Podcasts about letelier

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Best podcasts about letelier

Latest podcast episodes about letelier

Tyran
Pinochet 3:4

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 25:27


Med mordet på Letelier har Pinochet trådt over stregen og forsøger nu at pudse sit rædselsregime af. Nationalstadionet i Santiago går fra torturcentral til koncertarena, hvor tusindvis jubler til den spanske crooner Julio Iglesias. For intet siger "alt er fint" som en stadionkoncert, vel? Men selvom torturen dæmpes, vinder Pinochet ikke folkets hjerter. Økonomisk krise og arbejdsløshed presser ham - og som kronen på værket venter intet mindre end et skæbnesvangert demokratisk valg lige om hjørnet. 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

Estrenos y Razones
"La contadora de películas", una superproducción con acento chileno

Estrenos y Razones

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 12:47


La esperada adaptación de la novela homónima de Hernán Rivera Letelier, impulsada por el destacado director brasileño Walter Salles quien además coescribió el guión junto a Rafa Russo e Isabel Coixet. Dirige la danesa Lone Scherfig ("Italiano para principiantes", "An Education"), a cargo de un elenco con grandes figuras internacionales como Bérénice Bejo y Daniel Brühl, junto a talentos nacionales como Sara Becker, Mario Horton y Pablo Schwarz. Ya disponible en salas de cine.

El Podcast de Nico Orellana
Éxito sin perder la salud con Marcial Letelier #77

El Podcast de Nico Orellana

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2024 74:43


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit norellana.substack.com

Voice of the water lily- our stories
Ep. 131 The Murder of Orlando Letelier

Voice of the water lily- our stories

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2024 59:49


Orlando Letelier's only crime was being part of and defending the legitimate government of Chile, that of Salvador Allende, his actions earning him a year long detention and severe torture. This didn't break him or stop him, Orlando moved to the united states and became the most vocal and prominent chilean exile fighting against Pinochet's rule, further incurring the wrath of the US backed dictator. The story that follows is one of the most overlooked acts of foreign terrorism in US history, terrorism that is tied to US interventionism in South  America.Special 48th anniversary commemorative episode. Songs:Al centro de la injusticia - Isabel Parra Manifiesto - Nano Stern Con el Alma Llena de Banderas - QuilapayúnEl Derecho de Vivir en Paz - Banda Conmocion, Roberto Marquez Vientos del Pueblo - Víctor Jara Audio clip sources:DemocracyNow!Chile: Promise of freedom

Programas Radio Hoy
Invitado: Hernán Letelier - @lookingfashion.cl | Gotika Magazine 28-08-24

Programas Radio Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 40:23


Música, invitados, concursos, buena conversación y más a cargo de la mejor agencia de comunicaciones. #COVID19​​​​ #GotikaMagazine​​​​​ #RadioHoy​​​​​ #Chile​​​​​ Invitado: Hernán Letelier - @lookingfashion.cl Todos los Miércoles de 19:00​​​​​​​​​ a 20:00​​​​​​​​​ Hrs por www.radiohoy.cl este y más programas en un solo lugar ingresa a http://radiohoy.cl/gotika-magazine/​

Podcasts sobre o Terceiro Setor
Conecta com Leonardo Letelier | Investimentos de impacto socioambiental positivo

Podcasts sobre o Terceiro Setor

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 48:42


Em mais esta edição do Conecta Terceiro Setor, vamos conversar sobre investimentos de alto impacto socioambiental positivo. Vamos aprender com Leonardo Letelier, CEO da Sitawi, quais as tendências deste tipo de investimento e como isso impacta diretamente as Organizações do Terceiro Setor. Acompanhe, curta e compartilhe esta edição e aprenda ainda mais sobre o Terceiro Setor.

TXS Plus
Rockstars con Gabriel León y Carina Letelier 17 de julio del 2024

TXS Plus

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 47:08


Rockstars con Gabriel León y Carina Letelier 17 de julio del 2024 by TXS Plus

Radio Duna - Duna en Punto
La defensa al CDE, todos contra Jadue y la crisis de Dina Boluarte

Radio Duna - Duna en Punto

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024


Rodrigo Álvarez conversón con Luis Cordero, se refirió a las críticas formuladas por el alcalde de Recoleta, Daniel Jadue, contra el presidente del Consejo de Defensa del Estado, Raúl Letelier y recurso de protección para que CDE no tenga acceso a chats de Hermosilla. Además, junto a Consuelo Saavedra Los Infiltrados, Paula Catena, periodista de LT, y Juan Paulo Iglesias, editor de opinión de LT, analizaron las esquirlas que salpican al alcalde y el escándalo de los relojes que golpea a Dina Boluarte.

24 Horas | Showcast - Noticias 24
Presidente del PPD por Daniel Jadue: “Debiera ser militante formalizado, militante suspendido”

24 Horas | Showcast - Noticias 24

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 12:59


Jaime Quintana, senador y presidente del PPD, se refirió en Canal 24 Horas al emplazamiento del alcalde de Recoleta Daniel Jadue en contra del presidente del CDE Raúl Letelier, a raíz de su formalización.

Programas Radio Hoy
Invitado: Hernan Letelier - Creador de @lookingfashion.cl | Gotika Magazine 31-01-24

Programas Radio Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2024 51:20


Música, invitados, concursos, buena conversación y más a cargo de la mejor agencia de comunicaciones. #COVID19​​​​ #GotikaMagazine​​​​​ #RadioHoy​​​​​ #Chile​​​​​ Invitado: Hernan Letelier - Creador de @lookingfashion.cl Todos los Miércoles de 19:00​​​​​​​​​ a 20:00​​​​​​​​​ Hrs por www.radiohoy.cl este y más programas en un solo lugar ingresa a http://radiohoy.cl/gotika-magazine/​

Traficantes de Cultura
Alan McPherson, autor de “Matar a Letelier”

Traficantes de Cultura

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2024 42:15


"El 21 de septiembre de 1976, una autobomba en la capital de Estados Unidos asesinó al excanciller de Salvador Allende, Orlando Letelier, y a su colaboradora, la estadounidense Ronni Moffitt. El atentado causó impacto mundial, pues ocurrió a catorce cuadras de la Casa Blanca y acabó con la vida de uno de los opositores más activos a la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet. En un tranquilo barrio de embajadas y parques, Letelier y Moffitt murieron desangrados, ante la consternación de policías y transeúntes. Las sospechas de ambas familias fueron confirmadas por la investigación del FBI: el crimen había sido obra del régimen chileno, a quien Estados Unidos consideraba un aliado."   Conversamos en el #TraficantesDeCultura con el historiador estadounidense Alan McPherson, autor de Matar a Letelier, libro editado por UN DÍA EN LA VIDA y CATALONIA.   Conduce: Humberto Fuentes

Podcast de Radio Ritoque
Podcast: conversamos con ronald smith sobre su nuevo programa en ritoque fm, “valparaíso salvaje”

Podcast de Radio Ritoque

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 26:14


El martes 14 de noviembre, Alejandro “Kano” Brito se hizo cargo del programa #CiudadAbierta y en esta ocasión recibió a Ronald Smith, destacado hombre de radio de la región del Valparaíso que ha llevado una trayectoria dilatada en emisoras como UCV, Valentín Letelier y proyectos digitales. En esta ocasión, Smith llega a Radio Ritoque con una nueva serie de 20 capítulos titulados “Valparaíso Salvaje” una revisión necesaria a la música hecha y escuchada en Valparaíso durante los años de 1970 a 1973, un viaje en el tiempo en donde la memoria y la reconstrucción histórica serán el motivo para forjar en las nuevas generaciones una valoración sobre el espacio que se habita. En la entrevista Ronald Smith abordó su trayectoria, visión del valor histórico que estos documentos tienen, así como de la necesitad de recordar no desde la nostalgia, sino que desde la confección de nuevos referentes en las generaciones contemporáneas, entendiendo estos procesos como parte de un continuo del que también somos parte en la actualidad, que aunque con una realidad sociocultural diferente, presenta punto de encuentro con nuestro pasado de hace medio siglo.

Linkea2 con la Ciencia
Efecto Ciencia: /Astrofotografía: Puente entre ciencia y arte - Cari Letelier - Astrofotógrafa y divulgadora de astronomía.

Linkea2 con la Ciencia

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2023 15:04


En este capítulo conversamos con Cari Letelier, astrofotógrafa, quien nos relató acerca de su profesión.Escucha Efecto Ciencia por Ufro radio.

West Central Tribune Minute
WCT Sports Spotlight w/ Fernanda Ossa Letelier

West Central Tribune Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 13:09


West Central Tribune sports reporter Michael Lyne returns for Season 2 of the WCT Sports Spotlight Show. In the return of the show, Lyne chats with Willmar girls soccer senior midfielder Fernanda Ossa Letelier. One of four captains for the Cardinals, Ossa Letelier previews the Cardinals' season and more throughout the show.

Radio Universidad de Chile
Testigos 1973-2023. Capítulo 7: Sergio "Pirincho" Cárcamo

Radio Universidad de Chile

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 51:28


El mítico locutor chileno fue, durante la Unidad Popular, una de las voces de la Radio Valentín Letelier, de la Universidad de Chile sede Valparaíso y actual Universidad de Valparaíso, desde donde se impulsó la poderosa movida cultural porteña, en ámbitos como el cine de Aldo Francia o músicos como Los Jaivas, Congreso, el Gitano Rodríguez y Payo Grondona. Fue un testigo privilegiado de la Revolución Cultural y también, luego, del dolor y la represión.

Livros da Piça
Livro do Car*lho 5 - um interlúdio - "Rainha Isabel Cantava Rancheras" | Hermán Rivera Letelier

Livros da Piça

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 21:05


"Rainha Isabel Cantava Rancheras" do mineiro-escritor chileno Hernán Rivera Letelier. É um livro do c*ralho de um autor do c*ralho. Se ficarem entusiasmados com esta recomendação e cheios de vontade de adquirir livros deste autor dificilmente o poderão fazer porque: estão esgotados*. Poderão sempre fazer uma petição ou um tiktok. Ou recorrer a alfarrabistas ou bibliotecas. Karma equilibrado e até para a semana, já com o ódio habitual restabelecido. Sigam-nos e comentem este episódio em: instagram: https://www.instagram.com/livrosdapica/ twitter: https://twitter.com/livrosdapica *não é bem verdade, há alguns exemplares usados à venda por aí.

Preciso y Conciso
Astrofotógrafa chilena Reconocida y premiada por la Nasa. Entrevista a Cari Letelier.

Preciso y Conciso

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 39:24


Cari Letelier, es una apasionada astrofotógrafa y divulgadora de astronomía chilena que cumplió el sueño de ser reconocida por la NASA. Su fascinación y tenacidad por el estudio y la enseñanza de la astrofotografía le han valido más que muchos años de experiencia. Al ver que otros fotógrafos elogiaban sus trabajos, comenzó a pensar en cómo podía vivir de ello y un amigo le sugirió enseñar. Tras un año de su primera foto, a fines de 2018 tuvo que tomar una de las decisiones más importantes: elegir entre su vida estable con su marido, o dejarlo todo para comenzar un viaje con las estrellas.

Government Secrets  Podcast
Assassination of Orlando Letelier Operation Condor - Gov Secs Ep 125

Government Secrets Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2023 68:37


Graham talks about Operation Condor and Lee shows how great the FBI is. 

TXS Plus
Txs Health con Andrea Obaid, Joaquín Letelier y Diego Reyes, 13 de junio del 2023

TXS Plus

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 43:02


Txs Health con Andrea Obaid, Joaquín Letelier y Diego Reyes, 13 de junio del 2023 by TXS Plus

A Smaller Life
60 - Pilar Letelier of Cabeza de Alfiler - Overcoming the fear of Copy Cats, using the Power of Branding and Peer Support

A Smaller Life

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 56:58


On this episode of A Smaller Life, Pilar and Saskia discuss several key aspects of running a creative business. They emphasize the importance of having a clear vision for your business, delegating tasks to others, and finding support from peers. They also address the fear of being copied by competitors and suggest owning your brand as the best way to combat this. Finally, they highlight the importance of having a strong sense of purpose and working towards it with passion and dedication.FULL SHOWNOTES WITH TAKEAWAYShttps://www.asmallerlife.com/60BEST QUOTES FROM THE EPISODE"I wake up every morning with a drive. To take the next step and come closer to the vision and work on my mission." - Saskia"It's good to have that communication with the team and to let them know what the purpose, the vision, and where we are going to." - Pilar"By emphasising what makes your business unique and special, you can stand out from the competition and maintain your identity." - Pilar and SaskiaLINKSUse my Flodesk 50% off DISCOUNT CODEDOWNLOAD the Core Focus Compass HERECONNECT WITH PILARhttps://cabezadealfiler.clCONNECT WITH SASKIA @ A SMALLER LIFE + JA, WOLwebsite www.asmallerlife.com community https://community.ja-wol.come-mail info@ja-wol.comSUBSCRIBE TO A SMALLER LIFEGET MAIL HERE!JOIN THE BUSINESS CIRCLE WAITING LISTGet -50% for the easy to use and beautiful Flodesk Email Service Provider plan with my affiliate link: https://flodesk.com/c/ASMALLERLIFE (I get a discount if you use the discount, this helps me pay for the cost of making the podcast. I only share companies that share my values and products that I love!)Support the show☞ PATREON SUPPORT by becoming a patron here and Pay-What-You-Can. ☞ JOIN OUR COMMUNITY jawolcommunity.com (free plan available) ☞ SUBSCRIBE TO THE BUSINESS CIRCLE ☞ SUBSCRIBE TO THE Journey to Wardrobe Consciousness Membership☞ NO BUDGET SUPPORT Simply rate, review and subscribe to the podcast. Or point a friend in our direction!

El Podcast de Nico Orellana
E06 - Marcial Letelier y las claves de una vida saludable.

El Podcast de Nico Orellana

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 77:24


Conversamos de vida saludable y como los emprendedores podemos sacarle provecho. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit norellana.substack.com

Naukowo
Pozytywne kłamstwa dzieci, umiejętne biczowanie i wulkaniczne eksplozje życia - #060

Naukowo

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 20:34 Transcription Available


Jak trudno jest zręcznie posługiwać się elastycznymi przedmiotami takimi jak bicz czy sznurowadła? Jak dorośli oceniają dzieci, które zręcznie posługują się kłamstwem i pomijają bolesną prawdę? W dzisiejszym odcinku opowiem też o tym jak polujące na nietoperze myszołowy celują w swoje ofiary, przyjrzymy się też eksplozji życia spowodowanej eksplozją wulkanu. Zapraszam serdecznie!Jeśli uznasz, że warto wspierać ten projekt to zapraszam do serwisu Patronite, każda dobrowolna wpłata od słuchaczy pozwoli mi na rozwój i doskonalenie tego podkastu, bardzo dziękuję za każde wsparcie!Zapraszam również na Facebooka, Twittera i Instagrama, każdy lajk i udostępnienie pomoże w szerszym dotarciu do słuchaczy, a to jest teraz moim głównym celem :) Na stronie Naukowo.net znajdziesz więcej interesujących artykułów naukowych, zachęcam również do dyskusji na tematy naukowe, dzieleniu się wiedzą i nowościami z naukowego świata na naszym serwerze Discord - https://discord.gg/mqsjM5THXrŹródła użyte przy tworzeniu odcinka:Krotov Aleksei, Russo Marta, Nah Moses, Hogan Neville and Sternad Dagmar 2022Motor control beyond reach—how humans hit a target with a whipR. Soc. open sci.9220581220581. http://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.220581Brighton, C.H., Kloepper, L.N., Harding, C.D. et al. Raptors avoid the confusion effect by targeting fixed points in dense aerial prey aggregations. Nat Commun 13, 4778 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32354-5B. Barone, R. M. Letelier, K. H. Rubin, D. M. Karl. "Satellite Detection of a Massive Phytoplankton Bloom Following the 2022 Submarine Eruption of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Haʻapai Volcano", https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL099293L. Brimbal, A. M. Crossman. "Inconvenient truth-tellers: Perceptions of children's blunt honesty". https://doi.org/10.1080/03057240.2022.2109606

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza
Vivir como Cristo | Pastora Jessica Letelier

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 46:15


Podemos tener diferencias pero aprendamos a sobrellevarnos y amarnos ¡Amémonos con amor fraterno como lo haría Jesús!

TXS Plus
Rockstars con Gabriel León y Hernán Rivera Letelier. 14 de septiembre del 2022.

TXS Plus

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 48:44


Rockstars con Gabriel León y Hernán Rivera Letelier. 14 de septiembre del 2022. by TXS Plus

Radio Duna - Aire Fresco
El nuevo libro de Matías Prado y el premio a Hernán Rivera Letelier

Radio Duna - Aire Fresco

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2022


Polo Ramírez revisó las principales tendencias del día junto a Mariajosé Soto y conversó con el ilustrador chileno Matías Prado, quien entregó detalles sobre su último libro, llamado “El Coleccionista”, además comentó sobre su trayectoria y el camino que ha recorrido como artista. En el segundo bloque el escritor Hernán Rivera Letelier se refirió al Premio Nacional de Literatura que acaba de obtener este año. También hizo frente a las críticas, a sus lectores y a su obra.

24 Horas | Showcast - Vía Pública
Hernán Rivera Letelier presenta libro escrito durante pandemia: "Hombres que llegan a un pueblo"

24 Horas | Showcast - Vía Pública

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 21:15


El escritor nacional presentó su más reciente libro escrito durante la cuarentena -donde estuvo un año sin salir- y editado bajo el sello Alfaguara: "Hombres que llegan a un pueblo", el que contiene tres novelas breves ambientadas en la pampa salitrera. Además, habló sobre la enfermedad que lo aqueja y que está afectando su voz.

24 Horas | Showcast - Vía Pública
Hernán Rivera Letelier presenta libro escrito durante pandemia: "Hombres que llegan a un pueblo"

24 Horas | Showcast - Vía Pública

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 21:15


El escritor nacional presentó su más reciente libro escrito durante la cuarentena -donde estuvo un año sin salir- y editado bajo el sello Alfaguara: "Hombres que llegan a un pueblo", el que contiene tres novelas breves ambientadas en la pampa salitrera. Además, habló sobre la enfermedad que lo aqueja y que está afectando su voz.

Procesalmente hablando
Ministerio Público y Defensoría Penal Pública en el borrador de nueva Constitución: con Enrique Letelier Loyola

Procesalmente hablando

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 53:15


Bienvenidos a una nueva temporada del primer Podcast de Derecho Procesal chileno, esta vez bajo la dirección del Semillero de Derecho Procesal UCN Coquimbo. Conversan, Fabián Suazo, estudiante y ayudante de la cátedra de Derecho Procesal Penal de nuestra escuela y el prof. de la U. de Valparaíso, el Dr. Enrique Letelier Loyola. Gracias por seguirnos y escucharnos.

Brand Banter Podcast
Episode 9: Carolina Cruz-Letelier, Partner + Managing Director @ MUH-TAY-ZIK / HOF-FER

Brand Banter Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 43:26


On 'Episode 9: Carolina Cruz-Letelier, Partner, Managing Director @ MUH-TAY-ZIK / HOF-FER' of the Brand Banter Podcast, the guys were lucky enough to welcome on Carolina Cruz-Letelier, Partner + Managing Director at MUH-TAY-ZIK / HOF-FER (occasionally referred to on-pod as 'MH'), a full-service shop under the VCCP umbrella in San Francisco. During the pod, Carolina bantered about her journey, the evolution + current state of industry trends, and shared some awesome behind-the-scenes stories from some of MUH-TAY-ZIK / HOF-FER's prolific work with notable brands Staples, Audi, and the Golden State Warriors! Per Carolina's 'Shameless Plug Shill' segment, definitely be sure to check out: To our surprise, us! -- your one-stop-shop for all applicable podcast info/social links = https://linktr.ee/BrandBanterPodcast We can't thank Carolina enough for agreeing to come on the pod, it was an absolute blast chatting with her and hope to have her back on sometime in the future. If you enjoyed the interview as much as we did, be sure to let us know your thoughts, favorite conversation moment, as well as any additional events/brands/topics/conversation points you'd like covered in future episodes! Make sure to tune in for weekly episodes with industry professional interviews, segments, as well as special event coverage (e.g. Super Bowl, SXSW, Cannes Lions, etc.). Be sure to LIKE, SUBSCRIBE, and RATE wherever you consume the podcast, checking us out on all socials: Instagram - @BrandBanterPod | (Luke) @lukep1e | (Jack) @jack_carlson17 Twitter - @BrandBanterPod | (Luke) @lukep1e | (Jack) @TheRealJC17 LinkedIn - Brand Banter Podcast | (Luke) Luke Pieczynski | (Jack) Jack Carlson --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brandbanterpodcast/message

TXS Plus
Jóvenes Estrellas con Bernardita Cadiz y Luis Alfredo Letelier. 9 de mayo del 2022.

TXS Plus

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 48:02


Jóvenes Estrellas con Bernardita Cadiz y Luis Alfredo Letelier. 9 de mayo del 2022. by TXS Plus

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza
¿Puede Dios librarte? | Pastora Jessica Letelier

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 48:24


Dios puede librarnos aunque tengamos todas las imposibilidades en contra, solo Él puede llevarnos a la victoria.

The Strategy Inside Everything
Carolina Cruz-Letelier is a realistic optimist.

The Strategy Inside Everything

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 45:58


Carolina Cruz-Letelier has seen career growth from a lot of different angles. From brand side to agency side to jumping to new cities without a job, she's had a chance to think about how people adapt to new teams and organizations, and what prevents success there. Over the wild (understatement?) past years, she's been working with her team at MUH-TAY-ZIK | HOF-FER, to figure out what "culture" really is in the agency and how a new, largely remote team can come together in spirit to deliver great work, and feel like a cohesive unit.  Send us your thoughts about this show: Tweet at us @apierno or @strategy_inside. Leave us a voice message: https://anchor.fm/adam-pierno/message. Music for The Strategy Inside Everything is by Sawsquarenoise. Host Adam Pierno is an author, speaker and strategy consultant. Learn more at adampierno.com.  If you'd like to support the podcast, you can here: https://anchor.fm/adam-pierno/support --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/adam-pierno/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/adam-pierno/support

music realistic optimists letelier carolina cruz sawsquarenoise
Alive, or Just Blethering
[#040] ... About Ascendency by Trivium (with Robbie Letelier)

Alive, or Just Blethering

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 88:55


BOAT! RUDDER! STRANGE! MOUNTAIN! We dove into a classic metalcore album from 2005, the sophomore Trivium breakthrough record 'Ascendency'. Joined by our special guest Robbie Letelier, we talk Trivium albums, old and new, and what this band means to us in 2022. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

20 Minute Leaders
Ep772: Carolina Cruz-Letelier | Partner & Managing Director, MUH-TAY-ZIK / HOF-FER

20 Minute Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 20:35


She's been with the agency for nearly nine years, starting out in 2011 as an Account Manager, and now serving as Managing Director and Partner. Prior to joining M/H, Carolina had a two-year stint at Goodby Silverstein & Partners working on Chevrolet and Denny's. Before her time at GS&P, she worked at Fuse TV in Ad Sales helping to create and build integrated programs for clients such as Burger King, Kia Motors, and Mars.Carolina is passionate about leading her teams and being an empathetic leader is ingrained in who she is, so I think she would be a great guest to speak to how marketing/agency teams should be treating each other and their relationships with clients and on her career and how she rose to become a partner at the agency.

Midnight Train Podcast
What Are the Archives of Terror?

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 93:53


Support the show and receive bonus episodes by becoming a Patreon producer over at: www.themidnighttrainpodcast.com  Archives of terror Archivos del Terror were found on december 22, 1992 by a lawyer and human rights activist, strange how those two titles are in the same sentence, Dr. Martín Almada, and Judge José Agustín Fernández. Found in a police station in the suburbs of Paraguay known as Asunción.   Fernandez was looking for files on a former prisoner. Instead, stumbled across an archive describing the fates of thousands of Latin Americans who had been secretly kidnapped, tortured, and killed by the security services of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay with the help of our friendly neighborhood CIA. Known as Operation Condor.   “Operation Condor was a U.S. backed campaign of political repression and state terror involving intelligence operations and assassination of opponents.”   Let's go back a ways toward the beginning. One day, a young guy, wanted to fuck up the world and created the CIA. JK… but not really.   So we go back to 1968 where General Robert W. Porter said that "in order to facilitate the coordinated employment of internal security forces within and among Latin American countries, we are ... endeavoring to foster inter-service and regional cooperation by assisting in the organization of integrated command and control centers; the establishment of common operating procedures; and the conduct of joint and combined training exercises."   According to former secret CIA documents from 1976, plans were developed among international security officials at the US Army School of the Americas and the Conference of American Armies in the 1960s and early 1970s to deal with perceived threats in South America from political dissidents, according to American historian J. Patrice McSherry. "In early 1974, security officials from Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Bolivia convened in Buenos Aires to prepare synchronized attacks against subversive targets," according to a declassified CIA memo dated June 23, 1976.   Following a series of military-led coups d'états, particularly in the 1970s, the program was established: General Alfredo Stroessner took control of Paraguay in 1954 General Francisco Morales-Bermúdez takes control of Peru after a successful coup in 1975 The Brazilian military overthrew the president João Goulart in 1964 General Hugo Banzer took power in Bolivia in 1971 through a series of coups A military dictatorship seized power in Uruguay on 27 June 1973 Chilean armed forces commanded by General Augusto Pinochet bombed the presidential palace in Chile on 11 September 1973, overthrowing democratically elected president Salvador Allende A military dictatorship headed by General Jorge Rafael Videla seized power in Argentina on 24 March 1976   According to American journalist A. J. Langguth, the CIA organized the first meetings between Argentinian and Uruguayan security officials regarding the surveillance (and subsequent disappearance or assassination) of political refugees in these countries, as well as its role as an intermediary in the meetings between Argentinian, Uruguayan, and Brazilian death squads.   According to the National Security Archive's documentary evidence from US, Paraguayan, Argentine, and Chilean files, "Founded by the Pinochet regime in November 1975, Operation Condor was the codename for a formal Southern Cone collaboration that included transnational secret intelligence activities, kidnapping, torture, disappearance, and assassination." Several persons were slain as part of this codename mission. "Notable Condor victims include two former Uruguayan legislators and a former Bolivian president, Juan José Torres, murdered in Buenos Aires, a former Chilean Minister of the Interior, Bernardo Leighton, and former Chilean ambassador Orlando Letelier and his 26-year-old American colleague, Ronni Moffitt, assassinated by a car bomb in downtown Washington D.C.," according to the report.   Prior to the formation of Operation Condor, there had been cooperation among various security services with the goal of "eliminating Marxist subversion." On September 3, 1973, at the Conference of American Armies in Caracas, Brazilian General Breno Borges Fortes, the chief of the Brazilian army, urged that various services "expand the interchange of information" in order to "fight against subversion."   Representatives from Chile, Uruguay, and Bolivia's police forces met with Alberto Villar, deputy chief of the Argentine Federal Police and co-founder of the Triple A killing squad, in March 1974 to discuss collaboration standards. Their purpose was to eliminate the "subversive" threat posed by Argentina's tens of thousands of political exiles. Bolivian immigrants' bodies were discovered at rubbish dumps in Buenos Aires in August 1974. Based on recently revealed CIA records dated June 1976, McSherry corroborated the kidnapping and torture of Chilean and Uruguayan exiles living in Buenos Aires during this time.   On General Augusto Pinochet's 60th birthday, November 25, 1975, in Santiago de Chile, heads of the military intelligence services of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay met with Manuel Contreras, commander of the Chilean secret police, to officially establish the Plan Condor. General Rivero, an intelligence officer in the Argentine Armed Forces and a former student of the French, devised the concept of Operation Condor, according to French writer Marie-Monique Robin, author of Escadrons de la death, l'école française (2004, Death Squads, The French School).   Officially, the targets were armed groups (such as the MIR, the Montoneros or the ERP, the Tupamaros, etc.) based on the governments' perceptions of threats, but the governments expanded their attacks to include all types of political opponents, including their families and others, as reported by the Valech Commission, which is known as The National Commission on Political Imprisonment and Torture Report. The Argentine "Dirty War," for example, kidnapped, tortured, and assassinated many trade unionists, relatives of activists, social activists such as the founders of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, nuns, university professors, and others, according to most estimates.   The Chilean DINA and its Argentine counterpart, SIDE, were the operation's front-line troops from 1976 forward. The infamous "death flights," which were postulated in Argentina by Luis Mara Menda and deployed by French forces during the Algerian War (1954–62), were widely used. Government forces flew or helicoptered victims out to sea, where they were dumped to die in premeditated disappearances. According to reports, the OPR-33 facility in Argentina was destroyed as a result of the military bombardment. Members of Plan Condor met in Santiago, Chile, in May 1976, to discuss "long-range collaboration... [that] went well beyond intelligence exchange" and to assign code names to the participating countries. The CIA acquired information in July that Plan Condor participants planned to strike "against leaders of indigenous terrorist groups residing overseas."   Several corpses washed up on beaches south of Buenos Aires in late 1977 as a result of extraordinary storms, providing evidence of some of the government's victims. Hundreds of newborns and children were removed from women in prison who had been kidnapped and later disappeared; the children were then given to families and associates of the dictatorship in clandestine adoptions. According to the CIA, Operation Condor countries reacted positively to the concept of cooperating and built their own communications network as well as joint training programs in areas like psychological warfare.    The military governments in South America were coming together to join forces for security concerns, according to a memo prepared by Assistant Secretary of State for Latin America Harry W. Shlaudeman to Kissinger on August 3, 1976. They were anxious about the growth of Marxism and the consequences it would have on their dominance. This new force worked in secret in the countries of other members. Their mission: to track out and murder "Revolutionary Coordinating Committee" terrorists in their own nations and throughout Europe.Shlaudeman voiced fear that the members of Operation Condor's "siege mindset" could lead to a wider divide between military and civilian institutions in the region. He was also concerned that this would further isolate these countries from developed Western countries. He argued that some of these anxieties were justified, but that by reacting too harshly, these countries risked inciting a violent counter-reaction comparable to the PLO's in Israel.   Chile and Argentina were both active in using communications medium for the purpose of transmitting propaganda, according to papers from the United States dated April 17, 1977. The propaganda's goal was to accomplish two things. The first goal was to defuse/counter international media criticism of the governments involved, and the second goal was to instill national pride in the local population. "Chile after Allende," a propaganda piece developed by Chile, was sent to the states functioning under Condor. The paper, however, solely mentions Uruguay and Argentina as the only two countries that have signed the deal. The government of Paraguay was solely identified as using the local press, "Patria," as its primary source of propaganda. Due to the reorganisation of both Argentina's and Paraguay's intelligence organizations, a meeting scheduled for March 1977 to discuss "psychological warfare measures against terrorists and leftist extremists" was canceled.   One "component of the campaign including Chile, Uruguay, and Argentina envisages unlawful operations beyond Latin America against expatriate terrorists, primarily in Europe," according to a 2016 declassified CIA study titled "Counterterrorism in the Southern Cone." "All military-controlled regimes in the Southern Cone consider themselves targets of international Marxism," the memo stated. Condor's fundamental characteristic was highlighted in the document, which came to fruition in early 1974 when "security officials from all of the member countries, except Brazil, agreed to establish liaison channels and to facilitate the movement of security officers on government business from one country to the other," as part of a long-tested "regional approach" to pacifying "subversion." Condor's "initial aims" included the "exchange of information on the Revolutionary Coordinating Junta (RCJ), an organization...of terrorist groups from Bolivia, Uruguay, Chile, Argentina, and Paraguay" with "representatives" in Europe "believed to have been involved in the assassinations in Paris of the Bolivian ambassador to France last May and a Uruguayan military attache in 1974." Condor's primary purpose, according to the CIA assessment, was to eliminate "top-level terrorist leaders" as well as non-terrorist targets such as "Uruguayan opposition figure Wilson Ferreira, if he should travel to Europe, and some leaders of Amnesty International." Condor was also suspected by the CIA of being "involved in nonviolent actions, including as psychological warfare and a propaganda campaign" that used the media's power to "publicize terrorist crimes and atrocities." Condor also urged citizens in its member countries to "report anything out of the norm in their surroundings" in an appeal to "national pride and national conscience." Another meeting took place in 1980, and Montensero was apprehended. The RSO allegedly promised not to kill them if they agreed to collaborate and provide information on upcoming meetings in Rio.   So, after all of this mumbo jumbo, let's recap.    50,000 people were killed, 30,000 disappeared, and 400,000 were imprisoned, according to the "terror archives."  A letter signed by Manuel Contreras, the chief of Chile's National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) at the time, inviting Paraguayan intelligence personnel to Santiago for a clandestine "First Working Meeting on National Intelligence" on November 25, 1975, was also uncovered. The presence of intelligence chiefs from Argentina, Bolivia, and Uruguay at the meetings was also confirmed by this letter, indicating that those countries were also involved in the formulation of Operation Condor. Colombia, Peru, and Venezuela are among the countries named in the archives as having collaborated to varying degrees by giving intelligence information that had been sought by the security agencies of the Southern Cone countries. Parts of the archives, which are presently housed in Asunción's Palace of Justice, have been used to prosecute former military officers in some of these countries. Those records were used extensively in Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón's prosecution against Chilean General Augusto Pinochet. Baltasar Garzón interviewed Almada twice after he was a Condor victim.   "[The records] represent a mound of shame and lies that Stroessner [Paraguay's ruler until 1989] used to blackmail the Paraguayan people for 40 years," Almada said. He wants the "terror archives" to be listed as an international cultural site by UNESCO, as this would make it much easier to get funds to maintain and protect the records.   In May 2000, a UNESCO mission visited Asunción in response to a request from the Paraguayan government for assistance in registering these files on the Memory of the World Register, which is part of a program aimed at preserving and promoting humanity's documentary heritage by ensuring that records are preserved and accessible.   Now that we are all caught up, let's talk about a few noteworthy events. First we go to Argentina.   Argentina was ruled by military juntas from 1976 until 1983 under Operation Condor, which was a civic-military dictatorship. In countless incidents of desaparecidos, the Argentine SIDE collaborated with the Chilean DINA. In Buenos Aires, they assassinated Chilean General Carlos Prats, former Uruguayan MPs Zelmar Michelini and Héctor Gutiérrez Ruiz, and former Bolivian President Juan José Torres. With the support of Italian Gladio operator Stefano Delle Chiaie and Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, the SIDE aided Bolivian commander Luis Garca Meza Tejada's Cocaine Coup (see also Operation Charly). Since the release of secret records, it has been revealed that at ESMA, there were operational units made up of Italians who were utilized to suppress organizations of Italian Montoneros. Gaetano Saya, the Officer of the Italian stay behind next - Operation Gladio, led this outfit known as "Shadow Group." The Madres de la Square de Mayo, a group of mothers whose children had vanished, began protesting every Thursday in front of the Casa Rosada on the plaza in April 1977. They wanted to know where their children were and what happened to them. The abduction of two French nuns and other founders of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo in December 1977 drew worldwide notice. Their corpses were later recognized among the deceased washed up on beaches south of Buenos Aires in December 1977, victims of death planes.   In 1983, when Argentina's democracy was restored, the government established the National Commission for Forced Disappearances (CONADEP), which was chaired by writer Ernesto Sabato. It gathered testimony from hundreds of witnesses about regime victims and known atrocities, as well as documenting hundreds of secret jails and detention sites and identifying torture and execution squad leaders. The Juicio a las Juntas (Juntas Trial) two years later was mostly successful in proving the crimes of the top commanders of the numerous juntas that had composed the self-styled National Reorganization Process. Most of the top officers on trial, including Jorge Rafael Videla, Emilio Eduardo Massera, Roberto Eduardo Viola, Armando Lambruschini, Ral Agosti, Rubén Graffigna, Leopoldo Galtieri, Jorge Anaya, and Basilio Lami Dozo, were convicted and sentenced to life in prison.   Following these trials, Ral Alfonsn's administration implemented two amnesty laws, the 1986 Ley de Punto Final (law of closure) and the 1987 Ley de Obediencia Debida (law of due obedience), which ended prosecution of crimes committed during the Dirty War. In an attempt at healing and reconciliation, President Carlos Menem pardoned the junta's leaders who were serving prison sentences in 1989–1990.   Due to attacks on American citizens in Argentina and revelations about CIA funding of the Argentine military in the late 1990s, and despite an explicit 1990 Congressional prohibition, US President Bill Clinton ordered the declassification of thousands of State Department documents relating to US-Argentine relations dating back to 1954. These documents exposed American involvement in the Dirty War and Operation Condor.   Following years of protests by the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo and other human rights organizations, the Argentine Congress overturned the amnesty legislation in 2003, with the full support of President Nestor Kirchner and the ruling majority in both chambers. In June 2005, the Argentine Supreme Court deemed them unlawful after a separate assessment. The government was able to resume prosecution of crimes committed during the Dirty War as a result of the court's decision.    Enrique Arancibia Clavel, a DINA civil agent who was charged with crimes against humanity in Argentina in 2004, was sentenced to life in prison for his role in the death of General Prats. Stefano Delle Chiaie, a suspected Italian terrorist, is also said to have been involved in the murder. In Rome in December 1995, he and fellow extreme Vincenzo Vinciguerra testified before federal judge Mara Servini de Cubra that DINA operatives Clavel and Michael Townley were intimately involved in the assassination. Judge Servini de Cubra demanded that Mariana Callejas (Michael Townley's wife) and Cristoph Willikie, a retired Chilean army colonel, be extradited in 2003 because they were also accused of being complicit in the murder. Nibaldo Segura, a Chilean appeals court judge, declined extradition in July 2005, claiming that they had already been prosecuted in Chile.   Twenty-five former high-ranking military commanders from Argentina and Uruguay were charged on March 5, 2013, in Buenos Aires with conspiring to "kidnap, disappear, torture, and kill" 171 political opponents throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Former Argentine "presidents" Jorge Videla and Reynaldo Bignone, both from the El Proceso era, are among the defendants. Prosecutors are relying on declassified US records collected by the National Security Archive, a non-governmental entity established at George Washington University in Washington, DC, in the 1990s and later.   On May 27, 2016, fifteen former military personnel were found guilty. Reynaldo Bignone was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Fourteen of the remaining 16 defendants were sentenced to eight to twenty-five years in prison. Two of the defendants were found not guilty.  A lawyer for the victims' relatives, Luz Palmás Zalda, claims that "This decision is significant since it is the first time Operation Condor's existence has been proven in court. It's also the first time former Condor members have been imprisoned for their roles in the criminal organization."    Anyone wanna go to Brazil?   In the year 2000, President Fernando Henrique Cardoso ordered the publication of some military documents related to Operation Condor. There are documents proving that in that year, attorney general Giancarlo Capaldo, an Italian magistrate, investigated the "disappearances" of Italian citizens in Latin America, which were most likely caused by the actions of Argentine, Paraguayan, Chilean, and Brazilian military personnel who tortured and murdered Italian citizens during Latin American military dictatorships. There was a list containing the names of eleven Brazilians accused of murder, kidnapping, and torture, as well as several high-ranking military personnel from other countries involved in the operation.   "(...) I can neither affirm nor deny because Argentine, Brazilian, Paraguayan, and Chilean soldiers [military men] will be subject to criminal trial until December," the Magistrate said on October 26, 2000.   According to the Italian government's official statement, it was unclear whether the government would prosecute the accused military officers or not. As of November 2021, no one in Brazil had been convicted of human rights violations for actions committed during the 21-year military dictatorship because the Amnesty Law had protected both government officials and leftist guerrillas.   In November 1978, the Condor Operation expanded its covert persecution from Uruguay to Brazil, in an incident dubbed "o Sequestro dos Uruguaios," or "the Kidnapping of the Uruguayans." Senior officials of the Uruguayan army crossed the border into Porto Alegre, the capital of the State of Rio Grande do Sul, with the permission of the Brazilian military administration. They kidnapped Universindo Rodriguez and Lilian Celiberti, a political activist couple from Uruguay, as well as her two children, Camilo and Francesca, who are five and three years old.   The unlawful operation failed because an anonymous phone call notified two Brazilian journalists, Veja magazine reporter Luiz Cláudio Cunha and photographer Joo Baptista Scalco, that the Uruguayan couple had been "disappeared." The two journalists traveled to the specified address, a Porto Alegre apartment, to double-check the facts. The armed men who had arrested Celiberti mistook the journalists for other political opposition members when they came, and they were arrested as well. Universindo Rodriguez and the children had already been brought to Uruguay under the table.   The journalists' presence had exposed the secret operation when their identities were revealed. It was put on hold. As news of the political kidnapping of Uruguayan nationals in Brazil made headlines in the Brazilian press, it is thought that the operation's disclosure avoided the death of the couple and their two young children. It became a worldwide embarrassment. Both Brazil's and Uruguay's military governments were humiliated. Officials arranged for the Celibertis' children to be transported to their maternal grandparents in Montevideo a few days later. After being imprisoned and tortured in Brazil, Rodriguez and Celiberti were transferred to Uruguayan military cells and held there for the next five years. The couple were released after Uruguay's democracy was restored in 1984. They confirmed every element of their kidnapping that had previously been reported.   In 1980, two DOPS (Department of Political and Social Order, an official police unit in charge of political repression during the military administration) inspectors were found guilty of arresting the journalists in Lilian's apartment in Porto Alegre by Brazilian courts. Joo Augusto da Rosa and Orandir Portassi Lucas were their names. They had been identified as participants in the kidnapping by the media and Uruguayans. This occurrence confirmed the Brazilian government's active involvement in the Condor Operation. Governor Pedro Simon arranged for the state of Rio Grande do Sul to legally recognize the Uruguayans' kidnapping and compensate them financially in 1991. A year later, President Luis Alberto Lacalle's democratic government in Uruguay was encouraged to do the same.   The Uruguayan couple identified Pedro Seelig, the head of the DOPS at the time of the kidnapping, as the guy in charge of the operation in Porto Alegre. Universindo and Llian remained in prison in Uruguay and were unable to testify when Seelig was on trial in Brazil. Due to a lack of proof, the Brazilian cop was acquitted. Later testimony from Lilian and Universindo revealed that four officers from Uruguay's secret Counter-Information Division – two majors and two captains – took part in the operation with the permission of Brazilian authorities. In the DOPS headquarters in Porto Alegre, Captain Glauco Yanonne was personally responsible for torturing Universindo Rodriquez. Universindo and Lilian were able to identify the Uruguayan military men who had arrested and tortured them, but none of them were prosecuted in Montevideo. Uruguayan individuals who committed acts of political repression and human rights violations under the dictatorship were granted pardon under the Law of Immunity, which was approved in 1986. Cunha and Scalco were given the 1979 Esso Prize, considered the most significant prize in Brazilian journalism, for their investigative journalism on the case.  Hugo Cores, a former political prisoner from Uruguay, was the one who had warned Cunha. He told the Brazilian press in 1993: All the Uruguayans kidnapped abroad, around 180 people, are missing to this day. The only ones who managed to survive are Lilian, her children, and Universindo.   Joo "Jango" Goulart was the first Brazilian president to die in exile after being deposed. On December 6, 1976, he died in his sleep in Mercedes, Argentina, of a suspected heart attack. The true cause of his death was never determined because an autopsy was never performed. On April 26, 2000, Leonel Brizola, Jango's brother-in-law and former governor of Rio de Janeiro and Rio Grande do Sul, claimed that ex-presidents Joo Goulart and Juscelino Kubitschek (who died in a vehicle accident) were assassinated as part of Operation Condor. He demanded that an investigation into their deaths be launched. On January 27, 2008, the newspaper Folha de S.Paulo published a report featuring a declaration from Mario Neira Barreiro, a former member of Uruguay's dictatorship's intelligence service. Barreiro confirmed Brizola's claims that Goulart had been poisoned. Sérgio Paranhos Fleury, the head of the Departamento de Ordem Poltica e Social (Department of Political and Social Order), gave the order to assassinate Goulart, according to Barreiro, and president Ernesto Geisel gave the permission to execute him. A special panel of the Rio Grande do Sul Legislative Assembly concluded in July 2008 that "the evidence that Jango was wilfully slain, with knowledge of the Geisel regime, is strong."   The magazine CartaCapital published previously unreleased National Information Service records generated by an undercover agent who was present at Jango's Uruguayan homes in March 2009. This new information backs up the idea that the former president was poisoned. The Goulart family has yet to figure out who the "B Agent," as he's referred to in the documents, might be. The agent was a close friend of Jango's, and he detailed a disagreement between the former president and his son during the former president's 56th birthday party, which was sparked by a brawl between two employees. As a result of the story, the Chamber of Deputies' Human Rights Commission agreed to look into Jango's death.   Later, Maria Teresa Fontela Goulart, Jango's widow, was interviewed by CartaCapital, who revealed records from the Uruguayan government confirming her accusations that her family had been tracked. Jango's travel, business, and political activities were all being watched by the Uruguayan government. These data date from 1965, a year after Brazil's coup, and they indicate that he may have been targeted. The President Joo Goulart Institute and the Movement for Justice and Human Rights have requested a document from the Uruguayan Interior Ministry stating that "serious and credible Brazilian sources'' discussed an "alleged plan against the former Brazilian president."   If you thought it wasn't enough, let's talk about Chile. No not the warm stew lie concoction you make to scorn your buddy's stomach, but the country.   Additional information about Condor was released when Augusto Pinochet was detained in London in 1998 in response to Spanish magistrate Baltasar Garzón's request for his extradition to Spain. According to one of the lawyers requesting his extradition, Carlos Altamirano, the leader of the Chilean Socialist Party, was the target of an assassination attempt. He said that after Franco's funeral in Madrid in 1975, Pinochet contacted Italian neofascist terrorist Stefano Delle Chiaie and arranged for Altamirano's murder. The strategy didn't work out. Since the bodies of victims kidnapped and presumably murdered could not be found, Chilean judge Juan Guzmán Tapia established a precedent concerning the crime of "permanent kidnapping": he determined that the kidnapping was thought to be ongoing, rather than having occurred so long ago that the perpetrators were protected by an amnesty decreed in 1978 or the Chilean statute of limitations. The Chilean government admitted in November 2015 that Pablo Neruda may have been murdered by members of Pinochet's administration.   Assassinations   On September 30, 1974, a car bomb killed General Carlos Prats and his wife, Sofa Cuthbert, in Buenos Aires, where they were living in exile. The Chilean DINA has been charged with the crime. In January 2005, Chilean Judge Alejandro Sols ended Pinochet's case when the Chilean Supreme Court denied his request to strip Pinochet's immunity from prosecution (as chief of state). In Chile, the assassination of DINA commanders Manuel Contreras, ex-chief of operations and retired general Ral Itturiaga Neuman, his brother Roger Itturiaga, and ex-brigadiers Pedro Espinoza Bravo and José Zara was accused. In Argentina, DINA agent Enrique Arancibia Clavel was found guilty of the murder.   After moving in exile in Italy, Bernardo Leighton and his wife were severely injured in a botched assassination attempt on October 6, 1975. Bernardo Leighton was critically injured in the gun attack, and his wife, Anita Fresno, was permanently crippled. Stefano Delle Chiaie met with Michael Townley and Virgilio Paz Romero in Madrid in 1975 to plan the murder of Bernardo Leighton with the help of Franco's secret police, according to declassified documents in the National Security Archive and Italian attorney general Giovanni Salvi, who led the prosecution of former DINA head Manuel Contreras. Glyn T. Davies, the secretary of the National Security Council (NSC), said in 1999 that declassified records indicated Pinochet's government's responsibility for the failed assassination attempt on Bernardo Leighton, Orlando Letelier, and General Carlos Prats on October 6, 1975.   In a December 2004 OpEd piece in the Los Angeles Times, Francisco Letelier, Orlando Letelier's son, claimed that his father's killing was part of Operation Condor, which he described as "an intelligence-sharing network employed by six South American tyrants of the time to eliminate dissidents."   Letelier's death, according to Michael Townley, was caused by Pinochet. Townley admitted to hiring five anti-Castro Cuban exiles to set up a booby-trap in Letelier's automobile. Following consultations with the terrorist organization CORU's leadership, including Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch, Cuban-Americans José Dionisio Suárez, Virgilio Paz Romero, Alvin Ross Daz, and brothers Guillermo and Ignacio Novo Sampoll were chosen to carry out the murder, according to Jean-Guy Allard. The Miami Herald reports that Luis Posada Carriles was there at the conference that decided on Letelier's death as well as the bombing of Cubana Flight 455.   During a public protest against Pinochet in July 1986, photographer Rodrigo Rojas DeNegri was burned alive and Carmen Gloria Quintana received significant burns. The case of the two became known as Caso Quemados ("The Burned Case"), and it drew attention in the United States because Rojas had fled to the United States following the 1973 coup. [96] According to a document from the US State Department, the Chilean army set fire to both Rojas and Quintana on purpose. Rojas and Quintana, on the other hand, were accused by Pinochet of being terrorists who lit themselves on fire with their own Molotov cocktails. Pinochet's reaction to the attack and killing of Rojas, according to National Security Archive analyst Peter Kornbluh, was "contributed to Reagan's decision to withdraw support for the regime and press for a return to civilian rule."   Operación Silencio   Operación Silencio (Operation Silence) was a Chilean operation that removed witnesses from the country in order to obstruct investigations by Chilean judges. It began about a year before the "terror archives" in Paraguay were discovered. Arturo Sanhueza Ross, the man accused of assassinating MIR leader Jecar Neghme in 1989, departed the country in April 1991.    According to the Rettig Report, Chilean intelligence officers were responsible for Jecar Neghme's killing. Carlos Herrera Jiménez, the man who assassinated trade unionist Tucapel Jiménez, flew out in September 1991. Eugenio Berros, a chemist who had cooperated with DINA agent Michael Townley, was led by Operation Condor agents from Chile to Uruguay in October 1991 in order to avoid testifying in the Letelier case. He used passports from Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Brazil, prompting suspicions that Operation Condor was still active. In 1995, Berros was discovered dead in El Pinar, Uruguay, near Montevideo. His corpse had been mangled to the point where it was hard to identify him by sight.   Michael Townley, who is now under witness protection in the United States, recognized linkages between Chile, DINA, and the incarceration and torture camp Colonia Dignidad in January 2005. The facility was founded in 1961 by Paul Schäfer, who was arrested and convicted of child rape in Buenos Aires in March 2005. Interpol was notified about Colonia Dignidad and the Army's Bacteriological Warfare Laboratory by Townley. This lab would have taken the place of the previous DINA lab on Via Naranja de lo Curro, where Townley collaborated with chemical assassin Eugenio Berros. According to the court reviewing the case, the toxin that allegedly murdered Christian-Democrat Eduardo Frei Montalva could have been created at this new lab in Colonia Dignidad. Dossiê Jango, a Brazilian-Uruguayan-Argentine collaboration film released in 2013, accused the same lab in the alleged poisoning of Brazil's deposed president, Joo Goulart.   Congressman Koch   The Condor Years: How Pinochet and His Allies Brought Terrorism to Three Continents was released in February 2004 by reporter John Dinges. He reported that in mid-1976, Uruguayan military officers threatened to assassinate United States Congressman Edward Koch (later Mayor of New York City). The CIA station commander in Montevideo had received information about it in late July 1976. He advised the Agency to take no action after finding that the men were inebriated at the time. Colonel José Fons, who was present at the November 1975 covert meeting in Santiago, Chile, and Major José Nino Gavazzo, who led a team of intelligence agents working in Argentina in 1976 and was responsible for the deaths of over 100 Uruguayans, were among the Uruguayan officers.   Koch told Dinges in the early twenty-first century that CIA Director George H. W. Bush informed him in October 1976 that "his sponsorship of legislation to cut off US military assistance to Uruguay on human rights concerns had prompted secret police officers to 'put a contract out for you'." Koch wrote to the Justice Department in mid-October 1976, requesting FBI protection, but he received none. It had been more than two months after the meeting and the assassination of Orlando Letelier in Washington. Colonel Fons and Major Gavazzo were sent to important diplomatic postings in Washington, D.C. in late 1976. The State Department ordered the Uruguayan government to rescind their appointments, citing the possibility of "unpleasant publicity" for "Fons and Gavazzo."  Only in 2001 did Koch learn of the links between the threats and the position appointments.   Paraguay The US supported Alfredo Stroessner's anti-communist military dictatorship and played a "vital supporting role" in Stroessner's Paraguay's domestic affairs. As part of Operation Condor, for example, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Thierry of the United States Army was deployed to assist local workers in the construction of "La Technica," a detention and interrogation center. La Technica was also renowned as a torture facility. Pastor Coronel, Stroessner's secret police, washed their victims in human vomit and excrement tubs and shocked them in the rectum with electric cattle prods. They decapitated Miguel Angel Soler [es], the Communist party secretary, with a chainsaw while Stroessner listened on the phone. Stroessner asked that tapes of inmates wailing in agony be presented to their relatives.   Harry Shlaudeman defined Paraguay's militarized state as a "nineteenth-century military administration that looks nice on the cartoon page" in a report to Kissinger. Shlaudeman's assessments were paternalistic, but he was correct in observing that Paraguay's "backwardness" was causing it to follow in the footsteps of its neighbors. Many decolonized countries regarded national security concerns in terms of neighboring countries and long-standing ethnic or regional feuds, but the United States viewed conflict from a global and ideological viewpoint. During the Chaco War, Shlaudeman mentions Paraguay's amazing fortitude in the face of greater military force from its neighbors. The government of Paraguay believes that the country's victory over its neighbors over several decades justifies the country's lack of progress. The paper goes on to say that Paraguay's political traditions were far from democratic. Because of this reality, as well as a fear of leftist protest in neighboring countries, the government has prioritized the containment of political opposition over the growth of its economic and political institutions. They were driven to defend their sovereignty due to an ideological fear of their neighbors. As a result, many officials were inspired to act in the interest of security by the fight against radical, communist movements both within and beyond the country. The book Opération Condor, written by French writer Pablo Daniel Magee and prefaced by Costa Gavras, was published in 2020. The story chronicles the life of Martin Almada, a Paraguayan who was a victim of the Condor Operation.   The Peruvian Case   After being kidnapped in 1978, Peruvian legislator Javier Diez Canseco announced that he and twelve other compatriots (Justiniano Apaza Ordóñez, Hugo Blanco, Genaro Ledesma Izquieta, Valentín Pacho, Ricardo Letts, César Lévano, Ricardo Napurí, José Luis Alvarado Bravo, Alfonso Baella Tuesta, Guillermo Faura Gaig, José Arce Larco and Humberto Damonte). All opponents of Francisco Morales Bermudez's dictatorship were exiled and handed over to the Argentine armed forces in Jujuy in 1978 after being kidnapped in Peru. He also claimed that declassified CIA documents and WikiLeaks cable information account for the Morales Bermudez government's ties to Operation Condor.   Uruguay   Juan Mara Bordaberry declared himself dictator and banned the rest of the political parties, as was customary in the Southern Cone dictatorships of the 1970s. In the alleged defense against subversion, a large number of people were murdered, tortured, unjustly detained and imprisoned, kidnapped, and forced into disappearance during the de facto administration, which lasted from 1973 until 1985. Prior to the coup d'état in 1973, the CIA served as a consultant to the country's law enforcement institutions. Dan Mitrione, perhaps the most well-known example of such cooperation, had taught civilian police in counterinsurgency at the School of the Americas in Panama, afterwards renamed the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation.   Maybe now we can talk about the U.S involvement? The U.S never gets involved in anything so this might be new to some of you.   According to US paperwork, the US supplied critical organizational, financial, and technological help to the operation far into the 1980s. The long-term hazards of a right-wing bloc, as well as its early policy recommendations, were discussed in a US Department of State briefing for Henry Kissinger, then Secretary of State, dated 3 August 1976, prepared by Harry Shlaudeman and titled "Third World War and South America." The briefing was an overview of security forces in the Southern Cone. The operation was described as a joint effort by six Latin American countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay) to win the "Third World War" by eliminating "subversion" through transnational secret intelligence operations, kidnapping, torture, disappearance, and assassination. The research begins by examining the sense of unity shared by the six countries of the Southern Cone. Kissinger is warned by Shlaudeman that the "Third World War" will trap those six countries in an ambiguous position in the long run, because they are trapped on one side by "international Marxism and its terrorist exponents," and on the other by "the hostility of uncomprehending industrial democracies misled by Marxist propaganda." According to the report, US policy toward Operation Condor should “emphasize the differences between the five countries at all times, depoliticize human rights, oppose rhetorical exaggerations of the ‘Third-World-War' type, and bring potential bloc members back into our cognitive universe through systematic exchanges.” According to CIA papers from 1976, strategies to deal with political dissidents in South America were planned among international security officials at the US Army School of the Americas and the Conference of American Armies from 1960 to the early 1970s. "In early 1974, security officials from Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Bolivia convened in Buenos Aires to arrange synchronized attacks against subversive targets," according to a declassified CIA memo dated June 23, 1976. Officials in the United States were aware of the situation.   Furthermore, the Defense Intelligence Agency revealed in September 1976 that US intelligence services were well aware of Operation Condor's architecture and intentions. They discovered that "Operation Condor" was the covert name for gathering intelligence on "leftists," Communists, Peronists, or Marxists in the Southern Cone Area. The intelligence services were aware that the operation was being coordinated by the intelligence agencies of numerous South American nations (including Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Bolivia), with Chile serving as the hub. Argentina, Uruguay, and Chile, according to the DIA, were already aggressively pursuing operations against communist targets, primarily in Argentina.   The report's third point reveals the US comprehension of Operation Condor's most malevolent actions. "The development of special teams from member countries to execute out operations, including killings against terrorists or sympathizers of terrorist groups," according to the paper. Although these special teams were intelligence agency operatives rather than military troops, they did work in structures similar to those used by US special forces teams, according to the study. Operation Condor's preparations to undertake probable operations in France and Portugal were revealed in Kissinger's State Department briefing - an issue that would later prove to be immensely contentious in Condor's history.   Condor's core was formed by the US government's sponsorship and collaboration with DINA (Directorate of National Intelligence) and other intelligence agencies. According to CIA papers, the agency maintained intimate ties with officers of Chile's secret police, DINA, and its leader Manuel Contreras.  Even after his role in the Letelier-Moffit killing was discovered, Contreras was kept as a paid CIA contact until 1977. Official requests to trace suspects to and from the US Embassy, the CIA, and the FBI may be found in the Paraguayan Archives. The military states received suspect lists and other intelligence material from the CIA. In 1975, the FBI conducted a nationwide hunt in the United States for persons sought by DINA.   In a February 1976 telegram from the Buenos Aires embassy to the State Department, intelligence said that the US was aware of the impending Argentinian coup. According to the ambassador, the Chief of the Foreign Ministry's North American desk revealed that the "Military Planning Group" had asked him to prepare a report and recommendations on how the "future military government can avoid or minimize the sort of problems the Chilean and Uruguayan governments are having with the US over human rights issues." The Chief also indicated that "they" (whether he is talking to the CIA or Argentina's future military dictatorship, or both) will confront opposition if they start assassinating and killing people. Assuming this is so, the envoy notes that the military coup will "intend to carry forward an all-out war on the terrorists and that some executions would therefore probably be necessary." Despite already being engaged in the region's politics, this indicates that the US was aware of the planning of human rights breaches before they occurred and did not intervene to prevent them. "It is encouraging to note that the Argentine military are aware of the problem and are already focusing on ways to avoid letting human rights issues become an irritant in US-Argentine Relations." This is confirmation.   Professor Ruth Blakeley says that Kissinger "explicitly expressed his support for the repression of political opponents" in regards to the Argentine junta's continuous human rights violations.  When Henry Kissinger met with Argentina's Foreign Minister on October 5, 1976, he said, ” Look, our basic attitude is that we would like you to succeed. I have an old-fashioned view that friends ought to be supported. What is not understood in the United States is that you have a civil war. We read about human rights problems but not the context. The quicker you succeed the better ... The human rights problem is a growing one. Your Ambassador can apprise you. We want a stable situation. We won't cause you unnecessary difficulties. If you can finish before Congress gets back, the better. Whatever freedoms you could restore would help.”   The démarche was never provided in the end. According to Kornbluh and Dinges, the decision not to deliver Kissinger's directive was based on Assistant Secretary Harry Shlaudeman's letter to his deputy in Washington, D.C., which stated: "you can simply instruct the Ambassadors to take no further action, noting that there have been no reports in some weeks indicating an intention to activate the Condor scheme."   President Bill Clinton ordered the State Department to release hundreds of declassified papers in June 1999, indicating for the first time that the CIA, State, and Defense Departments were all aware of Condor. According to a 1 October 1976 DOD intelligence assessment, Latin American military commanders gloat about it to their American colleagues. Condor's "joint counterinsurgency operations" sought to "eliminate Marxist terrorist activities," according to the same study; Argentina developed a special Condor force "structured much like a US Special Forces Team," it said. According to a summary of documents disclosed in 2004, The declassified record shows that Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was briefed on Condor and its "murder operations" on August 5, 1976, in a 14-page report from [Harry] Shlaudeman [Assistant Secretary of State]. "Internationally, the Latin generals look like our guys," Shlaudeman cautioned. "We are especially identified with Chile. It cannot do us any good." Shlaudeman and his two deputies, William Luers and Hewson Ryan, recommended action. Over the course of three weeks, they drafted a cautiously worded demarche, approved by Kissinger, in which he instructed the U.S. ambassadors in the Southern Cone countries to meet with the respective heads of state about Condor. He instructed them to express "our deep concern" about "rumors" of "plans for the assassination of subversives, politicians and prominent figures both within the national borders of certain Southern Cone countries and abroad."   Kornbluh and Dinges come to the conclusion that "The paper trail is clear: the State Department and the CIA had enough intelligence to take concrete steps to thwart the Condor assassination planning. Those steps were initiated but never implemented." Hewson Ryan, Shlaudeman's deputy, subsequently admitted in an oral history interview that the State Department's treatment of the issue was "remiss." "We knew fairly early on that the governments of the Southern Cone countries were planning, or at least talking about, some assassinations abroad in the summer of 1976. ... Whether if we had gone in, we might have prevented this, I don't know", In relation to the Letelier-Moffitt bombing, he remarked, "But we didn't."   Condor was defined as a "counter-terrorism organization" in a CIA document, which also mentioned that the Condor countries had a specific telecommunications system known as "CONDORTEL."  The New York Times released a communication from US Ambassador to Paraguay Robert White to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance on March 6, 2001. The paper was declassified and disseminated by the Clinton administration in November 2000 as part of the Chile Declassification Project. General Alejandro Fretes Davalos, the chief of staff of Paraguay's armed forces, told White that the South American intelligence chiefs engaged in Condor "kept in touch with one another through a United States communications installation in the Panama Canal Zone that covered all of Latin America."   According to reports, Davalos stated that the station was "employed to coordinate intelligence information among the southern cone countries". The US was concerned that the Condor link would be made public at a time when the killing of Chilean former minister Orlando Letelier and his American aide Ronni Moffitt in the United States was being probed."it would seem advisable to review this arrangement to insure that its continuation is in US interest." White wrote to Vance. "Another piece of increasingly weighty evidence suggesting that U.S. military and intelligence officials supported and collaborated with Condor as a secret partner or sponsor." McSherry rebutted the cables. Furthermore, an Argentine military source told a U.S. Embassy contact that the CIA was aware of Condor and had played a vital role in establishing computerized linkages among the six Condor governments' intelligence and operations sections.   After all this it doesn't stop here. We even see France having a connection. The original document confirming that a 1959 agreement between Paris and Buenos Aires set up a "permanent French military mission" of officers to Argentina who had participated in the Algerian War was discovered in the archives of the Quai d'Orsay, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It was kept at the offices of the Argentine Army's chief of staff. It lasted until 1981, when François Mitterrand was elected President of France. She revealed how the administration of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing secretly coordinated with Videla's junta in Argentina and Augusto Pinochet's tyranny in Chile.   Even Britain and West Germany looked into using the tactics in their own countries. Going so far as to send their open personnel to Buenos Aires to discuss how to establish a similar network.  MOVIES   https://www.imdb.com/search/keyword/?keywords=military-coup&sort=num_votes,desc&mode=detail&page=1&title_type=movie&ref_=kw_ref_typ https://islandora.wrlc.org/islandora/object/terror%3Aroot https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archives_of_Terror https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Condor https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-20774985 https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB239d/index.htm

united states american president new york city europe israel school washington france law state french new york times government italy washington dc spanish dc western italian movement army spain chief brazil conference congress rome argentina fbi political mayors portugal nazis memory terror mothers colombia chile madrid senior ambassadors cia official venezuela agency peru bush rio latin south america mayo secretary brazilian latin america americas north american founded mart clinton square rodriguez human rights officer palace hundreds interior found chamber janeiro buenos aires panama bill clinton archives congressional bolivia uruguay immunity latin american ruiz communists los angeles times internationally unesco rub davies koch sul kidnappings officials state department mir us department south american george washington university ley plaza marxist prosecutors marxism paraguay assuming rojas rio grande wikileaks veja peruvian dod justice department jk argentine foreign affairs embassies world war iii united states army chilean amnesty international argentinian henry kissinger erp guti madres interpol caracas valent contreras el proceso juicio patria cunha op ed assistant secretary porto alegre miami herald condor counterterrorism montevideo allende pinochet molotov tapia folha us state department opr brazilians marxists pablo neruda us ambassador us embassy bolivian west germany national intelligence deputies asunci foreign minister plo coru quai mitterrand augusto pinochet women in prison human rights commission magistrate uruguayan national commission almada defense intelligence agency geisel barreiro giscard fons goulart sequestro rso curro jango social order foreign ministry paraguayan jujuy altamirano videla townley pacho dirty wars casa rosada clavel colonia dignidad costa gavras state henry kissinger fernando henrique cardoso dops klaus barbie seelig french ministry operation gladio operation condor security cooperation punto final carlos menem letelier national security council nsc southern cone baltasar garz algerian war national security archive general augusto pinochet davalos kornbluh brizola luiz cl paul sch marie monique robin panama canal zone ernesto sabato french school cubra alfredo stroessner in buenos aires torture report peter kornbluh uruguayans nestor kirchner carlos altamirano political imprisonment el pinar argentine dirty war castro cuban argentine congress your ambassador
Cristo Tu Única Esperanza
¿Cómo entrar a lo nuevo e inimaginable? | Pastora Jessica Letelier

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 43:39


Dejemos de abrazar el pasado y avancemos a lo que Dios ha diseñado para nosotros. Hoy pidamos al Señor que rompa toda estructura y que nos permita caminar hacia lo nuevo e inimaginable. 

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza
Cumplir mis metas en Dios | Pastora Jessica Letelier

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2021 38:08


Proyectemos nuestros sueños, anhelos y visiones de fe, dejemos que Dios nos examine y nos escudriñe; que Él nos guíe en sus propósitos eternos. 

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza
Ciértamente Yo estaré contigo | Pastora Jessica Letelier

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 41:12


En la zona de confort no hay crecimiento, solo estancamiento, estando allí no alcanzaremos nuestros sueños.Hoy salgamos de nuestra zona de confort, ciertamente Dios estará con nosotros para hacernos crecer ¡Creámosle al Señor, creamos a su palabra!

24 Horas | Showcast - La mañana informativa
Senador Letelier por cuarto 10%: "Creo que estarán los votos si hay ciertas modificaciones"

24 Horas | Showcast - La mañana informativa

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 13:10


Durante este martes, el Senado votará el proyecto de cuarto retiro del 10% de los fondos previsionales, jornada donde aún hay incertidumbre sobre los votos. El senador Juan Pablo Letelier (PS) se refirió a la tramitación de la iniciativa en la Cámara Alta.

24 Horas | Showcast - La mañana informativa
Senador Letelier por cuarto 10%: "Creo que estarán los votos si hay ciertas modificaciones"

24 Horas | Showcast - La mañana informativa

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 13:10


Durante este martes, el Senado votará el proyecto de cuarto retiro del 10% de los fondos previsionales, jornada donde aún hay incertidumbre sobre los votos. El senador Juan Pablo Letelier (PS) se refirió a la tramitación de la iniciativa en la Cámara Alta.

Procesalmente hablando
Debido proceso a propósito de una lectura del Semillero UCN

Procesalmente hablando

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2021 71:29


Compartimos con los y las estudiantes del Semillero de Derecho Procesal UCN una conversación en torno a un capítulo de Libro publicado por los profesores Flavia Carbonell y Raúl Letelier a propósito de una visión minimalista del Debido Proceso.

Libros&Libros Pablo Chiuminatto
Nicolás Letelier: los misterios de la perspectiva

Libros&Libros Pablo Chiuminatto

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 41:59


A partir de la reciente publicación de "La salvaje perspectiva" (Cástor y Pólux,2020) conversamos sobre los poemas que integran su tercer libro y los giros entre la literatura y la música que marcan su poesía.

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza
Entre montes y valles | Pra Jessica Letelier

Cristo Tu Única Esperanza

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 41:04


No importa lo que esté en contra, no permitas que tú condición te impida ver el obrar de Dios ¡Él ya ha determinado la victoria!

Universidad Autónoma de Chile
Hoja en Blanco - Capítulo 50 - Votación de indicaciones y los 2/3

Universidad Autónoma de Chile

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2021 40:19


En este nuevo episodio de #HojaenBlanco nuestro invitado es Raúl Letelier, académico de la Facultad de Derecho, Universidad de Chile, quien conversa junto a Viviana Ponce de León y Pablo Contreras de la actualidad en la Convención Constitucional; ¿Es posible que renuncie un convencional?, cómo funcionaría la consulta indígena y el impacto o consecuencias del quórum de 2/3.

Efemérides con Nibaldo Mosciatti
Asesinan a Orlando Letelier (1976)

Efemérides con Nibaldo Mosciatti

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 5:28


El 21 de septiembre de 1976 murió, víctima de un atentado explosivo, el ex ministro Orlando Letelier, asesinado por la DINA en territorio estadounidense.

Emprender es Clave
Emprender es Clave - Macarena Letelier "Dialogar es Clave" CAM Santiago, Gonzalo Téllez de Mercapp.cl

Emprender es Clave

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 40:17


En el capítulo de hoy (08 de Septiembre): - Macarena Letelier "Dialogar es Clave" CAM Santiago - Gonzalo Téllez, resperesentante Latam Mercapp.cl --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/emprender-es-clave/message

Radio Duna - Aire Fresco
El primer mes de la Convención y el último libro de Hernán Rivera Letelier

Radio Duna - Aire Fresco

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2021


Polo Ramírez revisó las principales tendencias del día junto a Mariajosé Soto y conversó con el destacado escritor chileno, Hernán Rivera Letelier, comentó su última publicación titulada "El secuestro de la hermana Tegualda", un 'apéndice' a su trilogía "La muerte...", donde destacó el cómo nació la idea.

New Books Network en español
Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt Letelier, "Historia general de Chile. Tomo III: Amos, señores y patricios" (Sudamericana, 2008)

New Books Network en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 64:12


Este libro corresponde a la tercera entrega del ambicioso proyecto historiográfico Historia general de Chile –iniciado con El retorno de los dioses (Tomo I; publicado en 2000) y seguido de Los césares perdidos (Tomo II; publicado en 2004). Dueño de una voz inconfundible en el panorama de las letras chilenas, el profesor Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt traza una historia nacional en que las mismas fronteras de la nación quedan en suspenso por la libre circulación de imágenes e íconos a ambos lados del Atlántico: en este volumen en particular, la imaginación iconológica de Jocelyn-Holt revisita el escenario del valle central chileno de los siglos XVII y XVIII a partir de la afinidad entre las descripciones de la Histórica relación del reyno de Chile del jesuita Alonso de Ovalle y la pintura de Nicolas Poussin (ambos por entonces instalados en Roma). Historia en que la trayectoria cosmopolita de los criollos redescribe el paisaje nacional a partir de juegos especulares entre América y Europa, entre aquí y allá, inaugurando una persistencia clásica capaz de unir la visión de Ovalle con la arquitectura de Toesca y el palacio de la Moneda –hoy sede de gobierno en Chile. Entrevista por Felipe Toro Franco, quien escribe sobre literatura latinoamericana y sus cruces con la cultura visual: literatura y pintura, literatura y deportes, y, últimamente, literatura y performance.

Novedades editoriales en literatura y estudios culturales
Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt Letelier, "Historia general de Chile. Tomo III: Amos, señores y patricios" (Sudamericana, 2008)

Novedades editoriales en literatura y estudios culturales

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 64:12


Este libro corresponde a la tercera entrega del ambicioso proyecto historiográfico Historia general de Chile –iniciado con El retorno de los dioses (Tomo I; publicado en 2000) y seguido de Los césares perdidos (Tomo II; publicado en 2004). Dueño de una voz inconfundible en el panorama de las letras chilenas, el profesor Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt traza una historia nacional en que las mismas fronteras de la nación quedan en suspenso por la libre circulación de imágenes e íconos a ambos lados del Atlántico: en este volumen en particular, la imaginación iconológica de Jocelyn-Holt revisita el escenario del valle central chileno de los siglos XVII y XVIII a partir de la afinidad entre las descripciones de la Histórica relación del reyno de Chile del jesuita Alonso de Ovalle y la pintura de Nicolas Poussin (ambos por entonces instalados en Roma). Historia en que la trayectoria cosmopolita de los criollos redescribe el paisaje nacional a partir de juegos especulares entre América y Europa, entre aquí y allá, inaugurando una persistencia clásica capaz de unir la visión de Ovalle con la arquitectura de Toesca y el palacio de la Moneda –hoy sede de gobierno en Chile. Entrevista por Felipe Toro Franco, quien escribe sobre literatura latinoamericana y sus cruces con la cultura visual: literatura y pintura, literatura y deportes, y, últimamente, literatura y performance.

Novedades editoriales en historia
Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt Letelier, "Historia general de Chile. Tomo III: Amos, señores y patricios" (2008)

Novedades editoriales en historia

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 64:12


Este libro corresponde a la tercera entrega del ambicioso proyecto historiográfico Historia general de Chile –iniciado con El retorno de los dioses (Tomo I; publicado en 2000) y seguido de Los césares perdidos (Tomo II; publicado en 2004). Dueño de una voz inconfundible en el panorama de las letras chilenas, el profesor Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt traza una historia nacional en que las mismas fronteras de la nación quedan en suspenso por la libre circulación de imágenes e íconos a ambos lados del Atlántico: en este volumen en particular, la imaginación iconológica de Jocelyn-Holt revisita el escenario del valle central chileno de los siglos XVII y XVIII a partir de la afinidad entre las descripciones de la Histórica relación del reyno de Chile del jesuita Alonso de Ovalle y la pintura de Nicolas Poussin (ambos por entonces instalados en Roma). Historia en que la trayectoria cosmopolita de los criollos redescribe el paisaje nacional a partir de juegos especulares entre América y Europa, entre aquí y allá, inaugurando una persistencia clásica capaz de unir la visión de Ovalle con la arquitectura de Toesca y el palacio de la Moneda –hoy sede de gobierno en Chile. Entrevista por Felipe Toro Franco, quien escribe sobre literatura latinoamericana y sus cruces con la cultura visual: literatura y pintura, literatura y deportes, y, últimamente, literatura y performance.