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by Staff Writers Santiago (AFP) Sept 10, 2014 Organizations of active and retired Chilean military personnel took out a newspaper advertisement Wednesday proudly claiming the 1973 coup that launched dictator Augusto Pinochet's 17-year rule. Published the day before the 41st anniversary of the coup, the letter said the overthrow of socialist president Salvador Allende set the South American country on the path to "security" and "progress." "We salute all Chileans on the foundational date of 21st-century Chile," said the ad in daily newspaper La Tercera, which was signed by 20 organizations of soldiers, police and "martyrs' widows" whose military husbands were killed. The letter condemned the trials of military officers accused of crimes during Pinochet's "dirty war" against leftist opponents, when 3,200 people were killed and 38,000 tortured, according to government figures. "While delinquents, subversives, terrorists and soldiers' murderers have been pardoned, amnestied or protected, the people who fought to create the conditions that have given us the security and order enabling the nation's current progress have been convicted without due process," it said. "We will not cease publicizing this abnormal situation, which damages the concept of justice and Chileans' solidarity." About 60 former military members are currently serving prison sentences for violating human rights during the dictatorship. The September 11, 1973 coup remains deeply divisive in Chile, where Pinochet still has fervent supporters 24 years after the return to democracy and eight years after his death at age 91.
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