Ex-Colonel Who Admitted Torture Killed in Brazil
A former army colonel who acknowledged he tortured and killed political
prisoners during Brazil's 1964-1985 military regime was murdered in his
home outside Rio de Janeiro, police told local news media on Saturday.
Citing the victim's widow, police inspector Fabio Salvadorete told the
UOL news portal that Paulo Malhaes was suffocated to death on Thursday
by three men who broke into his house and stole two computers and some
of the antique guns he collected.
Last month, Malhaes gave Brazil's National Truth Commission a detailed
account of how he participated in the abduction, torture and killing of
political prisoners. He also said he helped in the "disappearance" of
the bodies. He said that at the time he did not regret his actions which
he justified saying "they were guerrillas and enemies of the state."
Malhaes was the first member of the Armed Forces to openly acknowledge
that he tortured, killed and hid the bodies of political prisoners.
Created in 2012, the Truth Commission is investigating human rights
abuses committed under Brazil's military regimes. It does not have
powers to prosecute anyone because of a 1979 amnesty law that released
civilians and the military from liability for politically motivated
crimes committed during the dictatorship. It can, however, reveal the
abuses and the names of those who committed them.
Unlike Argentina, Chile and Uruguay, which also had repressive military
regimes, Brazil has never punished military officials accused of human
rights abuses.
The Truth Commission said in a statement it has asked the federal police
to help investigate Malhaes' murder and determine if it is linked to
what he said last month.
Victoria Grabois, head of the Rio de Janeiro-based activist group
Torture Never Again, told reporters that as a result of Malhaes killing
"other torturers may refuse to explain what took place during the
military dictatorship."
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