The state provided lifelong monetary compensation to the victims as well as health and education benefits. These are detailed in Law 19,992 and include: a monthly payment of about 113,000 to 129,000 thousand
Chilean pesos (in December 2004 prices, subsequently adjusted for inflation), depending on the victim's age; free public healthcare for victims and their parents, spouses or children under twenty-five, or incapacitated children of any age; free education (primary to tertiary) for victims whose studies were interrupted by their imprisonment. There is also a special bonus of four million Chilean pesos for victim's children who were born in captivity or who were detained with their parents while they were minors. These cases have raised questions about the system of verification of victims of dictatorships.
The Age newspaper has reported that a total of 1,183 people were killed, or reported missing and presumed dead, and that their names appear on a special memorial at the General Cemetery of Santiago. Clive Foss, in
The Tyrants: 2500 years of Absolute Power and Corruption, estimates that 1,500 Chileans were killed or disappeared during the Pinochet regime. Nearly 700 civilians disappeared during the period between 1974 and 1977 after being detained by the Chilean military and police. In October 1977,
The New York Times reported that
Amnesty International had documented the disappearance of approximately 1,500 Chileans since 1973. Until May 2012, seventy-six agents had been condemned for human rights violations and sixty-seven were convicted: thirty-six from the
Army, twenty-seven
Carabineros, two from the
Air Force, one from the
Navy, and one of the
PDI. Three condemned agents died and six agents received conditional sentences. The Chilean justice system holds 350 open cases of "disappeared" persons, illegal detainees, and torture victims during the dictatorial rule. These cases involve 700 military and civilian personnel. ==See also==