Brazil Shatters Its Wall of Silence

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    Brazil Shatters Its Wall of Silence

    By EDUARDO GONZALEZ

    Published: December 2, 2011

    Brazils recent decision to examine the abuses of the military dictatorship from several decades

    ago could change the face of democracy at home, making it more genuine and transparent. At

    the same time it could have a wider impact, allowing Brazil to take a decisive stand on human

    rights regionally and internationally.

    In a momentous step forward, President Dilma Rousseff has signed two laws: one on access to

    government information, and another establishing a national truth commission, modeled after

    similar experiences in Latin America.

    Authorizing inquiries on government abuse breaks with a long-standing tradition of

    government secrecy and elite opacity. Even today, Brazil refuses to declassify archives relatedto 19th century foreign wars and internal repression. After the end of slavery in the 1890s,

    Brazil incinerated all governmental archives on the practice; whether to hinder compensation

    claims by slave owners or to hide a shaming period in history, it is impossible to know with

    certainty.

    The worse episodes of state violence in the 20th century also remain shrouded in official

    silence, chief among them are the crimes committed by Brazils military dictatorship, which ran

    a system of torture and selective assassinations from 1964 to 1985. During those years Brazil

    was the regional model for regimes led by the military, rather than by individual caudillos, or

    leaders, and Brazilian ideologues systematized the Doctrine of National Security that would

    provide the intellectual basis for military regimes all over Latin America.

    The dictatorship was responsible for the exile and torture of thousands of Brazilians, as well as

    hundreds of forced disappearances and arbitrary executions. Some compare these numbers

    with atrocities in neighboring Argentina or Central America and conclude that Brazils

    strongmen were somehow mild. That is an immoral and misleading arithmetic that minimizes

    the suffering of the regimes victims and ignores the long term impact on the society.

    One of the most egregious cases of military abuse was the destruction of a rural guerrilla group

    in the Amazonian region of Araguaia in 1972. A small band of 62 anti-military combatants was

    wiped out there were no prisoners or survivors; no information whatsoever was ever

    provided to their families.

    The government of Brazil, at the instigation of the defense establishment, litigated for decades

    in national and international courts to protect the secrecy of its information, eventually losing

    the case in all jurisdictions, but prolonging the suffering of many relatives.

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    Unlike its neighbors in South America, who have confronted the legacy of military rule, Brazil

    has never conducted prosecutions or provided an official account of the crimes. A blanket

    amnesty granted by the military government is still in force, shielding torturers. The reason for

    this anomaly is that the Brazilian military also led the pack with its skill in managing what its

    leaders called a slow, gradual, and safe transition to civilian rule while simultaneously

    protecting their privileges.

    The result, however, is that Brazil now lags in comparison with all its neighbors in the

    examination of the past and the upholding of victims rights to truth and justice. This weakens

    the Brazilian voice in the international arena with respect to the critical field of human rights

    protection.

    Now, with a truth commission and a legal framework to open governmental records, it is

    possible that the country will start to break the wall of silence that forbids Brazilians from

    knowing their own history, and that Brazil will gain redoubled authority to advocate for human

    rights.

    There will be serious difficulties though, chief among them are the amnesty law and thepersistent denial or justification by the military and extreme right-wing politicians of their

    actions during the years of dictatorship. It will be up to President Rousseff, herself a victim of

    torture during the dictatorship, to stand up for the effective implementation of the access-to-

    information law and for the creation of a truly independent truth commission. In doing so she

    will send a strong moral message, like Michelle Bachelet of Chile, Nelson Mandela of South

    Africa, and other leaders who managed to open the gates of a troubled past in search of

    reconciliation.

    Eduardo Gonzalez is the director of Truth and Memory Program at the International Center for

    Transitional Justice.