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Former Sydney nanny accused of being dictator's secret agent to be extradited from Australia

Sydney woman Adriana Rivas' final appeal to avoid extradition to Chile to face historical kidnapping charges has failed.

A woman with short brown hair and glasses wearing a turquoise top and gold necklaces looks toward the camera with a serious expression.

Adriana Rivas (pictured here in a 2013 interview) is accused of participating in the disappearances of seven people while working for former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet's secret police force. Source: SBS News

IN BRIEF

  • Adriana Rivas worked as a nanny in Sydney before her 2019 arrest by NSW Police at the request of the Chilean government.
  • She has spent seven years resisting attempts to extradite her to Chile to face aggravated kidnapping charges.

A former Sydney nanny will be extradited to Chile to face court over kidnapping allegations after losing her seven-year battle to remain in Australia.

Adriana Elcira Rivas emigrated to Australia in the late 1970s and worked as a nanny in Sydney's eastern suburb of Bondi before she was arrested by the NSW Police in 2019 at the request of the Chilean government.

She has been in custody for seven years, as she resisted attempts to extradite her to the South American nation to face trial for seven counts of aggravated kidnapping.

Rivas, now in her 70s, is accused of participating in the disappearances of seven people — including a woman who was five months pregnant — while working for Augusto Pinochet's secret police force.

She denies the allegations and has argued her extradition to Chile should be blocked because it would result in her being tried for crimes against humanity.

But the argument that the offences had been mischaracterised was "misconceived", Justice Michael Lee told the Federal Court in Sydney on Tuesday.

"The materials do not suggest the offence for which extradition is sought is anything other than the offences identified throughout the request … namely aggravated kidnapping," he said.

Rivas' contention that the government failed to consider the time limit for prosecuting the kidnapping offences had expired was similarly flawed, the judge determined.

"The applicant has failed to demonstrate that the minister's decision was affected by jurisdictional error," Lee said.

Chileans' long quest for justice

The ambassador and consul-general of Chile sat in the public gallery as the decision was handed down.

Families of Chileans who vanished or were killed during Pinochet's rule had packed the courtroom during the two-day hearing, but were not able to be in the court for the decision.

Tens of thousands of Chileans came to Australia after the dictator violently overthrew the nation's elected socialist government in a 1973 coup.

About 40,000 people were killed, tortured or imprisoned for political reasons before the end of his ruthless reign in 1990.

Rivas is accused of playing a role in a Direccion de Inteligencia Nacional brigade that physically and psychologically tortured members of the communist party who opposed Pinochet's regime.

Adriana Navarro, who represents the families, previously said more than 1,100 Chileans have still not been found.

"We have a very good idea of what happened to them, and we think Rivas may do too," Navarro told AAP outside court during the hearing.


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3 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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