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Carlos Belarmino Barría Ibarra

Victim of the military dictatorship.

Background

Case summary

Carlos Belarmino Barría Ibarra was an agent of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) and a member of the CNI Engineering Division during the Chilean dictatorship. His name appears on an official list of repressors provided by the Army to the courts of justice to investigate human rights violations.

Automatically generated summary. Please consult the original sources below for verified information.

MemoriaViva[1]

The following is the complete list of DINA agents, which was handed over to the courts of justice by the Army a few years ago. The text was kept under lock and key for a long period, but time eventually leaked it to human rights lawyers and a journalist specializing in this subject.

This document, which has never been published in a print medium, has reached Clarín from the desk of a journalist who has followed multiple cases of human rights violations during the dictatorship. The document, therefore, is completely authentic. It concerns more than a thousand agents, some prosecuted, others convicted, and not a few already deceased.

[List of names omitted for brevity in this translation]

Source: elclarin.cl, July 8, 2013

Fears that those sued for belonging to DINA will argue they were unaware of what was happening

According to official figures, during the Pinochet dictatorship, more than 3,200 Chileans died at the hands of state agents, of whom about 1,200 remain forcibly disappeared; more than 38,000 were subjected to political imprisonment and torture, and several hundred thousand were forced into exile.

The list of more than a thousand members of the DINA who were sued for illicit association continues to generate repercussions. This is mainly due to the well-known men who stand out in politics today who were part of this repressive institution during the military dictatorship.

Given this, the deputy and one of the precursors of the lawsuit, along with the Association of Relatives of the Forcibly Disappeared, Hugo Gutiérrez (PC), maintained that "we will have to wait until the Court declares it admissible; from there, the trial will be held to investigate the criminal responsibility in this illicit association that was created, which was the DINA." In dialogue with Cambio21, he added that "the lawsuit aims to condemn those who persecuted people and tortured those who thought differently from the military regime." "People like Mayor Cristián Labbé or Deputy Rosauro Martínez (RN) cannot continue to appear in politics and Chilean society when they were part of the torture of thousands of Chileans," said the parliamentarian. Finally, he indicated that "for twenty years I have processed many criminal complaints, defending human rights, and if this is another one that I will have to wait for until it is resolved, I will do so." For his part, Deputy Jorge Tarud (PPD) told Cambio21 that "all actions to make our recent history transparent, and to identify those who participated in a criminal organization and illicit association to commit crimes, as the DINA was, seem positive to me." In that vein, he added that "now all those who have participated in the DINA must concretely express what their activity was, because certainly some will hide behind the fact that they had administrative responsibilities, when we all know that it was a repressive body that was mainly in charge of torturing people." "In my opinion, people who belonged to the DINA and who are currently linked to politics should not be, and that is where people should consider their vote," the legislator explained. Finally, Tarud said that "it is good that it is known who were part of a repressive body and who they are today, such as Mr. Labbé, mayor of Providencia." A real list? As it was established, at the end of 2007, a selected group of the Army took on the task of building, for the first time, a list of officers and non-commissioned officers who were part of the DINA. The task was stamped in a "secret" document, dated August 28, 2008, signed by the then Chief of the Army General Staff, General Alfredo Ewing Pinochet, which contains the list of officers and non-commissioned officers who "fulfilled an extra-institutional mission in the Army General Command, assigned to the DINA, between September 11, 1973, and December 1977." The document, however, remained stored in an archive until now. In addition to the list of agents, it reveals that the DINA existed from September 11, 1973, the date of the coup against the democratic government of Salvador Allende. According to official figures, during the Pinochet dictatorship, more than 3,200 Chileans died at the hands of state agents, of whom about 1,200 remain forcibly disappeared; more than 38,000 were subjected to political imprisonment and torture, and several hundred thousand were forced into exile. The cases of the disappeared occurred in their vast majority between September 11, 1973, and December 1977, the period in which the DINA operated, later replaced by the National Intelligence Center (CNI).

Source: cambio21.cl, April 12, 2012

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References

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How to cite this record

DondeEstan.cl (2026). Carlos Belarmino Barría Ibarra. Retrieved on June 4, 2026, from https://dondeestan.cl/record/barria-ibarra-carlos-belarmino. Original sources: Memoria Viva (https://memoriaviva.com/criminales/barria-ibarra-carlos-belarmino).