Decisive Win

The BBC reports on a decisive win for Michelle Bachelet in Chile's latest presidential election - what a turnaround for a country that was in the grip of a fascist dictatorship only 40 years ago.

Ex-president Michelle Bachelet wins Chile poll run-off

Education, tax rises, constitution and electoral reform are all key to Michelle Bachelet's plans

Left-wing candidate Michelle Bachelet has been elected Chilean president for a second time by a wide margin.

With almost all the votes counted, Ms Bachelet had 62% against 38% for Evelyn Matthei, a former minister from the governing centre-right coalition.

Ms Bachelet first served from 2006 to 2010, but under Chile's constitution she could not stand for a second consecutive term.

She narrowly missed out on outright victory in the first round last month.

Analysis


Gideon Long
BBC News, Santiago

Winning Chile's presidential election was pretty easy for Michelle Bachelet. She led the contest from the start and never faced much of a challenge from her bickering centre-right opponents. The hard part will start in March when she takes office.

Even Ms Bachelet's closest aides acknowledge her education reforms will be costly, eating up an extra 1.5% to 2% of gross domestic product each year. She says that money will come from taxes, particularly on big business.

The other big pledge of Ms Bachelet's campaign is constitutional change. She says Chile needs a new constitution to replace the one drawn up under Gen Augusto Pinochet in 1980, as well as a new electoral system.

But perhaps the biggest challenge facing her is the weight of expectation. After four years of centre-right rule marked by huge street protests, Chileans are clamouring for change.

BBC Mundo's Ignacio de los Reyes said that hundreds of people applauded Ms Bachelet when she took to the stage outside the headquarters of her coalition in the centre of Santiago, some even cried with joy.

Many of them were women, members of the gay and lesbian community and environmentalists - some of the core groups that supported Ms Bachelet throughout her campaign.

In her victory speech, Ms Bachelet, 62, said she would carry out "deep reforms needed in Chile", but she assured voters she would do so "responsibly".

"Today in Chile we're in the majority and it's time we moved forward to fulfil the dream we all have, to again believe in ourselves, and to believe that there's strength in unity," she said.

"I am proud to be your president-elect today. I am proud of the country we've built but I am even more proud of the country we will build."

Ms Bachelet is now set to become the first leader in Chile to serve two terms since the military rule of Gen Augusto Pinochet from 1973 to 1990.

Upon hearing the news, her supporters took to the streets to celebrate, waving flags and sounding car horns in the capital, Santiago.

Her rival, Evelyn Matthei, 60, conceded defeat and congratulated Ms Bachelet in person.

Coming close to tears, Ms Matthei told her supporters that her "deepest and honest desire is that things go well for her [Michelle Bachelet]".

"No one who loves Chile can want anything else," Ms Matthei said.
Ms Bachelet said she and Ms Matthei shared the will to serve their people

Ms Bachelet thanked Ms Matthei for her good wishes and said that both shared a love for their homeland and a willingness to serve its people.'Radical' manifesto

A paediatrician by training, Ms Bachelet won 47% of the vote in the first round on 17 November. Ms Matthei secured 25%.

Ms Bachelet leads an alliance of her Socialist Party, Christian Democrats and Communists and has campaigned on policies designed to reduce the gap between rich and poor.

Chile is one of the richest countries in Latin America, but millions have staged protests over the past few years to push for a wider distribution of wealth and better education.

Ms Bachelet wants to increase taxes to offer free university education and reform political and economic structures dating from the dictatorship of Gen Pinochet.

Her manifesto this time is much more radical than before, the BBC's Gideon Long in Santiago reports.

Ms Bachelet was constitutionally barred from serving a second successive term but was very popular when she left office.

Ms Matthei entered the race after two candidates of the centre-right alliance resigned earlier this year - one for alleged financial irregularities, the other one after struggling with depression.

She called for a continuation of the policies of outgoing President Sebastian Pinera, asserting that Chileans are "better off" now than when he came to power four years ago.Shared childhood

As children in the 1950s, the current rivals were neighbours and used to play together on the airbase where their fathers, both air force generals, worked.

Ms Matthei's father, Fernando, rose through the ranks to run a military school.

Michelle Bachelet's father, Alberto, had a job in the Socialist administration overthrown by Gen Pinochet in the 1973 coup.

He died in 1974 of a heart attack while in custody. An investigation concluded that the 51-year-old general had probably died of heart problems aggravated by torture at the military academy.

A judge ruled earlier this year that Gen Matthei had no knowledge of or involvement in the torture.

Daughters and Democracy (7 November 2013)

Chile goes to the polls today and finally seems to have embraced democracy - after a terrible period which began in 1973 when fascist generals, led by Augusto Pinochet, overthrew the elected President, Salvador Allende.  

I was living in the west end of Glasgow a few years later and I remember well the arrival of Chilean refugees who fled the country in fear for their lives, some settling in Scotland permanently - although it now looks as though Chile has taken a giant step forward if today's presidential elections are anything to go by.

Here's a remarkable tale from the BBC's web site on how two children of that time, two women, are contesting the election - and one of them will end up as the country's President.    

Chile's election: A tale of two daughters
By Gideon Long BBC News, Santiago

Michelle Bachelet (left) and Evelyn Matthei (right) grew up together

Chile holds a presidential election on Sunday and both frontrunners are women - the socialist Michelle Bachelet and her right-wing rival Evelyn Matthei.

In a region where politics is still very much a man's game, that, in itself, is remarkable enough, but when one considers the relationship between the two women, it becomes more extraordinary still.

Ms Bachelet and Ms Matthei went to the same primary school and played together as kids.

Their fathers were close friends and served together in the Chilean air force until the military coup of 1973 tore them apart, with tragic consequences.

At times, the history of the two women and their fathers is like something out of a Latin American soap opera or a magical realist novel.

The region's great writers, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, say, or Isabel Allende, would struggle to invent such a plot.

Early ties

"Chile is not yet fully reconciled with its past, and that's reflected in the lives of these two women” Rocio Montes Co-author of Daughters of Generals

The story of Ms Bachelet and Ms Matthei starts in 1958 on a military base in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. Their fathers, both air force officers, were posted there with their young families.

They lived on the same street - one at number 4 and the other across the road at number 13. Michelle Bachelet was seven years old and Evelyn Matthei five.

"To this day, Ms Bachelet's mother remembers how the two girls would play in the streets and go out on their bikes," says Rocio Montes, co-author of Daughters of Generals, a recently published book about the two women.

"They were living in a kind of ghetto. It was very remote. The air force families had their own food store, their own cinema, their own school. It was a very close community."
Evelyn Matthei (left) and her father Fernando (right) were friends of the Bachelets

The girls' fathers, Alberto Bachelet and Fernando Matthei, became good friends.

They shared a love of literature and music, and despite their political differences - Mr Bachelet was from the left, Mr Matthei from the right - they respected each other's views.
Michelle Bachelet (second from left) shares her father's love of music

When the two families moved to the capital, Santiago, in the 1960s, they stayed in touch.

But on 11 September 1973, everything changed.

The armed forces staged a violent coup, toppling the socialist government. The air force bombed the presidential palace.
Military jets bombarded La Moneda palace during the coup led by Gen Pinochet

Mr Bachelet worked for the government at the time and was immediately arrested.

"I was detained in solitary confinement for 26 days," he later wrote to his son. "I was subjected to torture for 30 hours. They broke me inside.

"I've never known how to hate anyone. I've always thought that a human being is the most marvellous thing on earth, and should be respected as such. But I came across colleagues from the armed forces who I'd known for 20 years - students of mine - who treated me like a criminal or a dog."

Meanwhile, Mr Matthei was in London, working as a military attache.

He supported the coup, and shortly afterwards was recalled to Chile to take up a job as director of the Academy of Ariel Warfare in Santiago.
Mr Bachelet was tortured at the Academy of Ariel Warfare in Santiago

In December 1973, Mr Bachelet was arrested for a second time and taken to the academy. He was charged with treason and imprisoned in the basement, where he was tortured.

On 12 March, 1974, after a night of relentless interrogation, he died of a heart attack.Moral issue

Just how much Mr Matthei knew of his friend's plight is unclear.

Although he was appointed as head of the academy in late 1973, he did not visit it until February 1974, and then only briefly.

He spent most of his time working elsewhere and was not in Chile on the day his friend died.

"He was nominally in charge of the academy but he didn't have authority over all of it," Ms Montes says. "He says he only once went to the basement."

"For Fernando Matthei, the death of Alberto Bachelet is a moral problem. He probably couldn't have done anything but, even so, he still has to live with the fact that he didn't try harder to save his friend, who was being tortured just a few metres below his office."
Ms Bachelet says she does not think Mr Matthei is to blame for her father's death

"It's a moral issue that pursues him to this day."

Some people in Chile say it is a criminal issue too, and have tried, without success, to bring Mr Matthei to trial for Mr Bachelet's death.

But even Ms Bachelet and her mother have said they do not regard Mr Matthei as guilty.

Contrasting fortunes

In the years after the coup, the two families suffered contrasting fortunes.

In 1975, Michelle Bachelet and her mother were detained in Villa Grimaldi, one of the military regime's most notorious torture centres, and then fled into exile in Australia and East Germany.
Ms Bachelet and her mother were held at Villa Grimaldi

Meanwhile, Mr Matthei rose through the ranks of the military to become the head of Gen Augusto Pinochet's air force and a member of the military junta.

By the 1990s, both Michelle Bachelet and Evelyn Matthei had entered politics and in 2006 Ms Bachelet became Chile's first female president.

Now, Michelle Bachelet is seeking to become the first Chilean president in more than half a century to serve a second term in office. 

Symbol of friendship

These days, Ms Matthei lives in a house that used to belong to her father and which Mr Bachelet used to visit in the 1960s.

In the back yard, there are two olive trees - gifts from Mr Bachelet to Mr Matthei and symbols of a friendship that has formed an intriguing backdrop to the current election campaign.

"How is it that two girls who played together as kids are here, 50 years later, standing as presidential candidates on either side of the political fence?" asks Ms Montes.

"Is it to do with history or simply coincidence?

"Our conclusion is that it isn't just coincidence. It's a consequence of what happened to Chile in 1973," she told the BBC.

"The country was split in two, families were divided, friendships were broken.

"Chile is not yet fully reconciled with its past, and that's reflected in the lives of these two women who are standing for election and, in their different ways, were marked by the lives of their fathers.
"

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