
Chile's government to expropriate land tied to Pinochet-era torture
The enclave, originally called Colonia Dignidad and renamed Villa Baviera, was founded in 1961 by Paul Schafer, a former Nazi medic turned evangelical preacher who kept the isolated community under tight control and was later jailed for sexually abusing children.
During Pinochet's 1973-1990 dictatorship, Colonia Dignidad also bore witness to another kind of abuse: the torture of political prisoners by military forces in a secret prison at the site.
Schafer collaborated with Pinochet's secret police and in exchange was shielded for years from prosecution for his own crimes. The dictatorship viewed the secretive, fortified and remote community as an ideal site to detain and torture dissidents away from public view.
The government now wants to turn the 290-acre (117-hectare) community into a memorial, Justice Minister Jaime Gajardo said at an event this month.
The aim is to make it "a place that allows all Chileans to enter freely to learn about what happened there," Gajardo said.
"Nothing justifies violating human rights as they were violated during the military dictatorship."
Schafer died in prison in 2010.
Several hundred families once lived at the settlement about 350 kilometers (217 mi) south of Santiago. Today the population numbers closer to 100, many of whom are descendants of the original German settlers.
Businesses at Villa Baviera, or Bavarian Village, have tried in recent years to attract visitors to the area's picturesque green fields and views of snow-capped mountains.
In the expropriation, property owners will be compensated under terms still to be determined by experts, Gajardo said. The government aims to complete the expropriation before President Gabriel Boric leaves office in March.
The justice minister said the community consists of about 90 land parcels but did not specify the number of businesses or residents.
Dozens of physically and mentally traumatized members of Colonia Dignidad eventually relocated to Germany, and the site's history drew international attention in the 2015 film "Colonia."
Plans for the expropriation underscore the challenges for governments in coming to terms with complicated histories in places that have overlapping layers of rights abuses.
Chile's National Institute of Human Rights in a recent report, opens new tab said those who were tortured by Pinochet's forces as well as the people who suffered under Schaefer's control were equally victims of Colonia Dignidad.
Jose Patricio Schmidt, who grew up in Colonia Dignidad and still lives there, said residents had existed in a bubble, unaware of the dictatorship's abuses.
"Schaefer would gather us together to read the Bible in a place about a kilometer from where people were tortured, and we knew nothing," he said in an interview at a memorial site in the community that pays tribute to the torture victims.
Tens of thousands of people were arrested and tortured throughout Chile during Pinochet's rule, and 1,469 people were victims of forced disappearance.
Some have criticized the government's move to take away property from current Villa Baviera community members, especially those who were themselves victims of abuse.
Juergen Szurgeleis in an interview said he tried as a boy to escape forced labor and abuse at Colonia Dignidad.
"Is it my fault for being born here?" he said. "And now they want to take away my land and leave me in the street?"
Yet a former political prisoner at Colonia Dignidad, Luis Jaque, said he struggles to see how the community, which includes a German restaurant and a hotel catering to tourists, can carry on without recognizing the horrors of the past.
"It's not reconcilable, at least not for me," he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Six great reads: Keir Starmer's human rights record, Jamie Lee Curtis on cosmetic surgery and the best of Euro 25
'Why is Labour's record to date on human rights – the one thing you might expect a Starmer-led government to be rock solid on – so mixed?' asks Daniel Trilling in this comprehensive long read. Due to Keir Starmer's background as a distinguished human rights lawyer, his supporters hoped that he would restore the UK's commitment to international law. Unfortunately, he is being blocked by a powerful man who has conflated protest with terrorism and called for musicians whose views he dislikes to be dropped from festival bills. That man is also named Keir Starmer. Over the past six months, Trilling has spoken to two dozen Labour insiders, former colleagues of the prime minister and leading human rights advocates in an attempt to pin down the shapeshifting PM. Read more 'At 66, I get to be a boss,' says Jamie Lee Curtis. That is very much the vibe of this interview, in which the actor shows up 'aggressively early' to the Zoom chat, opens up about her experience with addiction, and uses – and staunchly defends – the word 'genocide' to describe the impact that cosmetic surgery has had on a generation of women. Emma Brockes speaks to Curtis before the forthcoming sequel to Freaky Friday, which sees the actor reuniting with Lindsay Lohan in the mother-daughter body-swap comedy ('I felt tremendous maternal care for Lindsay after the first movie, and continued to feel that') – but their chat ends up becoming about so much more. Read more 'The lack of integration means I'm not the only remote worker feeling adrift. What happens when the shared spaces of your so-called community are sun-drenched cafes and boutique fitness studios? What does it mean to never volunteer, or spend time with an elderly person, to rarely take public transport, or read the local news?' It's easy to romanticise the life of a digital nomad: swapping the office for a beachside cafe; living in a flat far more spacious than the ones available back home; being eternally drenched in the southern European sun. But this thoughtful piece by Alex Holder, who moved from London to Lisbon, reveals the cracks in this fantasy. 'Maybe,' she wonders, 'it's time to move and make room for someone else.' Read more He had charisma. He had good content. He also had the support of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), an organisation whose membership has grown from 6,000 or so upon its founding in the 80s to a sizeable 80,000 today. Zohran Mamdani's record-setting success in New York's June mayoral primary was bolstered by 60,000 volunteers knocking on 1.6m doors across the city – a vast effort, Dharna Noor writes, made possible by New York's DSA field team. In this piece, Noor tracks the rise of an organisation that is increasingly shaping American politics – and considers whether it's ready for a face-off with the Democratic establishment. Read more From the match of the tournament and the best player to the most memorable goal, Guardian sports writers nominate their picks and personal highlights from Euro 2025, and share what they'd like to see next for women's football – 'Just more of everything!' Read more They say it takes a village, and parents today are ever increasingly turning to their own parents for help with childcare. One study estimates that 9 million British grandparents spend an average of eight hours a week helping to care for their grandchildren. Ellie Violet Bramley meets members of the 'grey army' and talks to them about the joys – and lows – of taking a hands-on role in their grandchildren's lives. Read more


The Independent
7 hours ago
- The Independent
Collapse at Chile's major copper mine kills 1 worker and leaves 5 missing
A collapse at a copper mine in Chile killed one worker and left five trapped underground, authorities said Friday, forcing Chile's state mining company to suspend operations in affected areas of the world's largest underground copper deposit. Nine other mine workers suffered injuries, said Chile's National Copper Corp., known as Codelco, describing the incident as the result of 'a seismic event.' The U.S. Geological Survey reported a magnitude 5 earthquake in an area of central Chile where Codelco's El Teniente mine is located, at 5:34 p.m. local time on Thursday. Codelco reported the tremor had a magnitude of 4.2. Authorities said they're still investigating whether it was a naturally occurring earthquake or whether mining activity at Codelco's flagship El Teniente mine caused the quake. Chilean prosecutors also launched a criminal investigation to determine whether any safety standards were violated. Chile's national disaster response service, Senapred, said that the tremor struck the Machalí commune in the O'Higgins region, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the capital, Santiago. Codelco identified the deceased as Paulo Marín Tapia and said he had been working on the Andesita project, a new 25-kilometer (15-mile) tunnel complex extending from the El Teniente mine on the western slopes of the Andes Mountains. That expanded section had only recently started to produce copper. The company said that search-and-rescue teams had determined the exact location of the partial collapse but could not communicate with the five trapped workers. As the mountain shook, mounds of rocks and dirt caved in, falling into the tunnel where the five miners were working and blocking all access routes to the sites 900 meters underground. It was not clear whether the workers were alive or dead, but Codelco emphasized it was treating its efforts as a rescue operation. The names of the trapped miners were not released. 'We are making every effort to try to rescue these five miners,' said Andrés Music, general manager of El Teniente, detailing rescue operations involving 100 experts, including some of whom participated in the dramatic 2010 rescue of 33 trapped miners in northern Chile — who, after 69 days underground, emerged alive and into the spotlight of international celebrity. 'The next 48 hours are crucial,' Music said. Codelco halted operations at the affected section of the copper mine and evacuated 3,000 people from the wider site to safe areas. The company canceled a presentation of its first-half financial results, set for Friday morning, due to the rescue efforts. Chile, the world's largest copper producer, also lies in the seismically active 'Ring of Fire' that surrounds the shores of the Pacific Ocean. ___ Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre in Buenos Aires, Argentina, contributed to this report. ____


Daily Mail
14 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Inside Pedro Pascal's tragic past and family scandal as actor becomes Hollywood's hottest leading man
It's safe to say that Pedro Pascal is Hollywood's most popular leading man right now. From taking over the small screen in The Last of Us and The Mandalorian, to leading box office hits like Gladiator II, Materialists, and The Fantastic Four, Pascal is utterly inescapable right now. Pascal's path to fame and fortune hasn't been easy though, beginning with his childhood in Santiago, Chile. When he was just four months old, his parents were forced to flee Chile so that they could avoid capture under General Augusto Pinochet, who plunged the country into a military dictatorship in 1973. Pascal's mother Veronica, a psychologist, and his father Jose Balmaceda, a fertility doctor, were deemed enemies of the state due to Veronica's distant family ties to socialist Chilean President Salvador Allende, who was overthrown by Pinochet. The family escaped to Denmark before relocating to the United States, but this wasn't the end of their troubles. In 1995, Pascal's father was swept up in a jaw-dropping fertility scandal that caused him to flee the U.S. and head back to Chile. He was later charged with mail fraud and income tax evasion. According to Orange County Register, Balmaceda was caught 'switching frozen embryos of women without their knowledge' at the fertility clinic he helped run with two other men. 'In 1995, the Orange County Register reported that Dr. Ricardo Asch, along with Dr. Balmaceda and Dr. Sergio Stone, had taken women's eggs without their permission and given them to other women who later bore children from those eggs,' the report said. 'At least 15 live births resulted from the improper transfers, and the clinic was shuttered following the egg-theft scandal.' In addition, it said that 'an audit determined that nearly $1 million in clinic income had not been reported' including 'tens of thousands of dollars in cash payments from patients that were allegedly pocketed by doctors.' While Stone was convicted of fraud, both Balmaceda and Asch fled the U.S. before their trials - with Balmaceda, Pedro's mother, and his two siblings moving back to Chile. Asch was later arrested in Mexico, where he had escaped to. According to the New York Times, Balmaceda was able to restart his life in Chile and continued working as one of the country's top fertility doctors. Years later - in 2022 - Balmaceda finally plead guilty to tax fraud and surrendered himself to law enforcement. ABC News dubbed the debacle 'one of the biggest fertility scandals in history'. Despite his father's scandalous past, Pascal and Balmaceda appear to be close, often sharing photos together on social media. Pedro even brought his dad, as well as his sister, transgender actress Lux Pascal, to the Gladiator II premiere in London last year. He has never publicly addressed his dad's fertility scandal, instead choosing to focus on the struggles that his parents overcame by escaping Pinochet's regime in Chile. Speaking about their journey in a SNL monologue, Pascal said, 'They were so brave. And without them, I wouldn't be here in this wonderful country, and I certainly wouldn't be standing here with you all tonight.' Tragically, Pascal's beloved mother Veronica took her own life in 1999. The Last of Us Star has spoken out numerous times about the huge impact she had on him, with him telling People in 2020, 'She was the love of my life.' He continued: 'She was always incredibly supportive, never a stage mom. I always felt like she knew something that I didn't. None of my success would be real if it weren't for her. 'I think about her every day. I don't pray, so I can't say I have a religious practice to feel close to her, but I live for her, even though she's gone. 'Losing the most important person in your life, discovering that something like this is possible and that what you fear most in life can happen, is an unexplainable and permanent moment. There is a before and after her death.' 'The circumstances of my mother's death made it very hard for us to remember her as the person she was,' he also admitted in a 2017 interview with Paula magazine. 'It hurts so much… Sometimes I feel anguished and I try to deal with it in the best possible way, because I know that my mother would not want me to do it any other way.' Following her passing, Pedro decided to take on her maiden name as a tribute to her - officially making his stage name Pedro Pascal. While there's been endless speculation online about Pascal's sexuality and romantic life, the Eddington hunk prefers to keep his relationships private. 'I've had dreams of taking my kids to the movies the way my parents took me,' he once lamented to Vanity Fair. 'So I guess I want a shortcut to an interesting human being, who is my child, who will go see something that I want to see.' However, despite refusing to publicly reveal his romantic partners to the world, Pascal claims that he isn't actually a private person. 'I always feel perplexed when I'm identified in whatever form of media as a "highly private person," because that's the opposite of me,' Pascal explained. He continued: 'I'm very unprivate in my private life. I just know that personal relationships are such a complex thing to navigate even without having this enormous lens on them.' Pascal is currently enjoying the success of his latest film, The Fantastic Four: First Steps. The Marvel movie launched with a bigger-than-expected opening weekend, raking in an estimated $118 million domestically and another $100 million overseas, for a global debut of around $220 million.