| Paraguay: Protests and Rubber Bullets Greet Return of Dictatorship Criminal |
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| Written by Benjamin Dangl |
| Saturday, 02 May 2009 06:59 |
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In the early hours of May 1st, Sabino Augusto Montanaro, the Interior Minister in Montanaro served as a minister under Stroessner from 1966 to the end of the dictatorship, and played a key role in the regime's repression, directing the abduction, torture and murder of political opponents of Stroessner. Now, upon his return to In 2006, Stroessner died at age 93 in Paraguayan Bishop Mario Melanio Medina told the ABC Color newspaper that Montanaro was Stroessner's "right hand man" and "number one [in command] after Stroessner." Rubber Bullets and Memory Around at the May 1st rally, some 1,000 protesters began marching toward the private hospital where Montaro was a patient. While pounding drums and yelling political chants, the marchers paraded down the middle of many streets that were empty due to the holiday. The chants and drumming increased in volume when the marchers passed the red headquarters of the Colorado Party, Stroessner's party which lost its 60 year long grip on the country with the 2008 election of Fernando Lugo.
When the majority of the marchers arrived at the hospital, one group charged the front door, trying to break through the police line and get to Montanaro. The police responded with brutal force that left one man bloody and stunned. As the numbers of protesters outside the hospital increased, news spread that a judge ordered Montanaro's transfer from the private hospital to a police hospital. Protesters responded by gathering around the side of the hospital where ambulances leave and arrive. Police formed another wall in this section of the hospital to protect Montanaro's ambulance and allow for his safe transferal. When the gates opened, and the ambulance transporting Montanaro began to leave, police pushed protesters back, crashing night sticks and shields on the bodies of the marchers, who responded by throwing stones at the police and ambulance. Protesters managed to get to the ambulance, breaking its windows with rocks as the police repression increased and the ambulance sped off. Police dispersed the crowd with a barrage of rubber bullets that injured a number of protesters.
Earlier in the day President Lugo arrived to echo the protesters sentiments. He spoke of Montanaro's return: "I promise that there will be justice, the same mistakes that previous governments made will not be repeated, and there won't be any privileges for anyone." He told protesters outside the hospital that this is a "good opportunity to recuperate historical memory." Judith Rolón, a daughter of Martín Rolón who was disappeared during the Stroessner dictatorship, said Montanaro "will not have peace until he says where the disappeared are." *** Benjamin Dangl is currently based in Paraguay, and is the author of "The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia" (AK Press). More of his writing is at www.bendangl.net/ |








Martin Almada, a human rights lawyer and former political prisoner, discovered documents which prove that Montanaro played a key role in Operation Condor, a unified, cross-border network of repression coordinated by military dictatorships in the region throughout the 1970 and '80s. 
