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Alfredo Pereira Acevedo

Obrero Maestranza FF.CC. — 27 years old.

Background

StatusValech-Rettig Commission Violation of Human Rights
DateOctober 6, 1973
LocationSantiago, RM Metropolitana
Age27 years old
OccupationObrero Maestranza FF.CC.
AffiliationPC

Case summary

Alfredo Pereira Acevedo, a 27-year-old worker at the Maestranza and a member of the Communist Party, was a victim of human rights violations on October 6, 1973, in Santiago. His case is part of the judicial process known as the "San Bernardo Episode."

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

Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos[1]

On October 6, 1973, the following individuals were killed by members of the Ejército:

Héctor Enrique HERNANDEZ GARCES, 17 years old, a high school student at a secondary school in Puente Alto, and a sympathizer of the Juventudes Socialistas. He was detained on September 27, 1973, at his home by military personnel who were tracking one of his friends, Francisco Viera.

Arturo KOYK FREDES, 48 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista. He was detained in the early hours of September 28 at his home by the same military patrol that captured Mauricio Cea and Roberto Avila.

Alfredo ACEVEDO PEREIRA, 27 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Raúl CASTRO CALDERA, 23 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Hernán CHAMORRO MONARDES, 29 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Manuel GONZALEZ VARGAS, 46 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Adiel MONSALVES MARTINEZ, 41 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops, a union leader, and a member of the Partido Comunista.

José MORALES ALVAREZ, 31 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops, Vice President of the Railway Workers' Council, and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Pedro OYARZUN ZAMORANO, 36 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops, a union leader, and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Joel Guillermo SILVA OLIVA, 37 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista.

Ramón VIVANCO DIAZ, 44 years old, a worker at the Maestranza San Bernardo railway workshops and a member of the Partido Comunista.

(Juan Guillermo Cuadra Espinoza, Gustavo Martínez Vera, and Carlos Ortiz Ortiz met the same fate; they had been detained in Paine and taken to the Cerro Chena detention center. However, the situation affecting them is recounted in the section corresponding to the town of Paine.)

The eleven individuals mentioned above were detained on September 28, 1973, by military personnel during an operation carried out at the Maestranza de Ferrocarriles de San Bernardo.

Javier Antonio PACHECO MONSALVE, 31 years old, a furniture maker, a former member of President Allende's GAP (Personal Security Group) for a time, and a member of the MIR. His wife, María Isabel Beltran Sánchez, is a forcibly disappeared person. He was detained on October 5 by military personnel.

All of the aforementioned individuals were executed on October 6, 1973, by Ejército troops at the Cerro Chena detention center, suffering multiple gunshot wounds. Their deaths are recorded in death certificates, many of which list the Escuela de Infantería de San Bernardo as the place of death.

Regarding the case of Arturo Koyk, although his death certificate indicates the date as September 28, 1973, the Commission possesses evidence confirming his death alongside the railway personnel on October 6.

The families only learned of the deaths upon discovering their bodies at the Instituto Médico Legal. Some of the bodies could not be recovered by their next of kin and were buried in Patio 29 of the Cementerio General.

Faced with the concerns of relatives and coworkers, military authorities in the area summoned a union assembly where they reported that those affected were participating in paramilitary activities and had attempted to escape from Cerro Chena, which had allegedly prompted the military to kill them.

On the other hand, witnesses who spoke with the workers while they were in detention indicated that the workers had stated they were being accused of intending to blow up the gasometer or gas pipeline at the workshops, which would have caused half of San Bernardo to explode.

The Commission formed the conviction that the deaths of those affected constituted a case of human rights violations and could not accept the version provided to the families, based on the following considerations:

– There is no official document supporting the version of an escape given by the military overseer, nor is there any press information or judicial investigation to that effect. – The testimonies received by this Commission regarding the conditions in which detainees were held at Cerro Chena also disprove a possible escape.

Before arriving at the site, detainees were blindfolded and remained in that condition throughout their detention. Furthermore, the entire detention camp was surrounded by fences with barbed wire. The paths were lined with small ditches into which detainees often fell precisely because they could not see. – An attempted escape would have required prior coordination among the victims, which was impracticable because the detained railway workers were not grouped together but distributed in different sectors of the facility. – Autopsy protocols confirm that all victims died from gunfire, with most shots fired from a long distance and in an upward trajectory. This corroborates testimonies received by the Commission, which indicate that the victims were taken from their cells and brought to the hill, where they were forced to climb while soldiers fired at them from behind. – All bodies were sent to the Instituto Médico Legal with the notation that they had been "found" at the Escuela de Infantería de San Bernardo. This Commission verified that there was no judicial proceeding regarding the discovery of corpses at that facility.

This Commission reached the conviction that all the victims were executed outside of any legal process by State agents.

View original source

Judicial Case Files[2]

Episodio San Bernardo

Politically Executed
Judge/Minister
  • Hector Solis
Case roles
  • 03-02-f
  • 1462-2007
  • 6379-2010
Region
  • Metropolitana De Santiago
Detention Centers
  • Escuela De Infanteria De San Bernardo Cuartel Dos Cerro Chena
Convicted in this case
  • Victor Pinto Perez

References

  1. 1
  2. 2

How to cite this record

DondeEstan.cl (2026). Alfredo Pereira Acevedo. Retrieved on June 4, 2026, from https://dondeestan.cl/record/pereira-alfredo-acevedo. Original sources: Museum of Memory (https://interactivos.museodelamemoria.cl/victims/?p=149), Judicial Case Files (https://expedientesdelarepresion.cl/causa/episodio-san-bernardo/).