• @TheGrandNagus
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    5 days ago

    Is this straight up misinformation? I’ve been through 6 articles now and I can’t find any other source on this outside of Skwawkbox.

    All I can find is stuff about him being a major person behind the Good Friday Agreement and HK + Chagos Islands handovers.

    Even the Telegraph and fucking GB News – both of which try to paint Labour/Starmer in the worst light possible – don’t say anything about Pinochet. Where does this alleged link come from?

    Looking into it, Skwawkbox has been caught lying multiple times, predominantly about the Grenfell Fire. They’ve also lost a libel case against one Labour MP and breached reporting standards about another. They, and I’m really not joking here, describe themselves as a non-traditional publication aimed at “aunties and uncles on Facebook”.

    If anybody has any other sources please correct me on this.

    • @[email protected]
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      65 days ago

      I just assume every skwawkbox link is misinformation.

      If not in an absolute sense then always by ommission.

      • @TheGrandNagus
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        4 days ago

        This article Guardian article, on top of just being an allegation in a book, doesn’t accuse Powell of doing what Skwawkbox says he did.

        Literally all it says is that the press chief of the 1999 Chilean government (i.e. 10 years and 2 governments after Pinochet stepped down) had meetings with Powell. That’s it. Seems normal to me. I imagine the UK government would be chatting to Chile if they arrested David Cameron tomorrow.

        Frei and his government, by the way, was anti-Pinochet. During his presidency, he indicted and arrested Pinochet.

        I don’t know how you could read that and think it’s a confirmation that Powell negotiated release for Pinochet.

        • flamingos-cantM
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          55 days ago

          It absolutely argues that:

          Frei argued to Blair that neither government would benefit if Pinochet were to die in England and that he could be tried in Chilean courts. […] Blair undertook to do what he could within the law provided the exchanges between the two leaders were kept secret. The authors claim that Blair suggested setting up a ‘back channel’, with two people appointed to liaise between the leaders’ private offices.