Osvaldo Romo
Osvaldo Romo Mena (c. 1938 – 4 July 2007) was an agent of the Chilean Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional (DINA) from 1973 to 1990, during the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Romo was involved in the forced disappearance of over one hundred people, including Christians for Socialism and MIR members Diana Arón Svigilsky, Manuel Cortez Joo and Ofelio Lazo. He was sentenced to life imprisonment, but several of the sentences were suspended by the Chilean Supreme Court.[1]
Life[]
Osvaldo Romo became known in working-class neighborhoods before Pinochet's coup in 1973 as a leftist activist, member of the Popular Socialist Union (USOPO) and MIR sympathizer.[1] Following the coup, he reappeared in these neighborhoods in a military uniform, arresting his friends and contacts. There are still debates in left-wing circles over whether Romo suddenly changed his political orientation or if he had always been a mole for the Chilean security services.[1]
Known as Guatón Romo ("Fatso Romo") or Comandante Raúl, he was one of DINA's key torturers, operating in centers such as Villa Grimaldi.[1] On April 11, 1995, in an interview televised by Univisión, he commented in great detail, and evidently without remorse, on the techniques that had been used in the centers. These included the application of electricity to women's nipples and genitals, the use of dogs, and insertion of rats into women's vaginas.[1]
—Would you do it again? Would you do it the same way?
—Sure, I'd do the same and more. I wouldn't leave anybody alive (...) That was one of DINA's mistakes. I was always arguing with my general: don't leave that person alive, don't let that person go free. There are consequences.
—As for throwing the corpses of the prisoners into the sea...
—I think it could have happened. (...) Throwing them into the crater of a volcano would be better... (...) Who'd go looking for them in a volcano? Nobody.
—On the day you die... what would your epitaph say? "Here lies the hangman, the torturer, the murderer..."
—Logical, logical. I accept that. But for me it was a positive thing. (...) I am at peace with my conscience and my beliefs.
— Excerpt from the interview, [2]
Life in Brazil and arrest[]
In 1977, Romo was sent to Brazil by his superiors, and may have participated in death squads there, according to human rights NGOs.[1] During Chile's transition to democracy, as one of the most important figures of the Pinochet regime, Romo was sought by prosecutors and found living in São Paulo with his wife and five children in June 1992.[citation needed]
Arrested by the Brazilian police, he was extradited to Chile in November 1992.[1] He was sentenced to ten years in prison for the kidnapping of MIR member Manuel Cortez Joo and five years and a day for the kidnapping of Ofelio Lazo, who was disappeared in July 1974.[citation needed]
Romo, suffering from diabetes and heart failure, was moved to the hospital of Santiago Penitentiary on 3 July 2007, and died the following day. His funeral was held on 5 July at the Cementerio General de Santiago, with no one in attendance.[3]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Fallece Osvaldo Romo, uno de los más crueles torturadores de la dictadura de Pinochet, El País (EFE cable), 5 July 2007 (in Spanish)
- ^ «La escabrosa entrevista que concedió Romo a Univisión», La Tercera, 7 April 2007.
- ^ «En rápida ceremonia, sepultan al "Guatón Romo" en Cementerio General» Archived 2007-07-14 at the Wayback Machine, Terra; accessed 2 January 2018.
- 1938 births
- 2007 deaths
- Chilean anti-communists
- Chilean kidnappers
- People of the Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional
- Chilean people who died in prison custody
- Prisoners who died in Chilean detention
- People extradited from Brazil
- People extradited to Chile
- Operation Condor
- Torture in Chile
- People convicted of kidnapping