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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> SANTIAGO, Chile Chile's former army chief is acknowledging he handed over
to nuns the child of two left-wing activists killed after the 1973
military coup.Juan Emilio Cheyre now heads Chile's electoral service. He
told the newspaper El Mercurio on Tuesday that he gave 2-year-old Ernesto
Lejderman to a convent. In his first time speaking publicly about the
case, he said he was just following orders.Lejderman was raised by his
grandparents in Argentina. He says Cheyre shouldn't face charges. But human
rights group are calling for Cheyre to quit his electoral post.Lejderman's
parents sought to escape with their son after Gen. Augusto Pinochet's coup
but were killed by a military patrol on the outskirts of a
northern city.Chile's government estimates 3,095 people were killed during
Pinochet's 1973-90 dictatorship.
be made public with the eventual release of such documents
under the new U.S. Freedom of Information Act -- the same act
the Washington-based National Security Archive used to get the latest release."I
requested these particular materials in 2000 and it took 11 years to
get them," the archive's Malcolm Byrne said in an email to The
Associated Press on Tuesday.Iranian leaders have been asking for an official
apology ever since the coup. The U.S. and Iran remain at odds
over Iran's plans to build up its nuclear power system, and allegedly,
nuclear weapons capability.President Bill Clinton came close to apologizing
in oblique comments in 1999, and President Barack Obama acknowledged the
U.S. actions in his Cairo speech in 2009."In the middle of the
Cold War, the United States played a role in the overthrow of
a democratically elected Iranian government," Obama said to the Egyptian
audience, citing that as a reason for tension between the two countries.No
U.S. leader has explicitly apologized, and the White House offered no immediate
comment Tuesday on the new disclosures.
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