In Chile, Charge in Death of Victor Jara

May 28th, 2009  |  Published in Newsroom Alerts

Musician Victor Jara

Musician Victor Jara


A judge in Chile has charged a former soldier in connection with the killing, more than 35 years ago, of the popular folk singer Victor Jara.

The accused man, Jose Adolfo Paredes Marquez, who is now 54, was an army conscript at the time.

Victor Jara was among thousands of people rounded up in the early days of General Augusto Pinochet’s right-wing military coup.

He was taken to Santiago’s national stadium, tortured and shot.

Judicial authorities reopened the investigation into Victor Jara’s death last year, after new evidence was presented by his family.

His widow, Joan, reacting to the court’s decision, said: “There are other people responsible - those who ordered the torture and the execution.”

Broken hands

Victor Jara and thousands of other people were arrested and taken to the main football stadium in Santiago soon after Gen Pinochet seized power, following the military coup which ousted the elected leftist president Salvador Allende in September, 1973.

Once there, soldiers broke and burned Victor Jara’s hands so that he was unable to play his guitar, witnesses say. He was then shot and killed.

The 38-year-old singer was one of the founding fathers of Chile’s New Song movement, and a supporter of President Allende.

More than 3,000 were killed or disappeared during the period of military rule in Chile, which lasted from 1973 to 1990.

General Pinochet died in 2006, at the age of 91.

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Victor Jara’s music was featured on Latino USA’s recent program: Torture and The Soul of a People.

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