Chilean woman accused of Pinochet-era kidnaps loses Australia extradition battle
Adriana Rivas, a 72-year-old Chilean woman living in Australia, has lost her legal battle against extradition to Chile, where she is accused of kidnapping and torturing dissidents during the Pinochet regime (1973-1990). Rivas emigrated to Australia in 1978 and Chile requested her extradition 12 years ago, alleging her involvement in the disappearance of seven people in 1976, including a pregnant 29-year-old and the secretary-general of Chile's Communist Party.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedAdriana Rivas, a 72-year-old Chilean woman living in Australia, has lost her legal battle against extradition to Chile, where she is accused of kidnapping and torturing dissidents during the Pinochet regime (1973-1990). Rivas emigrated to Australia in 1978 and Chile requested her extradition 12 years ago, alleging her involvement in the disappearance of seven people in 1976, including a pregnant 29-year-old and the secretary-general of Chile's Communist Party. A federal judge dismissed her lawyers' arguments against the extradition request, but Rivas may appeal. Rivas was allegedly an agent for DINA, Pinochet's secret police, and has denied wrongdoing despite describing her time with the agency positively. If no appeal is made, she will be sent to Chile to stand trial on charges of aggravated kidnapping.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedChilean prosecutors accuse Rivas of participating in the 1976 forced disappearance of Víctor Díaz and six other Communist Party members.
Rivas described her years at the Dina as 'the best of my life'.
More than 40,000 people were politically persecuted and some 3,000 were killed during the Pinochet era.
Chile requested Rivas' extradition 12 years ago, alleging her involvement in the disappearance of seven people.
Adriana Rivas lost her legal battle against extradition from Australia.