Juan Garcés

Awarded 1999

Spain

For his long-standing efforts to end the impunity of dictators.

Juan Garcés is a Spanish lawyer who became Chilean president Salvador Allende’s closest personal adviser and a survivor after the 1973 military attack on La Moneda Palace. He is the man behind the arrest of dictator Augusto Pinochet in London in 1998 and the US declassification of documents related to the Pinochet case.

From Europe, Garcés intensively published on the Allende years and spent a considerable amount of energy and money in taking forward the Pinochet case first and the Franco case afterwards, struggling against unaccountability and crimes against humanity.

Impunity is an invitation to commit new crimes.

Juan Garcés, 1999 Laureate

When Salvador Allende became President of Chile in 1970, he invited Garcés to be his personal adviser. He was with the President when revolting troops bombed the presidential palace and found himself the sole survivor among Allende's political advisers when the coup had run its course.

Garcés was forced to leave the country and went to France. He worked as an adviser to the Director-General of UNESCO and researcher at the National Foundation of Political Science. In these years, he wrote several books and articles about the Allende years, most famously Allende and the Chilean Experience (1976) and Democracy and counterrevolution (1975), published in many languages. After the fall of Franco, he returned to Spain, became a member of the Madrid Bar Association in 1981 and set up a law firm in the following year.

In 1985, a Spanish law was passed that permitted victims of genocide, terrorism and torture, whether Spanish nationals or not, and whether the crimes were committed in Spain or not, to seek justice in Spanish courts according to the principles of universal jurisdiction. With the Union of Progressive Spanish Prosecutors, Dr Garcés filed a criminal complaint against Pinochet and fellow Junta leaders for 'crimes against humanity' in July 1996.

Simultaneously, a civil suit was filed on behalf of the families of victims of Pinochet's regime, who had been organised by and whose lawyers had been directed by Garcés. The Spanish courts accepted both suits. When Pinochet visited London in October 1998, Garces demanded his arrest and extradition to Spain to face trial. Pinochet was arrested, and the United Kingdom Courts granted his extradition.

Garcés intensified his collection of evidence, travelling several times to the US to ask the Clinton administration to declassify documents related to Pinochet's crimes. On January 28, 1999, President Clinton ordered a massive declassification of documents related to the Pinochet case.

Garcés has borne substantial costs in taking forward the Pinochet case, which has implications far beyond the indictment of one old ex-dictator and marks a breakthrough in the struggle against unaccountability and impunity in crimes against humanity. It confirms that heads of state or government can no more hide behind the shield of immunity from criminal procedures. It illustrates the need for universal jurisdiction concerning prosecution and punishment of international crimes and constitutes a vital catalyst in supporting the establishment of an effective International Criminal Court.

Moreover, the Pinochet case serves as a precedent that may deter other prospective perpetrators of gross and massive violations of human rights.

Since 2009, Garcés' legal work has focused on getting the Spanish courts to investigate for the first time the crimes against humanity committed under General Franco's Dictatorship between July 1936 and November 1975.

Among other books on international relations and sociology, Garcés is the author of Soberanos e Intervenidos. Estrategias globales, americanos y españoles (2008).

In 2000, the President of the Republic of France honoured Garcés with the order of Chevalier de l'Ordre Nationale du Mérite.

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