In Argentina:
http://www.desaparecidos.org/arg/eng.htmlIn Brazil:
http://www.desaparecidos.org/brazil/victimas/listas/In Chile:
http://www.desaparecidos.org/chile/eng.htmlIn Colombia:
http://www.desaparecidos.org/colombia/fmcepeda/genocidio-up/In Paraguay:
http://www.verdadyjusticia.gov.py/In Peru:
http://www.desaparecidos.org/peru/tort/eng.htmlIn Uruguay:
http://www.desaparecidos.org/uru/eng.htmlCaracazo: Four million bullets were shot against unarmed people
Caracas, Feb 27 ABN (Emma Grand).- Alexis went from Portuguesa state to Caracas on February 28, 1989. His mother had made him a desperate phone call because there was a rumor that day about that prisoners at the Remand of Catia (Venezuelan house of detention in the Catia suburb of Caracas) were being released to kill them at the entry of the remand center, in which her other son was serving time. They had heard of a great quantity of dead prisoners. “When I tried to get close to the remand, jointly to other people, in order to find out about our imprisoned relatives, we were shot at,” Alexis said. Then, he was to the Republic's General Attorney with his mother so as to look up his brother's name on the lists of people murdered in Venezuelan jails. Fortunately for Alexis and his mother, the name of their relative did not appear in the endless lists of dead prisoners. The thing is that in the midst of the affray, he preferred to not try to go out from the former remand, so he survived the massacre. Six years later, he was released ...
http://www.abn.info.ve/noticia.php?articulo=171543&lee=17 RENDITION IN THE SOUTHERN CONE: OPERATION CONDOR DOCUMENTS REVEALED FROM PARAGUAYAN ‘ARCHIVE OF TERROR’
Washington D.C., December 21, 2007 – On the fifteenth anniversary of the discovery of the Archive of Terror in Paraguay, the National Security Archive posted Spanish-language documents that reveal new details of how the Southern Cone military regimes collaborated in hunting down, interrogating, and disappearing hundreds of Latin Americans during the 1970s and 1980s. The collaboration, which became officially known as “Operation Condor,” drew on cross-border kidnapping, secret detention centers, torture, and disappearance of prisoners—rendition, interrogation and detention techniques that some human rights advocates are comparing to those used today in the Bush administration’s counterterrorism campaign ...
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB239d/index.htm