podcasts about Augusto Pinochet

Latest podcast episodes about Augusto Pinochet

The Lawfare Podcast
Lawfare Daily: ‘38 Londres Street,' Impunity, and Immunity with Philippe Sands

The Lawfare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 64:02


On today's episode, Lawfare Managing Editor Tyler McBrien sits down with Philippe Sands, a professor of law at the University of London and the Samuel Pisar Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School to discuss his new book, “38 Londres Street: On Impunity, Pinochet in England, and a Nazi in Patagonia.”They discuss the intertwined stories of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and Nazi SS commander Walther Rauff, his uncanny personal connections to those stories, how Pinochet's arrest and the subsequent legal battle over his extradition changed international criminal law, and how writing the book informed his thinking on the U.S. Supreme Court's immunity ruling in Trump v. United States.To receive ad-free podcasts, become a Lawfare Material Supporter at www.patreon.com/lawfare. You can also support Lawfare by making a one-time donation at https://givebutter.com/lawfare-institute.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/lawfare. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Shakespeare and Company
Philippe Sands: Pinochet, Walter Rauff, and the Shadows of History

Shakespeare and Company

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 66:38


This week Adam Biles speaks with international lawyer and acclaimed author Philippe Sands about his latest book, 38 Londres Street: On Impunity, Pinochet in England and a Nazi in Patagonia. Building on East West Street and The Ratline, Sands traces the remarkable and disturbing links between Nazi officer Walter Rauff—architect of the mobile gas vans—and Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Their conversation explores how Rauff escaped Europe, settled in South America, and later became entangled with Pinochet's regime, raising profound questions about memory, complicity, and justice. Sands also shares his personal and professional connection to this history: as a barrister involved in Pinochet's extradition case, and as the descendant of a family decimated by the Holocaust. Blending archival detective work, courtroom drama, and encounters with extraordinary witnesses, Sands reveals the human stories behind the law. This is a gripping, moving, and sometimes unsettling dialogue about the echoes of history and the pursuit of accountability.Buy 38 Londres Street: https://www.shakespeareandcompany.com/books/38-londres-street-2*Philippe Sands was born in London in 1960 and studied Law at the University of Cambridge. His book East West Street was the winner of the Baillie Gifford Prize for Non Fiction 2016, the British Book Awards Non-fiction Book of the Year 2017 and 2018 Prix Montaigne He is also the author of Lawless World: America and the Making and Breaking of Global Rules, which inspired a stage play (Called to Account, Tricycle Theatre) and a television film (The Trial of Tony Blair, Channel 4). He writes regularly for the press and serves as a commentator for the BBC, CNN and other radio and television producers. His BBC Storyville film My Nazi Legacy: What Our Fathers Did premiered in April 2015 at the Tribecca Film Festival. Sands co-wrote a podcast of the same name for the BBC. Sands lectures around the world and has taught at New York University and been a visiting professor at the University of Toronto, the University of Melbourne, and the Université de Paris I (Sorbonne). He was appointed a Queen's Counsel in 2003. The Ratline: Love, Lies and Justice on the Trail of a Nazi Fugitive, was published in 2020 and The Last Colony: A Tale of Exile, Justice and Britain's Colonial Legacy in 2022. His most recent book, 38 Londres Street: On Impunity, Pinochet in England and a Nazi in Patagonia was published in 2025. He is currently Professor of Law at University College London and a barrister and arbitrator at 11 King's Bench Walk. He served as president of English PEN and is on the board of the Hay Festival of Arts and Literature.Adam Biles is Literary Director at Shakespeare and Company.Listen to Alex Freiman's latest EP, In The Beginning: https://open.spotify.com/album/5iZYPMCUnG7xiCtsFCBlVa?si=h5x3FK1URq6SwH9Kb_SO3w Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Les matinales
Philippe Sands pour son livre « 38 rue de Londres » aux éditions Albin Michel et David Korn Brzoza auteur et réalisateur de documentaires

Les matinales

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025


ESSENTIEL, le rendez-vous culture Sandrine Sebbane reçoit Philippe Sands pour son livre « 38 rue de Londres » aux éditions Albin Michel et David Korn Brzoza auteur et réalisateur de documentaires. À propos du livre : « 38 rue de Londres » paru aux éditions Albin Michel 1ʳᵉ sélection du Prix André Malraux Dans la soirée du 16 octobre 1998, le dictateur chilien Augusto Pinochet est arrêté dans une clinique de Londres. Après un règne brutal marqué par des assassinats, des disparitions et des tortures dans le centre de détention et d'interrogatoire situé au « 38, rue de Londres », à Santiago, il est inculpé de crimes de génocide, de tortures, de terrorisme international et d'enlèvements. Il sera empêché de retourner au Chili pendant plus d'un an, en attendant l'aboutissement de la bataille juridique internationale autour de son cas. En 2006, âgé de quatre-vingt-onze ans, il s'éteint à l'Hôpital militaire de Santiago. En 1984, Walther Rauff, considéré comme l'un des plus grands criminels nazis, meurt dans son lit, à Santiago, sans avoir jamais été extradé, ni jugé. Responsable direct de la mort de près de 100 000 victimes juives par gazage dans des camions - les « unités de tuerie mobiles » -, dont il a organisé la conception et le déploiement, il se réfugia, après la guerre, en Patagonie, protégé jusqu'à sa mort par les milieux militaires chiliens, dont il fut très proche. Ces assassins hors du commun finiront-ils par répondre de leurs actes ? Comment leurs histoires sont-elles liées ? Dans ce thriller juridique fascinant qui retrace l'histoire et le parcours croisé de deux des criminels les plus impitoyables du xxe siècle, Philippe Sands pose la question de l'impunité et de l'immunité, une question d'une inquiétante actualité. Avocat international franco-britannique, Philippe Sands est aussi professeur de droit à l'University College de Londres et écrivain. Il est l'auteur, chez Albin Michel, de Retour à Lemberg (2017), La Filière (2019) et de La Dernière Colonie (2022).

Archivo presente: Día X Día
Se cumplen 52 años de la muerte de Pablo Neruda

Archivo presente: Día X Día

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2025 12:03


Su nombre real era Ricardo Eliecer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto y fue uno de los poetas hispanoamericanos más importantes del siglo XX. Nació el 12 de julio de 1904, en la ciudad de Parral, región centro sur de Chile y murió el 23 de septiembre de 1973, en Santiago de Chile. Comenzó muy pronto a escribir poesía, y en 1921 publicó La canción de la fiesta, su primer poema, con el seudónimo de Pablo Neruda, en homenaje al poeta checo Jan Neruda, nombre que mantuvo a partir de entonces y que legalizaría en 1946. En 1924, con tan solo veinte años, escribió Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada, y un año después escribe la que será su única novela: El habitante y su esperanza. En 1926, los problemas económicos lo llevaron a emprender la carrera consular que lo llevó a residir en Birmania, Ceilán, Java, Singapur y, entre 1934 y 1938, en España. Allí se relacionó con Federico García Lorca, Rafael Alberti, Vicente Aleixandre, Gerardo Diego, Miguel Hernández y otros componentes de la llamada Generación del 27, y fundó la revista Caballo Verde para la Poesía. En 1939, de vuelta en Chile, ingresó en el Partido Comunista y su obra experimentó un giro hacia la militancia política. En 1945 fue el primer poeta en ser galardonado con el Premio Nacional de Literatura de Chile y, desde su escaño de senador, Neruda utilizó su oratoria para denunciar los abusos y las desigualdades del sistema, lo que provocó la persecución gubernamental y su posterior exilio en Argentina. De allí pasó a México, y más tarde viajó por la URSS, China y los países de la Europa del Este para volver luego a su país natal. Su prestigio internacional fue reconocido en 1971, año en que se le concedió el premio Nobel de Literatura. El año anterior Pablo Neruda había renunciado a la candidatura presidencial en favor de Salvador Allende, quien lo nombró poco después embajador en Francia. Dos años más tarde, ya gravemente enfermo, regresó a Chile y falleció días después del golpe de estado del general Augusto Pinochet. Fue velado en “La Chascona”, su residencia de Santiago, la cual había sido violentada por partidarios de la Junta Militar. Recordamos a Neruda a través de testimonios conservados en el Archivo Histórico de Radio Nacional.  

Star Spangled Gamblers
Chile Presidential Election

Star Spangled Gamblers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2025 58:17


Latin America expert Ian Bezek returns for a deep dive into Chile's presidential election. Timestamps 0:00: Intro begins 0:35: Venezuela invasion 1:35: Intro ends 3:36: Interview begins 4:38: Polymarket odds 4:55: Chilean history 5:45: Pinochet 8:06: Chilean democracy 9:19: Ideologies of Chilean candidates 10:09: 2021 election 11:19: Boric's failures 12:20: Regional waves 13:43: First round 14:51: Left-wing primary 15:47: Kast 19:47: Kast's electability 20:16: Kast's professional bio 21:47: Kast's political skill 22:20: Jara 23:43: Latin American left 27:17: Jara's view on mining 29:57: Comparisons to other Latin American leftists 31:48: Matthei 32:39: Parisi 33:18: Kaiser 34:28: Kaiser polling 35:00: Latin American libertarians and immigration 36:02: First round winner 38:47: Polling 39:45: Bezek's recommended combo play 40:01: Overall winner 42:32: Why Polymarket underpricing Kast 43:41: Potential surprises 44:04: Financial markets 44:45: Tariffs 48:44: Venezuela invasion 50:15: Equity plays 51:35: ETFs 52:01: Banco de Chile 52:21: Chilean peso 52:34: How to follow election 53:16: How to interpret polls 54:31: Implications for other Latin American candidates 54:57: Follow Bezek 55:46: Interview ends 56:00: Upcoming meetups Follow Star Spangled Gamblers on Social Twitter/X: @ssgamblers YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@starspangledgamblers1029 Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@starspangledgambl7 Bet on Latin American politics at Polymarket.com, the world's largest prediction market. Forecasting Meetup Network Join the community of prediction market traders, rationalists, effective altruists, sports bettors, and other forecasters coming together to improve humanity's ability to predict the future. Upcoming meetups: DC: Thu, Sep 18th at 6pm. Details and RSVP here. Boston: Mon, Sep 22nd at 6pm. Details and RSVP here. https://forecastingmeetupnetwork.kit.com/eb6374e5e8

Journal d'Haïti et des Amériques
Chili : début de la campagne électorale avant la présidentielle

Journal d'Haïti et des Amériques

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2025 30:00


Deux mois de meetings, de distribution de tracts et d'interventions dans les médias jusqu'à la présidentielle du 16 novembre... La campagne électorale commence ce mercredi (17 septembre 2025) au Chili. Comme l'explique la correspondante de RFI à Santiago, Naïla Derroisné, les Chiliens qui sont obligés de voter sous peine d'amende, devront choisir entre huit candidats. Deux d'entre eux sont en tête des sondages : la candidate de la gauche, la communiste Jeannette Jara, et José Antonio Kast, représentant de l'extrême droite. Jeannette Jara fait la course en tête. «Issue d'une famille pauvre, elle s'est politisée très jeune», raconte Naïla Derroisné. Avant de lancer sa candidature à la présidentielle, elle était ministre du Travail sous l'actuel gouvernement. Elle a notamment fait approuver la semaine des 40 heures, l'augmentation du salaire minimum ou encore la difficile réforme des retraites. Pour l'emporter, il lui faudra parvenir à élargir sa base. Ses adversaires ne manqueront pas de souligner qu'elle est communiste quand elle se présente avant tout comme la candidate de la gauche réunie. José Antonio Kast la talonne dans les sondages. Les Chiliens le connaissent bien. Il avait surpris en 2021 en se qualifiant pour le second tour, avant de s'incliner face à l'actuel président Gabriel Boric. Élu député deux fois, il a fondé le parti républicain, à l'extrême droite, et n'a jamais caché son admiration pour Augusto Pinochet. En quelques années, il a gagné en popularité auprès des Chiliens, s'inspirant de figures comme Donald Trump, Jair Bolsonaro ou encore Javier Milei, tout en se différenciant d'eux par son respect des institutions. La candidate de la droite traditionnelle et conservatrice, Evelyn Matthei, pourrait, toutefois, lui faire de l'ombre. Des programmes totalement opposés José Antonio Kast met l'accent sur les sujets de sécurité, de délinquance et de narcotrafic, au cœur des préoccupations des Chiliens. Il promet des peines plus lourdes et des prisons de haute sécurité, quand Jeannette Jara prône plutôt la prévention et un État social fort. Sur l'immigration – en hausse depuis plusieurs années dans le pays –  et le rôle de l'État, là aussi les deux candidats s'opposent.   La difficile rentrée scolaire en Haïti La rentrée des classes aura lieu le 1er octobre, à Port-au-Prince. Cette date, tout comme les conditions dans lesquelles les élèves vont reprendre les cours font débat. Plusieurs établissements publics ne sont pas en mesure d'ouvrir, et les autres privés auraient préféré démarrer plus tôt pour ne pas perturber encore un peu plus l'année scolaire. Jean Gérard Fleuriot, directeur du Lycée Jean-Jacques Dessalines qui se trouvait à l'Avenue Christophe, zone aujourd'hui contrôlée par les gangs, ne sait pas où les cours auront lieu. «Sans local, il est impossible de parler de préparatifs. Même les inscriptions, nous ne pouvons pas les faire», regrette-t-il au micro de notre correspondant Peterson Luxama. Sans attendre la date officielle, d'autres établissements, notamment privés, ont déjà ouvert leurs portes et commencé les cours. Ils se sont vu rappeler à l'ordre par le ministère de l'Éducation nationale. Marguerite Clérié, membre de l'Association des écoles privées d'Haïti, estime qu'il est urgent de retrouver le chemin de l'école, notamment pour les enfants défavorisés qu'il faut «protéger des rues et de l'emprise des gangs.» Certains parents d'élèves sont également pour un retour en classes, à l'image de Jean-Fritz, chauffeur de taxi-moto et père d'une fillette. Non seulement ça donnerait plus de temps aux enfants pour apprendre, mais en période scolaire, il gagne beaucoup plus d'argent avec sa moto, a-t-il raconté à Peterson Luxama. Mais d'autres regrettent une éducation à plusieurs vitesses. Certaines écoles ont ouvert leurs portes avant la date fixée par le ministère, tandis que les autorités peinent à intervenir. Une réalité reflétant les fragilités du système éducatif national.   Le journal de la 1ère En Guadeloupe, l'association de l'aide à l'enfance et à l'adolescence (AAEA) fondée en 1981, est pointée du doigt et sera bientôt placée sous administration provisoire. Certains de ses membres ont touché des primes et des avantages non prévus par la loi.

Enfoque internacional
En Chile, la figura mítica e intacta del cantautor Víctor Jara

Enfoque internacional

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2025 2:26


Cada año, en el centro de Santiago de Chile, se rinde homenaje al cantautor Víctor Jara, asesinado en septiembre de 1973 tras el golpe militar de Pinochet. Víctor Jara fue torturado durante días y finalmente asesinado en el Estadio Chile, que hoy lleva su nombre. Se convirtió en un ícono político y un referente fundamental de la música chilena, donde es conocido como el “poeta de la revolución”. Víctor Jara (1932–1973) fue un destacado músico, cantautor, profesor, escritor y director de teatro chileno. Su música lo convirtió en una figura emblemática del gobierno de Salvador Allende. Tras el golpe de Estado del 11 de septiembre de 1973, Jara fue detenido, torturado y ejecutado por las fuerzas militares del régimen de Augusto Pinochet. Su muerte lo consolidó como un símbolo de la lucha por los derechos humanos en Chile. Un legado musical fundamental en Chile Amanda Jara, hija de Víctor Jara, ha dedicado su vida a preservar y difundir el legado artístico y político de su padre. A través de la Fundación Víctor Jara, organiza talleres, conciertos y actividades culturales que buscan mantener viva su memoria y promover la reflexión sobre los derechos humanos. Amanda destaca en una entrevista a RFI que su padre era "ante todo un creador y un artista", y explica que "es gracias al arte que se organizan las luchas". Música, memoria y política electoral Las elecciones presidenciales en Chile están programadas para el 16 de noviembre de 2025. Los principales candidatos son José Antonio Kast, del Partido Republicano, y Jeannette Jara, del Partido Comunista. Ambos representan los extremos del espectro político y han protagonizado debates marcados por tensas confrontaciones.  En este contexto de polarización y tensión política, el legado de Víctor Jara cobra especial relevancia. Su música y su mensaje siguen siendo una fuente de inspiración para quienes luchan por la justicia, la memoria y los derechos humanos en Chile. Como señala Amanda Jara, "nunca deja de sorprenderme la cantidad de personas que siguen cantando las canciones de mi padre". Un legado que sigue vivo en el corazón del pueblo chileno.

DESDE MI PUNTO DE VISTA
⚔️ 11 de septiembre en Chile: Allende, Pinochet y medio siglo de debate

DESDE MI PUNTO DE VISTA

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2025 18:13


DESDE MI PUNTO DE VISTA
⚔️ 11 de septiembre en Chile: Allende, Pinochet y medio siglo de debate

DESDE MI PUNTO DE VISTA

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2025 18:12


Daily Easy Spanish
Quién fue el ”Pinochet africano” y cómo el ”cazador de dictadores” contribuyó a su caída

Daily Easy Spanish

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 45:04


En su libro "Atrapar a un dictador", el abogado estadounidense Reed Brody ofrece detalles inéditos del proceso que llevó a la cárcel a Hissène Habré, condenado por el asesinato y la violación de los derechos humanos de cientos de miles de personas en Chad, y de cómo la detención de Augusto Pinochet en Londres fue esencial para lograrlo.

Efemérides con Nibaldo Mosciatti
"Operación Siglo XX", el atentado a Pinochet (1986)

Efemérides con Nibaldo Mosciatti

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2025 3:02


El 7 de septiembre de 1986, el Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez lleví a cabo la "Operación Siglo XX", un atentado contra el dictador Augusto Pinochet.

Les histoires de 28 Minutes
« Storyteller » / Sud global réuni en Chine : vers un nouvel ordre mondial ?

Les histoires de 28 Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2025 45:57


L'émission 28 minutes du 01/09/2025 Pinochet et un nazi de Patagonie au cœur d'un thriller juridiquePhilippe Sands est un avocat spécialisé dans le droit international. Il publie "38, rue de Londres. De l'impunité, Pinochet et le Nazi de Patagonie", troisième opus d'une série de livres qui explorent la "révolution" qu'a été l'application du droit international depuis 1945. Dans ce thriller juridique, l'auteur se penche sur les destins croisés du dictateur chilien Augusto Pinochet et du nazi Walter Rauff, réfugié au Chili. Ce dernier avait théorisé le système des camions à gaz, qui a asphyxié plus de 100 000 Juifs lors de la Shoah. Au Chili, il a fait mine d'avoir laissé ces crimes derrière lui, mais nul ne doute de sa participation aux opérations les plus sombres du régime de Pinochet. Le chef d'État chilien est justement arrêté à Londres en 1998, et a failli être défendu par Philippe Sands. Sommet OCS en Chine : vers un nouvel ordre mondial anti-occidental ?Du 31 août au 1er septembre, Xi Jinping réunit une vingtaine de pays, dont les principales puissances asiatiques, ainsi que Vladimir Poutine, à Tianjin pour le sommet annuel de l'Organisation de coopération de Shanghai (OCS). "Le rôle de la Chine dans la défense du multilatéralisme est fondamental", a assuré Antonio Guterres, le secrétaire général des Nations Unies, en marge du sommet. L'épisode des droits de douanes aura terni les relations américaines avec nombre de pays, qui cherchent depuis des partenaires stables. C'est par exemple le cas du Premier ministre indien, Narendra Modi, qui, courroucé par l'imposition de 50 % de droits de douanes sur les produits indiens par les États-Unis, a traversé l'Himalaya pour retrouver son voisin chinois. Une première depuis 7 ans pour les deux puissances rivales qui étaient en froid depuis des affrontements entre leurs soldats dans une région himalayenne en 2020. "Le dragon et l'éléphant doivent mener ensemble un pas de deux", a déclaré Xi Jinping, qui semble vouloir faire de la Chine un nouveau pôle de stabilité, en se positionnant comme leader du multilatéralisme. Assiste-t-on à l'aube d'un nouvel ordre mondial ? Enfin, Xavier Mauduit revient sur l'histoire des musées d'Orsay et de l'Orangerie, suite au décès brutal de Sylvain Amic, leur président. Puis, Marie Bonnisseau nous fait découvrir un trompettiste brésilien, qui traque l'ex-président d'extrême droite Jair Bolsonaro pour lui jouer des sérénades : l'hymne antifasciste “Bella Ciao”, ou “La Marche funèbre” de Chopin. 28 minutes est le magazine d'actualité d'ARTE, présenté par Élisabeth Quin du lundi au jeudi à 20h05. Renaud Dély est aux commandes de l'émission le vendredi et le samedi. Ce podcast est coproduit par KM et ARTE Radio. Enregistrement 1er septembre 2025 Présentation Élisabeth Quin Production KM, ARTE Radio

El Primer Café
Secretaria general RN: Nosotros decimos que lo de Pinochet fue una dictadura

El Primer Café

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2025 63:37


Este martes compartimos El Primer Café de Cooperativa junto a Andrea Balladares, Bárbara Figueroa, Isidro Solís y Flavia Torrealba. La secretaria general de Renovación Nacional, Andrea Balladares, buscó no dejar dudas respecto de la posición de su partido ante el régimen que encabezó Augusto Pinochet tras el golpe de Estado de 1973 y afirmó que "nosotros decimos que fue una dictadura militar". Conduce Cecilia Rovaretti.

The Daily Beans
Repainting The Rainbow (feat. Joyce Vance)

The Daily Beans

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2025 75:58


Monday, August 25th, 2025Today, the DOJ has released the audio and transcripts of the witness tampering meeting between Todd Blanche and Ghislaine Maxwell; the government has threatened to deport Kilmar Abrego to Uganda if he doesn't plead guilty to the two charges against him; John Bolton's house has been raided in search of classified emails sent on a private server; a federal judge orders the dismantling of the Florida concentration camp; Fort Bliss - where the Japanese were interned during WWII - is operating as an internment camp again; the White House lists Smithsonian exhibits it wants to erase from history; the Justice Department's release of the Epstein files to House Oversight is a joke; the Pentagon plans to deploy the military to Chicago; Homeland Security is violating the law by refusing to retain text messages; Illinois announces a first of its kind legal hotline for the LGBTQ community; residents keep repainting the Pulse nightclub rainbow sidewalk after the city keeps removing it; and Allison and Dana deliver your Good News.Thank You, HomeChefFor a limited time, get  50% off and free shipping for your first box PLUS free dessert for life!  HomeChef.com/DAILYBEANS.  Must be an active subscriber to receive free dessert.Thank You, Naked Winesnakedwines.com/DAILYBEANS and use code DAILYBEANS for both the code and password.Guest: Joyce VancePreorder Giving Up Is Unforgivable by Joyce Vance - 10/21/2025 Civil Discourse with Joyce Vance | Substack#SistersInLaw - Podcast - Apple Podcasts, The Insider Podcast - CAFE@joycewhitevance.bsky.social on BlueskyLive with Allison Gill and Joyce Vance | Joyce Vance SubstackLive with Allison Gill and Joyce Vance | MuellerSheWrote SubstackYou Can Nominate Dana Goldberg for this year's Out100!2025 Out100 Readers' ChoiceNational Security Counselors - DonateNPHC & FBF stand united w/ CDC, NIH, & other HHS agencies in formal dissent of HHS Sec Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. & his political rhetoric that led to the Aug 8 attack on CDC & his response. Help ensure safety of public servants. Hold RFK Jr accountable by signing the letter: savehhs.orghttps://bsky.app/profile/firedbutfighting.bsky.social/post/3lwtfq56klc2gStoriesJustice Dept. Sent Congress Epstein Files That Were Already Public, Democrats Say | The New York TimesNational Security Counselors - DonatePentagon plans military deployment in Chicago as Trump eyes crackdown | The Washington PostHomeland Security Tells Watchdog It Hasn't Kept Text Message Data Since April | The New York TimesJapanese American groups blast use of Fort Bliss, former internment camp site, as ICE detention center | NBC NewsWhite House Lists Smithsonian Exhibits It Finds Objectionable | The New York TimesFlorida ordered to dismantle Alligator Alcatraz over environmental impact | The Washington PostPritzker announces 'first of its kind' legal hotline for LGBTQ+ Illinoisans | Chicago Sun-TimesRainbow crosswalk repainted outside Pulse; Florida troopers seen standing by | News 6 Orlando Good Trouble IRS asks for public input on free tax filing options to inform congressional report | Internal Revenue Service From The Good NewsApplication of the Fair Labor Standards Act to Domestic Service - Comments open until September 2Joy SaxtonThe Art of Arpilleras under Augusto Pinochet's Authoritarian Rule – Retrospect JournalReminder - you can see the pod pics if you become a Patron. The good news pics are at the bottom of the show notes of each Patreon episode! That's just one of the perks of subscribing! patreon.com/muellershewrote Our Donation LinksNational Security Counselors - DonateMSW Media, Blue Wave California Victory Fund | ActBlueWhistleblowerAid.org/beansFederal workers - feel free to email AG at fedoath@pm.me and let me know what you're going to do, or just vent. I'm always here to listen. Find Upcoming Actions 50501 Movement, No Kings.org, Indivisible.orgDr. Allison Gill - Substack, BlueSky , TikTok, IG, TwitterDana Goldberg - BlueSky, Twitter, IG, facebook, danagoldberg.comCheck out more from MSW Media - Shows - MSW Media, Cleanup On Aisle 45 pod, The Breakdown | SubstackShare your Good News or Good TroubleMSW Good News and Good TroubleHave some good news; a confession; or a correction to share?Good News & Confessions - The Daily Beanshttps://www.dailybeanspod.com/confessional/ Listener Survey:http://survey.podtrac.com/start-survey.aspx?pubid=BffJOlI7qQcF&ver=shortFollow the Podcast on Apple:The Daily Beans on Apple PodcastsWant to support the show and get it ad-free and early?The Daily Beans | SupercastThe Daily Beans & Mueller, She Wrote | PatreonThe Daily Beans | Apple Podcasts

El Primer Café
Ignacio Walker: Declaraciones de Kast y Sutil demuestran que hay "un solo libreto" en la derecha

El Primer Café

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2025 61:44


Este viernes compartimos El Primer Café de Cooperativa junto a Ignacio Walker, Máximo Pavez, Nicolás Eyzaguirre y Ricardo Solari; El exministro Ignacio Walker (exDC) aseguró en Cooperativa que las declaraciones del exlíder de la CPC, Juan Sutil, sobre la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet demuestran que existe "un solo libreto" entre los partidos de derecha. Conduce Cecilia Rovaretti.

Literatura Universal con Adolfo Estévez
527. El primer mar. Pablo Neruda.

Literatura Universal con Adolfo Estévez

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2025 2:50


Pablo Neruda fue un poeta chileno, considerado uno de los más importantes y reconocidos de la literatura del siglo XX. Su verdadero nombre era Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto, y nació el 12 de julio de 1904 en Parral, Chile, y murió el 23 de septiembre de 1973 en Santiago de Chile. Neruda escribió una amplia variedad de poesía, desde amorosa hasta política y épica. Algunos de sus libros más destacados son: "Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada" (1924): Uno de sus libros más populares, escrito cuando era muy joven. Mezcla pasión, erotismo y melancolía. "Residencia en la tierra" (1933-1935): Una obra más surrealista y oscura, escrita durante su tiempo como cónsul en Asia. "Canto general" (1950): Una epopeya que recorre la historia de América Latina, desde sus raíces indígenas hasta la lucha contra la opresión. Muestra su compromiso político. "Odas elementales" (1954): Poemas dedicados a objetos y experiencias cotidianas (una cebolla, el vino, el mar), escritos con sencillez y belleza. Neruda fue militante del Partido Comunista de Chile y llegó a ser senador. Fue perseguido por el gobierno de Gabriel González Videla y tuvo que vivir exiliado durante un tiempo. Fue también embajador de Chile en Francia durante el gobierno de Salvador Allende. Premio Nobel de Literatura (1971): Por una obra que "con la acción de una fuerza elemental da vida al destino y los sueños de un continente". Premio Nacional de Literatura de Chile (1945). Murió poco después del golpe militar de Augusto Pinochet. Aunque oficialmente se dijo que murió de cáncer, hay teorías y estudios que apuntan a un posible envenenamiento.

The Real News Podcast
Chile's Bulnes Bridge: Remembering the past, honoring the victims

The Real News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 4:18


It is not a pretty bridge. Four lanes of busy traffic rush across Puente Bulnes during most hours. To the North, it buttresses against two overpasses that lead to a bustling highway. Below it, run the milky grey waters of the Mapocho River, after passing through downtown Santiago, Chile. 50 years ago, in another time, this bridge was a favorite execution site for the military and police of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Today, Aquiles Cordova will not let it be forgotten—ever.This is episode 62 of Stories of Resistance—a podcast produced by The Real News. Each week, we'll bring you stories of resistance like this. Inspiration for dark times.You can check out exclusive pictures of Bulnes Bridge and the mural painting session there late last year here on Michael Fox's Patreon.Please consider supporting this podcast and Michael Fox's reporting on his Patreon account: patreon.com/mfox. There you can also see exclusive pictures, video, and interviews. If you like what you hear, please subscribe, like, share, comment, or leave a review. And please consider signing up for the Stories of Resistance podcast feed, either in Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, or wherever you listen.Written and produced by Michael Fox.Become a member and join the Stories of Resistance Supporters Club today!Follow Stories of Resistance on Spotify or Apple PodcastsSign up for our newsletterFollow us on:Bluesky: @therealnews.comFacebook: The Real News NetworkTwitter: @TheRealNewsYouTube: @therealnewsInstagram: @therealnewsnetwork

La Paella Rusa
Tortura, memoria y justicia: PhilippeCareless People la puerta de ‘Calle Londres 38'

La Paella Rusa

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2025 18:15


Como cada semana, La Paella Rusa os lanza también una propuesta cultural. En este caso, inauguramos nuestro apartado de lecturas fresquitas, lecturas de playa, títulos para la evasión estival. En este caso, lo hacemos con Calle Londres 38. Dos casos de impunidad: Pinochet en Inglaterra y un nazi en la Patagonia, de Philippe Sands (Anagrama, 2025). Porque sí, nada dice más ‘verano' que una dictadura a cualquier lado del océano atlántico. ¡Dentro sinopsis!: “Abogado especializado en derecho internacional, ensayista y reconocido escritor de no ficción, Philippe Sands explora en este apasionante relato la relación entre Augusto Pinochet y Walther Rauff, oficial de las SS alemanas que tras abandonar Europa encontró refugio en Punta Arenas, en el sur de Chile. A raíz del arresto del dictador chileno en Londres en 1998, Sands fue contratado como abogado por Human Rights Watch, y tuvo la oportunidad de participar en uno de los casos penales internacionales más importantes desde los juicios de Núremberg. Años después, mientras se documentaba para un libro, encontró una misiva escrita por un antiguo líder nazi llamado Walther Rauff. El autor de la carta, creador de las cámaras de gas ambulantes, ofrecía consejo a su viejo camarada sobre cómo escapar de las autoridades. Perseguido por crímenes contra la humanidad y genocidio, el jerarca había logrado trasladarse a Chile, donde había pasado a administrar una conservera que empaquetaba carne de cangrejo: alrededor de su figura se había forjado cierta mitología (Roberto Bolaño lo menciona en La literatura nazi en América y Nocturno de Chile, y aparece también al final de En la Patagonia de Bruce Chatwin). A Philippe Sands jamás se le ocurrió que pudiera existir alguna conexión entre Rauff y Pinochet, pero las vidas de ambos habían estado profundamente entrelazadas. Calle Londres 38 es la historia de un viaje personal en busca de los orígenes y las consecuencias de esa relación, un camino donde la historia, la política y la literatura se entrecruzan para acabar componiendo un complejo rompecabezas en el que se mezclan también la comunidad selknam de la Patagonia, la opresión de los colonizadores europeos y una flecha que terminó en un oscuro almacén del Museo Británico. Basándose en documentos, archivos, testimonios y conversaciones, Sands trata de arrojar luz a una historia fascinante; pese a la imposibilidad de trazar un círculo completo y llegar a una verdad única, el autor busca desvelar la escalofriante realidad oculta tras las vidas de dos hombres y sus destinos, que convergen en el número 38 de la calle Londres de Santiago: una doble historia de asesinatos en masa y un inquietante vínculo entre las atrocidades del pasado y las de nuestros días. El resultado de esa exploración es un exhaustivo relato sobre la justicia y la impunidad, pero también sobre la memoria y la delicada línea que separa los hechos de la ficción, la verdad del mito”. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Literatura Universal con Adolfo Estévez
513. Primer viaje. Pablo Neruda.

Literatura Universal con Adolfo Estévez

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2025 2:30


Pablo Neruda fue un poeta chileno, considerado uno de los más importantes y reconocidos de la literatura del siglo XX. Su verdadero nombre era Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto, y nació el 12 de julio de 1904 en Parral, Chile, y murió el 23 de septiembre de 1973 en Santiago de Chile. Neruda escribió una amplia variedad de poesía, desde amorosa hasta política y épica. Algunos de sus libros más destacados son: "Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada" (1924): Uno de sus libros más populares, escrito cuando era muy joven. Mezcla pasión, erotismo y melancolía. "Residencia en la tierra" (1933-1935): Una obra más surrealista y oscura, escrita durante su tiempo como cónsul en Asia. "Canto general" (1950): Una epopeya que recorre la historia de América Latina, desde sus raíces indígenas hasta la lucha contra la opresión. Muestra su compromiso político. "Odas elementales" (1954): Poemas dedicados a objetos y experiencias cotidianas (una cebolla, el vino, el mar), escritos con sencillez y belleza. Neruda fue militante del Partido Comunista de Chile y llegó a ser senador. Fue perseguido por el gobierno de Gabriel González Videla y tuvo que vivir exiliado durante un tiempo. Fue también embajador de Chile en Francia durante el gobierno de Salvador Allende. Premio Nobel de Literatura (1971): Por una obra que "con la acción de una fuerza elemental da vida al destino y los sueños de un continente". Premio Nacional de Literatura de Chile (1945). Murió poco después del golpe militar de Augusto Pinochet. Aunque oficialmente se dijo que murió de cáncer, hay teorías y estudios que apuntan a un posible envenenamiento.

SWR2 Kultur Info
Philippe Sands – Die Verschwundenen von Londres 38

SWR2 Kultur Info

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2025 4:09


Allein die Vorstellung ist mehr als nur empörend: Ein bekannter NS-Verbrecher beteiligt sich Jahrzehnte nach Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs erneut an Folter und an Morden. Genau das geschah aber in Chile unter Augusto Pinochet, schreibt Philippe Sands in seinem neuen Buch über den SS-Offizier Walther Rauff und die Pinochet-Verhaftung in London 1998. Rezension von Roman Kaiser-Mühlecker

Literatur - SWR2 lesenswert
Philippe Sands – Die Verschwundenen von Londres 38

Literatur - SWR2 lesenswert

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2025 4:09


Allein die Vorstellung ist mehr als nur empörend: Ein bekannter NS-Verbrecher beteiligt sich Jahrzehnte nach Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs erneut an Folter und an Morden. Genau das geschah aber in Chile unter Augusto Pinochet, schreibt Philippe Sands in seinem neuen Buch über den SS-Offizier Walther Rauff und die Pinochet-Verhaftung in London 1998. Rezension von Roman Kaiser-Mühlecker

Una Nueva Mañana
Periodista de Ciper: Fallo contra herederos de Pinochet "nos recuerda quién fue realmente el dictador"

Una Nueva Mañana

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2025 39:31


Pedro Ramírez, periodista de Ciper, comentó en Una Nueva Mañana el dictamen que obliga a los herederos de Augusto Pinochet a restituir más de 16 millones de dólares al Estado. El investigador recordó que este caso "no tiene que ver con temas políticos, tiene que ver con robo de recursos públicos", añadiendo que esta "sentencia nos recuerda quién fue realmente el dictador". Conduce Cecilia Rovaretti y Sebastián Esnaola.

Sonar Global
El "Profesor" nos contó la historia del diario de José Miguel Carrera, devuelto al Museo Histórico Nacional gracias al caso Riggs.

Sonar Global

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2025 21:59


En una nueva clase de historia, el "Profesor" Gonzalo Peralta nos contó la historia del diario de José Miguel Carrera, que pasó por las manos de Augusto Pinochet y fue devuelto al Museo Histórico Nacional gracias al caso Riggs.

El Diario de Cooperativa AM
Vallejo apunta a Matthei y Kaiser: No podemos relativizar declaraciones que reivindiquen la dictadura

El Diario de Cooperativa AM

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2025 53:04


La ministra vocera de Gobierno, Camila Vallejo (PC), criticó en El Diario de Cooperativa las últimas declaraciones de los candidatos de oposición Evelyn Matthei (Chile Vamos) y Johannes Kaiser (Libertario), considerando que relativizan el golpe de Estado y la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet; Además hablamos con El fiscal nacional, Ángel Valencia, quien explicó cómo fue la fuga del país del sicario del "Rey de Meiggs" y las complicaciones para perseguir a ciudadanos venezolanos que han ingresado a Chile por pasos irregulares y utilizan nombres falsos para delinquir. Conduce Verónica Franco y Rodrigo Vergara.

The Hartmann Report
Greg Palast Reveals the Evil Scheme to Purge More Voters

The Hartmann Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2025 58:33


Migrants at Ice jail in Miami made to kneel to eat ‘like dogs' Plus - Allentown grandfather who was granted political asylum in 1987 after surviving torture at the hands of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet's regime was disappeared by ICE. Tulsi Gabbard says Obama could face criminal charges as she alleges ‘Treasonous Conspiracy' against Trump. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

SBS Spanish - SBS en español
Chile creará memorial en enclave alemán que fue un centro de represión durante la dictadura de Pinochet

SBS Spanish - SBS en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2025 5:07


En un acto de justicia histórica, el Gobierno de Chile creará un memorial en los terrenos de la antigua Colonia Dignidad, un asentamiento fundado por un exmilitar alemán que sirvió como centro de prisión, tortura y desaparición durante la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet de 1973 a 1990.

Presidents, Prime Ministers, Kings and Queens
209. Augusto Pinochet – Chile (1973-90)

Presidents, Prime Ministers, Kings and Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2025 51:31


Iain Dale talks to former US diplomat and law professor Colleen Graffy about the life of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinchochet.

Dan Snow's History Hit
How the Nazis Escaped Germany

Dan Snow's History Hit

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2025 46:26


Following the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945 some of its most egregious war criminals sought to escape justice by fleeing Europe, most famously to South America. The escape routes they used, established by Nazi sympathisers, came to be known as 'ratlines'. The escaping Nazis had helped from an unexpected source; senior figures within the Catholic Church.The story of SS officer Walter Rauff exemplifies how these networks operated and the subsequent lives of the escapees. Rauff was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people during the Second World War and was a key perpetrator of the Holocaust. After escaping to Chile, he would eventually come to work for the brutal Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. There he would go on to inflict further miseries on the Chilean people. Rauff was never put on trial, but is it possible to obtain a different kind of justice for his numerous crimes?Philippe Sands, a renowned British-French lawyer and author, joins Dan to provide insights from his book '38 Londres Street: On Impunity, Pinochet in England and a Nazi in Patagonia', which explores Rauff's life and actions and the involvement of the Catholic Church.Produced & edited by Dougal Patmore.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com.

From Our Own Correspondent Podcast
Ukraine's 'Operation Spider's Web'

From Our Own Correspondent Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2025 28:47


Kate Adie introduces stories from Ukraine, Chile, Indonesia, and France.Ukraine's audacious drone raid on Russian airbases was met with disbelief that such an attack was even possible. Operation ‘Spider's Web' was 18 months in the planning, and caused huge damage to Russia's bomber fleet. But as Paul Adams discovered, civilians in Kyiv are uneasy about celebrating this success, fearful of how Russia might respond.Approximately one fifth of Ukraine is currently under Russian occupation. Russia doesn't allow foreign journalists to enter the occupied territories, but the BBC's Olga Malchevska has been corresponding in secret with Ukrainian civilians in Crimea, through which she learned of the risks they face for small acts of resistance.During the rule of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in the 70s and 80s, thousands of babies were illegally kidnapped and adopted by couples abroad. Today, many of Chile's ‘stolen children' are in a race against time to trace their aging mothers. Jane Chambers was there as one mother and daughter reunited.The coral reefs of Raja Ampat in Indonesia are among the most beautiful on Earth, but last year suffered a mass bleaching event which left reefs in some regions resembling white desert plains. Mark Stratton reports from West Papua where locals are worried that over-tourism is making the reefs even more vulnerable.And we're in Normandy in Northern France, where this week the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings was commemorated. Each year, commemorations take on greater significance as the number of war veterans able to attend declines. Ash Bhardwarj visited one village keeping their memory alive.Series Producer: Serena Tarling Production Coordinators: Katie Morrison & Sophie Hill Editor: Richard Fenton-Smith

The Journey of My Mother's Son
Christian Ray Flores – Live to Give

The Journey of My Mother's Son

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 45:33


In this episode of the Journey of My Mother's Son podcast, I talk with Christian Ray Flores. Christian was born in Moscow, Russia to a Chilean father and a Russian mother. The family moved to Chile when Christian was nine months old. During the 1973 military coup of Augusto Pinochet, Christian's father, Americo Flores, was arrested along with thousands of others and spent time in one of the infamous concentration camps. His mother Larisa and two children went into hiding under an assumed name and with a fake Argentinian passport. After Americo's release, the family spent some time in a UN refugee camp and was granted asylum in Germany, moving to Munich. After living in Germany and Russia, Americo and Larisa moved to Mozambique, at the government's invitation, which was recruiting international professionals after a mass exodus of Portuguese upon the nation's independence. Christian learned four languages by age nine: Russian, Spanish, English, and Portuguese. After his parents' divorce, Christian returned to Russia with his mother and sister in 1983. Christian got a master's degree in economics in 1991 from the RUDN University in Moscow. In 1993, Christian released his first single in Russia and became an instant success, winning awards like Generation ‘93 and Ovation in 1996 and playing nationwide. Back-to-back top ten hits culminated in his number one single, "Our Generation" – an anthem of freedom and change. It became a song widely used as the anthem of Boris Yeltsin's election campaign. Christian campaigned for Yeltsin as part of the Russian version of Rock the Vote, credited to giving Yeltsin the youth vote and victory in the campaign. After moving to the US in 2004, Christian worked for the international charity HOPE Worldwide, serving as a country director for Latin America, focusing on health care and education in nine different countries. He also developed and directed the Positive Choice education program, implemented around the US and internationally in Mexico, Jamaica, Indonesia. Christian co-founded a production company, Hollywood World, in Los Angeles with his wife, Deb de Flores. Hollywood World allowed international artists to work with top Hollywood producers and directors. Among other projects, Christian did voice acting for the English and Spanish versions of Masha and the Bear, a popular animated TV series. After moving to Austin, Texas, Christian and Deb co-founded (with Brandon Knicely) Third Drive, raising millions of dollars for startups and creating digital media projects for emerging businesses, public personalities and non-profit organizations. Christian speaks to audiences in the US and internationally, hosts the Headspace with Christian Ray Flores podcast and YouTube Channel dedicated to success in career and calling Headapace newsletter. His short film Dance With Me was selected to several international film festivals, and its title song was released on all major music platforms. In the first days of the war in Ukraine, the Ascend Mission Fund launched the Ukraine Relief Network, serving refugees in Ukraine. Christian and Deb personally visited Ukraine in September 2022. In 2022, Christian and Deb launched the Xponential career coaching program for high achievers. Christian and Deb have been active in Christian ministry in the US, Eastern Europe, and Latin America for two decades. They lead The Tribe, a community of faith in Austin, Texas. Ray frequently speaks to different audiences in the US and overseas. They are also active in philanthropy through their charity Ascend Mission Fund and projects like the Ascend Academy in Mozambique that lifts children out of poverty through developing character, communication, and computer skills. To find out more about Christian, you can check out his website at https://www.christianrayflores.com/.

The Fifth Court - Ireland's legal podcast
E121 The Fifth Court - Ms Justice Marguerite Bolger, life and times of a High Court judge

The Fifth Court - Ireland's legal podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 66:52


Episode 121 of The Fifth Court is the first of a mini-series of the podcast recorded at the Kilkenny Law Festival 2025, held from May 16–18 in Kilkenny City. It offered a dynamic weekend of discussions on contemporary and historical legal topics aimed at making legal discourse accessible and engaging, blending serious analysis with entertainment - a bit like our own podcast!The event featured a diverse lineup of speakers, including judges, journalists, academics, and legal practitioners. Topics ranged from the impact of AI and blockchain on the legal profession to discussions on censorship, defamation, and constitutional reform.On this episode co-host Peter Leonard chats to Ms Justice Marguerite Bolger, appointed as a Judge of the High Court in January 2022. She is very well known for work in employment and equality law. She co-authored seminal legal texts such as Criminal Law (with Peter Charleton and Paul Anthony McDermott), Sex Discrimination and the Law, and Employment Equality Law and served as Chairperson of the Employment Bar Association of Ireland as well as being a member of the executive board of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties.Notable Judgments:In a 2024 case, emphasized the importance of firsthand recollections in traumatic events, stating that assumptions about memory fading shouldn't apply to unusual incidents like witnessing a death outside a nightclub.In 2025, ruled that a plaintiff's claim regarding defective breast implants was sufficiently pleaded, allowing the case to proceed.Her cultural recommendation, 38 Londres Street: On Impunity, Pinochet in England and a Nazi in Patagonia (2025) by Phillipe Sands. He examines the cases of Augusto Pinochet and Nazi officer Walther Rauff, highlighting issues of impunity and international justice.The episode also includes recent important cases drawn from the Decisis casebook and discussed by Mark Tottenham BL and Peter Leonard BL.These cases are brought to you thanks to Charltons Solicitors and Collaborative Practitioners, Georges St. Dun Laoghaire, Dublin.Cases includeA case involving a failure to comply with a court orderA wind turbine operation restriction to minimise noise, particularly at nightA High Court decision involving a Norwich Pharmacal Order, a type of court order compelling a third party—usually an innocent but involved party, like an internet service provider, bank, or social media platform—to disclose information that can help identify a wrongdoer. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Please Explain
The lawyer (and author) who represented Palestine in international court

Please Explain

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 23:59 Transcription Available


How are we to make sense of the swirling chaos around us? The multiple wars, accusations of wrongdoing, and human carnage? And how can we possibly have civilised conversations about it all? British barrister and author Philippe Sands, is uniquely placed to guide us through this moment. It’s not just that he’s an expert on crimes against humanity, who has won cases against former Chilean dictator, Augusto Pinochet. But he understands the personal toil of it all; he’s written about the Nazi SS officer who might have been responsible for the death of one of his family members. Today, Philippe Sands, who recently visited Australia for the Sydney Writers Festival, on helping to defend Palestine at the International Court of Justice. And the breakups he’s experienced with friends, over their comments about Israel.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Please Explain
The lawyer (and author) who represented Palestine in international court

Please Explain

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 23:59 Transcription Available


How are we to make sense of the swirling chaos around us? The multiple wars, accusations of wrongdoing, and human carnage? And how can we possibly have civilised conversations about it all? British barrister and author Philippe Sands, is uniquely placed to guide us through this moment. It’s not just that he’s an expert on crimes against humanity, who has won cases against former Chilean dictator, Augusto Pinochet. But he understands the personal toil of it all; he’s written about the Nazi SS officer who might have been responsible for the death of one of his family members. Today, Philippe Sands, who recently visited Australia for the Sydney Writers Festival, on helping to defend Palestine at the International Court of Justice. And the breakups he’s experienced with friends, over their comments about Israel.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Camp Gagnon
The P3do Nazi Cult You've NEVER Heard About

Camp Gagnon

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2025 38:42


P3DO NAZI CULT! Today, we look into one of the most chilling and dark communities that we have talked about: Colonia Dignidad. We will see how Paul Schäfer, a p3do religious leader who was a medic in the Reich Labor Service (a paramilitary organization established by Nazi Germany), managed to start and control a community that even catered to then-Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, and the horrors that came with this evangelical community that would literally (and legally) steal children, force slave labor, and hoard military equipment. WELCOME TO CAMP

Revolutionary Left Radio
[BEST OF] Chilean Coup of 1973: Salvador Allende, Augusto Pinochet, & the CIA

Revolutionary Left Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 87:28


ORIGINALLY RELEASED May 21, 2018 Professor of History at ASU, Alex Aviña, returns to RLR to discuss the Chilean coup of 1973. In this gripping episode, Alex and Breht delve deep into the tragic and pivotal events surrounding the Chilean Coup of 1973. Learn about Salvador Allende's courageous attempt to build democratic socialism, Augusto Pinochet's brutal dictatorship backed by US imperialism, and the CIA's covert operations to undermine and overthrow Chilean democracy. From the economic sabotage and propaganda warfare to the violence and terror unleashed on the Chilean people, this conversation sheds critical light on a watershed moment in Cold War history—one that continues to echo powerfully into our present day. Join us as we unravel the lessons and legacies of Chile's 9/11, exploring what it reveals about imperialism, democracy, socialism, and the extremely violent and inhuman lengths to which capitalist powers will go to protect their interests. Outro Music: Monsters by Bambu ---------------------------------------------------- Support Rev Left and get access to bonus episodes: www.patreon.com/revleftradio Make a one-time donation to Rev Left at BuyMeACoffee.com/revleftradio Follow, Subscribe, & Learn more about Rev Left Radio https://revleftradio.com/

Black Op Radio
#1251 – Ted Yacucci

Black Op Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 94:55


  50 Reasons For 50 Years - Episode 08 Ted Yacucci - YouTube Channel Ted's 2024 interview on Black Op Radio, Episode #1225. Listen here. Respectfully, Ted has enjoyed a distinguished career working in media for decades. Len is a huge fan! New documents prove the CIA assassinated JFK. Watch Video. Len thanks and congratulations Ted for his good work, after starting his serious JFK research 20 years ago. Ted was just 8 years old when JFK was assassinated and fascinated by the case after watching Ruby shoot Oswald. Ted's research has really had two main focuses, Ruth Paine and the Chicago plot. During 2013, Ted and Ruth Paine corresponded several times over the phone during a 3 month period. When Ted didn't agree that Lee Harvey Oswald was involved in the General Walker shooting, Ruth denied a final interview. Ted has travelled to Chicago several times over the years, while researching the Chicago plot, filing several FOIA requests. Predictably, Ted was not given any serious answers via the various FOIA requests to the JFK assassination info gatekeepers. Since retiring recently in December, Ted has had a lot of fun creating new JFK video content. Have you seen Ted's most recent video, "You May Be A Lone Nutter If You..."? View Here. Len really likes this video of Ted's as it shows the CIA's methods for removing governments in an articulate manner. Ted makes it obvious that the CIA was out of control, manipulating elections and Congress, creating government coups etc.. The CIA was running contributions to a strike in British Guiana via cover under the AFL-CIO and George Meany. George Meany, President of the AFL-CIO, was CIA. Watch here. Why would an American union be used to help fund and organize a strike in a foreign country? Pre-electoral interference. In March and May of 1964, the CIA gave money to the Christian Democratic candidate, Eduardo Frei. A whopping $750k was funnelled by the CIA to Frei in March and $1.25 million in May, in efforts to defeat Salvador Allende. Over the next 8 years, the CIA kept up their efforts to keep Allende out of power. 1972 the CIA couldn't stop the people from voting for Allende, who became President. The CIA then sponsored a coup against President Salvador Allende, installing dictator Augusto Pinochet. Upon becoming President, Pinochet cancelled open free democratic elections after he was installed into power. Pinochet's dictatorship lasted about 20 years, during which time, a genocide was perpetuated against the Chilean people. In 1953, the overthrow of the democratically elected government happened in Iran, with the CIA installing Shah Pahlevi. Oil profits were funnelled to Britain and the United States after the coup, Iran has never been the same since the takeover. All of the CIA's chaos and genocides that they create comes down to GREED and PROFIT. It’s disgusting. Guatemalan President was thrown out mainly by the Dulles brothers, major shareholders in the United Fruit Company. United Fruit Company owned over 80% of the land in Guatemala, who was dependent on the CIA. After Guatemalan President, Elfego H. Monzon was removed from power, a genocide followed, over the next 20 years. The year before, the CIA had eliminated Congo President, Patrice Lumumba.on January 17, 1961. Patrice Lumumba wanted to have a fair democracy for the poor people of the Congo. He wanted the best for his people. During these events, John Kennedy was inaugurated as President on January 20th, 1961. Everyone knew that JFK was a big supporter of Lumumba, and would not have wanted him touched. When Kennedy found out Lumumba was kidnapped and murdered, he was openly devastated hearing the news. In the 1947 CIA Charter, the CIA was authorized to operate a mind control program like MK Ultra! LSD experiments included giving LSD to participants for 77 days straight!

Invité Afrique
Mali: «On est dans une véritable dictature aujourd'hui, le droit est anéanti»

Invité Afrique

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 5:40


Au Mali, le régime militaire du général Goïta supprime les partis politiques. Ce mardi 13 mai au soir, un ministre a lu, à la télévision, un décret présidentiel qui dissout tous les partis politiques. Cette annonce tombe au moment où le chef de la junte malienne veut se faire proclamer président de la République pour cinq ans, sans passer par des élections. Réaction de l'avocat Mamadou Ismaïla Konaté, qui a été ministre malien de la Justice et garde des Sceaux. Aujourd'hui, il est inscrit au barreau du Mali et au barreau de Paris. Maître Konaté répond aux questions de Christophe Boisbouvier. RFI : Êtes-vous êtes surpris par la décision de dissoudre les partis politiques ? Mamadou Ismaïla Konaté : Une décision au forceps d'un régime militaire de transition ne surprend guère. Ceci d'autant plus qu'on l'a vu arriver. Ceux qui avaient encore le moindre doute doivent ouvrir les yeux et les oreilles et comprendre simplement que nous sommes dans le contexte du Chili de 1973 d'Augusto Pinochet.Alors pourquoi cette décision du général Assimi Goïta, que vous comparez au général Pinochet ? Est-ce que c'est pour pouvoir se faire proclamer, dans quelques jours peut-être, président pour un mandat de cinq ans sans passer par la case des élections ? Il a louvoyé dans le vœu d'être comme ses autres homologues dans le cadre de l'AES, c'est-à-dire d'être déclaré président de la République sans jamais passer par une élection. Je pense que, après le tour de table qui lui a permis justement de prendre contact avec la justice constitutionnelle, un certain nombre de juristes, pour savoir s'il pouvait aller avec son képi, ses galons et sa tenue comme candidat à la présidence de la République, je pense qu'il en a été dissuadé. Au point que, aujourd'hui, il a anéanti les partis politiques qui étaient les seuls acteurs politiques qui pouvaient vraiment le gêner. Là, aujourd'hui, il a le vent en poupe. Il a dégagé l'arène, il peut tout dire, tout se proclamer et se prendre pour tout ce qu'il n'est pas.Alors, vous dites que son modèle, c'est le général chilien Augusto Pinochet en 1973. Est-ce que ce n'est pas aussi le général malien Moussa Traoré qui a putsché en 1968 et qui a tenu le pouvoir pendant 23 ans ? Oui, mais le parallèle qui me vient à l'esprit, c'est quand même le général Pinochet, qui a renversé dans les mêmes conditions un régime légal, pour s'installer au pouvoir. Et sa démarche a consisté à saccager les institutions, à anéantir les libertés, à bannir les droits. Les partis politiques ont disparu, toute la vie politique a disparu. Et de ce point de vue-là, je pense que l'équivalent du général Assimi Goïta, c'est quand même Pinochet dans sa démarche d'anéantissement de l'État de droit, dans sa démarche justement de mépris de la démocratie et des démocrates. Il ne faut pas oublier que le 26 mars, dans ce pays, il y a eu du sang. Et le 26 mars, c'est quand même le point de départ d'un système de démocratie qui est l'option fondamentale du Mali et des Maliens, qu'aucune force vive ne peut venir aujourd'hui anéantir. Les Maliens doivent ouvrir les yeux, comprendre qu'on est dans une véritable dictature aujourd'hui et que le droit est anéanti. Ce n'est que la force militaire, la baïonnette, qui va désormais parler.À lire aussiMali: les partis politiques sont officiellement dissousOui, vous faites allusion au 26 mars 1991, le jour où la révolution malienne a fait tomber le régime militaire de Moussa Traoré. Mais est-ce que ce général, qui a gouverné 23 ans d'une main de fer, n'est pas le modèle d'Assimi Goïta ?S'il le prend pour modèle, à mon avis, il se trompe parce que les époques ne sont pas les mêmes. L'option de la démocratie est définitivement faite par le Mali et par les Maliens.Le 3 mai dernier, pour la première fois depuis l'arrivée au pouvoir des militaires, des centaines de Maliens ont défilé dans les rues de Bamako au cri de « Vive la démocratie ! », « À bas la dictature ! ». Est-ce que ce sont les prémices d'un réveil démocratique ? Ce sont des prémices et des prémices qui sont quand même indicateurs de la suite. Ça ne s'est pas passé qu'à Bamako. Dans plusieurs autres villes et localités du Mali, les gens ont pris conscience que cet ordre militaire ne pourrait pas s'imposer pendant très longtemps. Et j'estime simplement que ce qui vient de se passer est un tour de vis qui va encore davantage faire prendre conscience du danger, notamment chez les jeunes, chez les femmes. Et tous ceux qui sont épris de paix et de démocratie se disent aujourd'hui que le Mali est en danger.Oui, mais est-ce que le général Goïta ne dispose pas de la police, de l'armée, d'une machine qui peut réprimer et faire peur ? Avant lui, on en a vu d'autres, après lui, on en verra d'autres. S'il a les moyens d'exterminer 22 millions de Maliens, alors là, il décidera que l'autorité militaire doit s'imposer au détriment de la démocratie, au détriment de la liberté.Mais vous ne craignez pas une vague de répression à présent ? C'est le prix à payer, justement, lorsqu'on est en quête de droits, en quête de loi, en quête de démocratie. C'est le prix à payer face à une institution militaire comme celle-ci, qui viole le serment militaire, qui viole le règlement militaire, qui ne connait plus la doctrine militaire. Bien évidemment, ils peuvent prendre le risque de tirer sur les gens, mais cela se terminera contre leur gré et ce sont eux qui en paieront le prix.À lire aussiMali: l'inédite contestation de la transition du 3-4 mai peut-elle se poursuivre?

The Hatchards Podcast
Philippe Sands on 38 Londres Street: Pinochet, Prosecution, and a Nazi in Patagonia

The Hatchards Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2025 54:12


On this episode, we're joined by author and international human rights barrister Philippe Sands to talk about his latest book, 38 Londres Street, a gripping exploration of justice, memory, and impunity through the intertwining stories of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and Nazi fugitive Walter Rauff who spent decades in Chile avoiding extradition.We consider the groundbreaking legal concept of universal jurisdiction through the lens of Pinochet's dramatic 1998 arrest in London—a defining moment that transformed international justice—and what it means for the complex geopolitics of today. Drawing inspiration from literary figures like Roberto Bolaño, Bruce Chatwin, and Ariel Dorfman, Sands blends detective-style nonfiction with profound moral complexity, tracing the ominous echoes among Nazi Germany, fascism, and the Cold War. He also tells us about the book's sensational reception in Chile, where the effects of his reporting have reignited long-suppressed debates about accountability and national memory. In typical fashion, we also cover everything from Pinochet's visit to Hatchards a few days before his arrest—where he reportedly bought every book he could find on Napoleon—to his compulsive viewing of Star Wars films while awaiting trial.

Start the Week
Impunity and fighting for justice

Start the Week

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 41:46


The lawyer Philippe Sands weaves together a story of historical crimes, impunity and the law in his latest book, 38 Londres Street. He uncovers the links between a Nazi hiding in plain sight in Patagonia and the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, and the failed attempts to bring either to justice. Kenneth Roth has led Human Rights Watch for the last three decades, overseeing investigations into violence and oppression in countries all over the world. In Righting Wrongs he tells the stories of the wins and the losses, and the ongoing fight to uncover, and prosecute, abuses.The BBC's former Syria correspondent Lina Sinjab was forced into exile more than a decade ago after threats from President Bashar al-Assad's government. She could only watch as death and destruction ripped through her country, and those in power appeared to act with impunity. She looks at how Syria is faring since the fall of al-Assad's brutal regime.Producer: Katy Hickman

SBS Spanish - SBS en español
Programa | SBS Spanish | 11 abril 2025

SBS Spanish - SBS en español

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 51:14


Analizamos las propuestads de la Coalición australiana tras prometer una reducción en el número de estudiantes internacionales y un aumento a las tarifas de solicitud de visa si ganan las elecciones. Mientras los laboristas harán lo propio en números más bajos. También hablamos de la exagente de la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet en Chile, Adriana Rivas, quien lucha para acceder a documentos que podrían darle motivos para evitar su extradición. Analizamos los anuncios de Donald Trump en relación a México y te actualizamos en materia deportiva.

History Extra podcast
A Nazi in Chile: did an SS commander work for Pinochet?

History Extra podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 49:01


What connects a notorious Chilean dictator with an SS commander who played a key role in the Holocaust? This is the question at the heart of a book by the author and lawyer Philippe Sands, which follows the twin stories of Augusto Pinochet's sensational arrest in London in 1998 and the postwar career of Walter Rauff, who spent many years in Pinochet's Chile. Philippe was joined by Rob Attar to explore a tangled tale of law and mass murder in Europe and South America. (Ad) Philippe Sands is the author of 38 Londres Street: On Impunity, Pinochet in England and a Nazi in Patagonia (Orion, 2025). Buy it now from Waterstones: https://go.skimresources.com?id=71026X1535947&xcust=historyextra-social-histboty&xs=1&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.waterstones.com%2Fbook%2F38-londres-street%2Fphilippe-sands%2F9781399632812. The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Documentos RNE
Documentos RNE - Caso Pinochet, en las fronteras de la justicia - 21/03/25

Documentos RNE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 58:48


3 de marzo del año 2000, Pinochet regresa a Chile tras su liberación de su arresto de 503 días en Londres. Un caso que se había iniciado con la orden internacional de detención contra el dictador chileno dictada por el juez de la Audiencia Nacional Baltasar Garzón.Aprovechando la recuperación de Pinochet en una clínica londinense tras una operación de hernia discal, el juez Garzón reclamó su extradición para ser juzgado en España por crímenes de lesa humanidad, amparado en el principio de Jurisdicción Universal.Aunque había poca esperanza de que la orden pudiera prosperar, el caso adquirió una gran repercusión. Se abrió un amplio debate sobre la aplicación del Derecho Penal Internacional y se le llegó a comparar con el proceso de Núremberg.Mientras el caso Pinochet tenía un tortuoso recorrido jurídico, en el terreno político tensó las relaciones entre Chile y el Reino Unido y España. Socialmente, en Chile la polarización creció hasta límites no conocidos en su reciente democracia, aún tutelada por la sombra de la dictadura.A pesar del visto bueno final del Comité Judicial de la Cámara de los Lores a la extradición, aunque recortando los delitos por los que podría ser juzgado, el caso se resolvería en el plano político. El ministro del interior, Jack Straw, liberaba a Pinochet en base a dictámenes médicos que determinaban su supuesta incapacidad para afrontar un juicio.Cuando Pinochet regresó a Chile fue aclamado por sus seguidores, pero ya no era él mismo: había perdido su inmunidad y sería procesado en su propio país.Este documental, con guion de Luis Zaragoza y realización de Samuel Alarcón, cuenta con la participación del propio Baltasar Garzón, junto a los periodistas Ernesto Ekaizer, autor del libro Yo Augusto, y Felipe Gerdtzen, autor de Augusto Pinochet, 503 días atrapado en Londres, y la intérprete Jean Pateras, que asistió a Scotland Yard durante el arresto de Pinochet.Escuchar audio

Trend Lines
U.S. Aid Is Crucial to Defending Democracy in Latin America

Trend Lines

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 7:38


"Why are there never coup attempts inside the United States?" an old joke among left-wing activists in Latin America goes. "Because there is no U.S. embassy there." It's a reference to U.S. actions during the Cold War to undermine democratically elected governments across the region, including Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz in the 1950s and Chilean President Salvador Allende in the 1970s. Under the auspices of fighting communism, Washington backed right-wing military coups and dictatorships throughout the hemisphere. As late as the 1980s, Jeanne Kirkpatrick - a foreign policy adviser to then-President Ronald Reagan who later served as his ambassador to the United Nations - issued a defense of authoritarian regimes that she believed helped to protect their populations from even worse revolutionary ideologies. But the joke was outdated even before January 2021, when then-U.S. President Donald Trump tried to overturn the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. In fact, over recent decades, the view of the United States as a defender of authoritarianism, at least in Latin America, has become an anachronism. Eventually, Washington lent support to the Concertacion coalition that defeated then-dictator Augusto Pinochet at the polls and led to the reestablishment of democracy in Chile in 1990. And in 2001, the U.S. backed the Inter-American Democratic Charter, which clearly states in its opening that "[t]he peoples of the Americas have a right to democracy and their governments have an obligation to promote and defend it," while promising to remove nondemocratic governments from various hemispheric institutions. More recently, perhaps the top three achievements of former President Joe Biden's policies in Latin America all came in defense of democracy. His administration supported a democratic transition in Honduras in 2021 after Xiomara Castro defeated the ruling National Party's candidate in the country's presidential election that year. Washington then had outgoing President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who had stolen Honduras' 2017 presidential election, extradited on drug-trafficking charges so he could no longer interfere in domestic politics. A year later, Biden's team pressured Brazil's military leadership to stay clear of a coup attempt led by outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro after Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva won that country's presidential election in 2022. And the Biden team safeguarded an incredibly difficult presidential transition in Guatemala at the end of 2023 to ensure that President Bernardo Arevalo took office, overcoming the efforts of that country's corrupt elites to keep him from power. The U.S. record is far from perfect, and this column will no doubt provoke responses detailing the many wrongs Washington has committed in the region in recent years. But the U.S. really did shift toward a more pro-democracy stance in Latin America since the end of the Cold War. As part of that shift, the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID, funded numerous local NGOs that promoted human rights and anti-corruption efforts. The National Endowment for Democracy - a government-funded semi-autonomous organization - backed training for political parties and civil society that contributed to grassroots civic activism at the heart of democratic values, winning NED the hatred of authoritarian leaders who viewed those efforts as a violation of their sovereignty. Various other U.S. agencies also provide grants for research and think tank work that is critical to policy debates in the region. All those efforts go beyond the specific episodes, such as those by the Biden administration, when the U.S. government backed a democratic movement at a critical moment. They were cooked into U.S. policy in nearly every country. That is not to say that U.S. support is the only thing sustaining democracy in Latin America. Democracy can't be imposed from abroad. The biggest efforts come from the people of Latin America, who work to impr...

Tyran
Pinochet 1:4

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 36:15


I næsten 40 år har Augusto Pinochet loyalt arbejdet sig op i det chilenske militær. Stille og roligt er han nået næsten helt til tops. Og tæt på pensionsalderen udnævner Chiles socialistiske præsident Pinochet til øverstkommanderende for hæren - et valg, der virker ret sikkert. Men det viser sig hurtigt, at det valg bliver skæbnesvangert. Bare tre uger senere er Pinochet fuldstændig vendt på en tallerken. Al loyalitet til præsidenten er væk og nu står han i spidsen for et blodigt kup, der skal sætte ham selv på præsidentstolen. Tilrettelæggelse: Laura Skelgaard Paulsen og Nicholas Durup Thomsen. Fortæller: Nicholas Durup Thomsen. Lyddesign: Tobias Ingemann. DRredaktør: Ander Eriksen Stegger. Produceret for P3 af MonoMono. Kilder. The Pinochet File - Peter Kornbluh Politics of Torture - Hugh O'Shaughnessy The Pinochet Affair - Roger Burbach Sådan forvandlede Pinochet Chile til en rædselsstat - historienet.dk Katia Chornik - Music and Torture in Chilean Detention Centers Kuppet i Chile og den danske venstrefløj - Morten Lassen

Eine Stunde History  - Deutschlandfunk Nova
Chile - Allende und die Unidad Popular

Eine Stunde History - Deutschlandfunk Nova

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 57:10


Sie ist die Voraussetzung für den kurzen chilenischen Ausflug in den Sozialismus: die Unidad Popular wird 1969 gegründet. Ihr erster Präsident heißt Salvador Allende – er bleibt der einzige. Auf ihn folgt ein General, kein Politiker.**********Ihr hört in dieser "Eine Stunde History":00:10:31 - Karl-Heinz Dellwo, ehemaliger RAF-Terrorist, Dokumentarfilmer, Verleger und Gastwirt00:22:40 - Günther Wessel, Autor einer Allende-Biographie00:36:10 - Diethard Küster saß mehrere Wochen in den Foltergefängnissen von Augusto Pinochet und berichtet über Verhöre und Misshandlungen.00:49:08 - Dieter Maier ist Kenner der chilenischen Geschichte und Gegenwart und erläutert, welche Spuren sowohl Allende als auch Pinochet hinterlassen haben.**********Mehr zum Thema bei Deutschlandfunk Nova:Simón Bolívar: Der Nationalheld SüdamerikasKolonialismus: Die Eroberung MexikosDer Vertrag von Tordesillas – Die Aufteilung der Welt**********Den Artikel zum Stück findet ihr hier.**********Ihr könnt uns auch auf diesen Kanälen folgen: TikTok auf&ab , TikTok wie_geht und Instagram .**********In dieser Folge mit: Moderation: Markus Dichmann Gesprächspartner: Dr. Matthias von Hellfeld, Deutschlandfunk-Nova-Geschichtsexperte

SBS Spanish - SBS en español
Programa | SBS Spanish | 31 octubre 2024

SBS Spanish - SBS en español

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 47:00


Hablamos del caso de la exagente de la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet, Adriana Rivas, buscada en Chile por delitos cometidos durante la dictadura militar, después que su equipo jurídico continúa dilatando en el tiempo su extradición de Australia a Chile. También hablamos de cómo afronta la comunidad latina en Estados Unidos las próximas elecciones presidenciales, y en deportes hablamos de la nueva jornada de A-league, la Copa Sudamericana y la penúltima fecha de Moto GP.

Film at Lincoln Center Podcast
#542 - Pablo Larraín and Antonia Zegers on No

Film at Lincoln Center Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2024 35:30


This week we're excited to present an archival conversation from 2012 at the 50th New York Film Festival with No director Pablo Larraín and lead actress Antonia Zegers. Larraín returns to the New York Film Festival this fall with the NYFF62 Spotlight selection Maria. Don't miss the NYFF premiere of Maria and many more great films at this year's festival. Single tickets will go on sale this Tuesday, September 17! Learn more at filmlinc.org/nyff In 1988, Chilean military dictator Augusto Pinochet, due to international pressure, is forced to call a plebiscite on his presidency. The country will vote YES or NO to Pinochet extending his rule for another eight years. Opposition leaders for the NO persuade a brash young advertising executive, Rene Saavedra (Gael Garcia Bernal), to spearhead their campaign. Against all odds, with scant resources and under scrutiny by the despot's minions, Saavedra and his team devise an audacious plan to win the election and set Chile free. The conversation was moderated by Richard Peña.

Explaining History (explaininghistory) (explaininghistory)

In 1973 the democratically elected socialist government of President Salvador Allende was overthrown in a violent US backed military coup led by general Augusto Pinochet. Following this seizure of power, tens of thousands of political dissidents were arrested, tortured and executed and economic shock therapy was administered to the country on a massive scale, mass privatisations, slashing of welfare programmes and carte blanche handed to multinational corporations to extract wealth from Chile. Help the podcast to continue bringing you history each weekIf you enjoy the Explaining History podcast and its many years of content and would like to help the show continue, please consider supporting it in the following ways:If you want to go ad-free, you can take out a membership hereOr You can support the podcast via Patreon hereOr you can just say some nice things about it here Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/explaininghistory. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Real Dictators
Pinochet Part 1: An Arrest in London

Real Dictators

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 50:48


We travel to South America. In September 1973, Augusto Pinochet seizes power in Chile following a coup d'état. The aim is to topple the country's socialist president. And it succeeds. But how does Pinochet - a seemingly unremarkable army man - come to lead the notorious uprising? And after that, how do he and his wife consolidate power, remaining in post for 17 long and bloody years? A Noiser production, written by Sean Coleman. Many thanks to John Bartlett, Mark Ensalaco, Peter Kornbluh. This is Part 1 of 3. Get every episode of Real Dictators a week early with Noiser+. You'll also get ad-free listening, bonus material and early access to shows across the Noiser network. Click the Noiser+ banner to get started. Or, if you're on Spotify or Android, go to noiser.com/subscriptions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Real Dictators
Introducing: D-Day: The Tide Turns - Episode 1

Real Dictators

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 54:13


This is a taster episode of a brand-new podcast from the Noiser network. Host Paul McGann follows the real people involved in the D-Day landings. It's 1944 and Europe is in the grip of the Nazi war machine. But on the shores of Great Britain, thousands of men and women are planning the great fightback. What will it take to turn the tide of World War 2? Search ‘D-Day: The Tide Turns' in your podcast app and hit follow to get new episodes each Thursday. Or listen at noiser.com Episode 2 is live now on D-Day: The Tide Turns. Real Dictators will be back soon with the story of Augusto Pinochet. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices