Tuesday, 16 April 2024

Textile Details

'No a la impunidad 2 / No to Impunity 2', by Arpilleristas de Lo Hermida, Santiago de Chile. (Photo: Martin Melaugh)
'No a la impunidad 2 / No to Impunity 2', by Arpilleristas de Lo Hermida, Santiago de Chile. (Photo: Martin Melaugh)

 

Title of Textile:No a la impunidad 2 / No to Impunity 2
Maker: Maria Madariaga, Arpilleristas de Lo Hermida, Santiago de Chile
Country of Origin: Chile
Year Produced: 2011
Size (cm): 60cm x 70cm
Materials: Scraps of material hand sewn onto burlap
Type of Textile: Arpillera
Description:

This arpillera dates from the latter years of the Pinochet regime in Chile. It is a classical arpillera, framed by the sun and mountains. It was made for export to highlight the reality worldwide of the struggle that saw women in public protests chanting "we want democracy" and demanding "Truth, Justice and Reconciliation."

For these women, already very engaged with the struggle for democracy, saying ”No to impunity” was a core element of this struggle. In their opinion, law 2191, known as the Amnesty law (Amnesty to the perpetrators), written in 1977 by the then minister of Justice, Mónica Madariaga, was a retrograde step.

This law, written five years after the start of the military coup that took power from the democratically elected President, Salvador Allende, was enacted in 1978 in order to avoid legal action in all cases of human rights violation from 1973-1978.

In 1998 Chile’s Supreme Court ruled that the law should not apply to cases of human rights violations, paving the way for investigations in cases of detention, disappearances, torture, and execution to proceed. This resulted in prosecutions and prison sentences for former agents of Pinochet’s secret police (Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional, DINA).

These prosecutions are positive steps in progressing the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation process. However, it was only in 2010 that a bill to nullify law 2191 was brought to parliament. Declaring it void “would force Chile to come face-to-face with its troubled past and finally send the message that the abuses of the Pinochet era will not be tolerated again.” claims Guadalupe Marengo, Americas Deputy Director at Amnesty International - a view shared by many human rights groups. (Amnesty, 2015) Chile: Amnesty law keeps Pinochet’s legacy alive

Successive democratic governments have promised but failed to comply with an Inter-American Court of Human Rights verdict, and numerous UN body reports and recommendations, to have the law revoked, annulled, or otherwise removed. They argue that it is not possible in Chilean legal practice to 'dissolve' a law with retroactive effect; that it is not necessary to remove it legislatively because it has been overcome interpretively by Court practice and that the Chilean Supreme Court has come to recognise that amnesty cannot be applied to crimes against humanity. Human Rights organisations dispute this argument.

The Amnesty law still remains technically in force and on the statute books but is being disapplied on a case by case basis.

Owner: Conflict Textiles collection
Location: c/o Jeanie Parris, Belfast Campus Library, Ulster University
Original / Replica: Original
Photographer: Martin Melaugh
Provenance: Angélica Ponce, Chile.



Textile exhibited at: RETAZOS TESTIMONIALES: arpilleras de Chile y otras latitudes, 28/09/2013 - 10/11/2013
Mujeres que Hilvanan Días / Women that Sew Days Together, 5/03/2015 - 10/04/2015
Arpilleras de América Latina: Mujeres cosedoras de vida , 19/03/2016 - 24/04/2016
LA VIDA QUE SE TEJE Tejidos de América Latina por la memoria y la vida, 11/05/2016 - 10/07/2016
Art and Human Rights Network Day , 20/06/2017 - 20/06/2017
Textile Language of Conflicts, 6/11/2017 - 10/11/2017
Arpilerak: Memoriaren Haritik Etorkizuna Josten / Arpilleras: Al Hilo De La Memoria, 12/04/2018 - 24/04/2018
ARIPILLERAS: AL HILO DE LA MEMORIA, TEJIENDO FUTURO / Arpilleras: Knitting the Future, 25/04/2018 - 30/05/2018
Justicia Transicional y Arte-Textil / Transitional Justice and Art-Textile, 24/09/2018 - 18/10/2018
Conflict Textiles / Ulster University, Belfast - The search for the disappeared, 25/10/2023 - 30/08/2024
Responding to Disappearance in Chile, Northern Ireland and Turkey, 25/10/2023 - 25/10/2023



Textile Detail Image(s)