From Salon | May 11, 2012 | The human rights detective
By Jefferson Morley
Note from CrisisBalochistan: While Balochistan is not the subject of this article, we are posting a link to the story because the work that Kate Doyle does is important to all who are concerned with extra-judicial abductions and killings. It is our hope that one day sources will come forward in Balochistan and Pakistan, as they have done in Guatemala, to help reveal the fates of those who have been disappeared and/or been murdered.
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'Kate Doyle's job isn't exactly journalism, though she's nailed more big stories than many Pulitzer Prize winners. Her work does not quite qualify as law enforcement either, though a few bad guys living in confined quarters rue the day she came into their lives. "Human rights detective" sounds flippant, so she prefers "forensic archivist."
Whatever you call it, war criminals have to pay attention. Last month Doyle, a senior analyst at the non-profit National Security Archive, testified as an expert witness in the Peruvian government's prosecution of Vladimir Montesinos, the country's former intelligence chief, who is on trial for ordering the execution of 14 captured leftist guerrillas in 1997. Doyle authenticated a declassified CIA cable she had obtained that included a first person account of Montesinos's actions.
...In the late 1990s, a source gave Guatemalan human rights activists a 54-page army log that revealed the fate of scores of people who were "disappeared" by security forces during the mid-1980s. The log included photos of 183 of the victims, along with coded references to their executions.
For the families of the victims, the results of the discovery of the so-called "death squad dossier" were close to miraculous. Not only are the officers named in the documents now under investigation, but thanks to Peccerelli's DNA work, the bodies of five of the victims were identified and returned to their families, who had never known what had happened to their loved ones 30 years ago.
In 2009, another source gave Doyle a set of internal military documents about the scorched earth campaign of the early 1980s that were so damning in their details that the source recommended she immediately leave the country. "This person was worried that anybody who had possession of such incendiary documents would be targeted," Doyle said.
The documents will be used by prosecutors in the trial of Rios Montt. "We have a very strong case," Doyle says. But the continuing power of the Guatemalan military means the 86-year-old retired general may be able to avoid justice...'
Read the full article at Salon.com | May 11, 2012 | The human rights detective