Mario Toro Arguellez
Taxista — 34 years old.
Background
Mario Toro Arguellez
Taxista — 34 years old.
Case summary
Mario Argüelles Toro, a 34-year-old taxi driver and Socialist leader, was executed by the military on October 19, 1973, in Calama alongside 25 other people. Despite having been previously sentenced to three years of internal exile, he was removed from the prison where he was awaiting transfer and murdered.
Image AI-colorized. This is not an original photograph.
Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos[1]
On October 19, 1973, the following 26 individuals were executed by military personnel on the road between Calama and Antofagasta: Mario ARGUELLES TORO, 34 years old, taxi driver, socialist leader; detained on September 26, 1973, and sentenced by a Consejo de Guerra on October 16 to three years of internal exile south of the 38th parallel.
At the time of his execution, he was being held in prison awaiting the Gendarmerie commission that would take him to the location of his sentence. Carlos BERGER GURALNIK […] Haroldo CABRERA ABARZUA […] Carlos Alfredo ESCOBEDO CARIS […] Daniel GARRIDO MUÑOZ […] Luis Alberto HERNANDEZ NEIRA […] Hernán Elizardo MORENO VILLARROEL […] Luis Alfonso MORENO VILLARROEL […] David MIRANDA LUNA […] Rafael Enrique PINEDA IBACACHE […] Carlos Alfonso PIÑERO LUCERO […] Fernando Roberto RAMIREZ SANCHEZ […] Sergio Moisés RAMIREZ ESPINOZA […] Alejandro RODRIGUEZ RODRIGUEZ […] José Gregorio SAAVEDRA GONZALEZ […] Domingo MAMANI LOPEZ […] Jerónimo CARPANCHI CHOQUE […] Bernardino CAYO CAYO […] Luis Alberto GAHONA OCHOA […] Manuel HIDALGO RIVAS […] José Rolando HOYOS SALAZAR […] Rosario Aguid MUÑOZ CASTILLO […] Milton Alfredo MUÑOZ MUÑOZ […] Víctor Alfredo ORTEGA CUEVAS […] Roberto Segundo ROJAS ALCAYAGA […] Jorge Rubén YUENG ROJAS […] The last ten individuals mentioned provided services at the Dupont Explosives plant of the ENAEX company and were detained at the company's facilities at noon on October 12, 1973, by Carabineros personnel, being immediately taken to the police station located in the Dupont sector. That same day, the detainees were transferred to the Calama Police Station, where they remained held incommunicado for about five days.
During their detention at that facility, they were taken on several occasions to other locations to be subjected to interrogations and torture. On October 17, they were admitted to the Public Prison. There is no precise information regarding the charges brought against them, nor regarding their legal status at the time of their executions.
On October 20, 1973, official information issued by the Jefe de Plaza was released through the press, stating that 26 detainees from the Calama Prison had been killed by the military personnel transporting them to the Antofagasta Prison when they attempted to escape, taking advantage of an electrical failure in the vehicle in which they were being transported.
An identical version was given to the direct relatives of the executed, who were also not given their remains, but only death certificates that indicated Calama as the place of death and execution by firing squad as the cause.
Regarding the bodies, there was a commitment from the military authority of the time to hand them over after one year, a commitment that, despite being recorded in documents given to the families, was never fulfilled.
Despite successive investigations to locate the whereabouts of the bodies, it was only during 1990 that the place where they had been illegally buried for at least some time was found, and from where they had been removed or blown up on some occasion. Despite this, it was possible to identify the remains of Haroldo Cabrera through forensic analysis.
Regarding the events that led to the execution of the 26 detainees from Calama, the Commission formed the conviction that all of them were executed outside the law, with cruelty and malice, an illicit act for which State agents are responsible. This conviction is based on the following circumstances:
– The authority's version that there was a transfer of prisoners is implausible, especially when a delegation from Santiago was on-site precisely to review the legal status of the detainees; it is even maintained, although this could not be proven, that when the detainees were taken out of the prison, a Consejo de Guerra that concerned them was in session, which makes it even more absurd that they were taken to another place.
The transfer also makes no sense if one considers that a significant number of the detainees had already been sentenced by that date, others were being prosecuted, others were to be sent into internal exile, and some did not even have a case initiated, which contributes to undermining the existence of any motive or reason that explains the need to transfer all of them together to the city of Antofagasta;
– It is unlikely that there was an escape attempt, among other things, because there were people among the detainees who had been sentenced to relatively very light penalties; because others were in precarious physical condition as a result of the torture received; and finally, because of the extreme difficulty of escaping while being guarded by a large military detachment;
– Even more important than the above is that in the public statements of the various authorities and officers who participated in the events, there has been a dispute over who gave the order to proceed with the executions, without claiming that it was actually an escape attempt, with all of them refuting the initial explanation;
– Various reliable testimonies lead to the conclusion that officers from the Calama Regiment and the delegation from Santiago participated in the executions;
– In relation to these events, there was no institutional investigation ordered by the competent authorities to achieve the proper clarification of the facts and to define the appropriate responsibilities, as was required.
Likewise, the judicial proceedings, which ended up falling under the jurisdiction of the Military Justice system, were dismissed through the application of the Amnesty Decree Law;
– The fact that their bodies were not handed over to their families suggests a desire to conceal the events.
References
- 1Museum of Memoryhttps://interactivos.museodelamemoria.cl/victims/?p=2979