Pablo Neruda's bone remains to be analyzed in US

Pablo Neruda's bone remains to be analyzed in US

SANTIAGO - Agence France-Presse

Photo shared on Wikimedia Commons

Bone remains of Chilean Nobel literature laureate Pablo Neruda will be analyzed in the United States as investigators seek to resolve a four-decade mystery about his death.

Neruda's body was exhumed this week in an effort to discover if he died from prostate cancer as was recorded, or if he was poisoned by agents of Gen. Augusto Pinochet's bloody dictatorship, as his driver and others believe.

Rodolfo Reyes, one of Neruda's nephews, met with Chilean and foreign forensics experts April 12 and said some of the poet's skeletal remains will be sent to a laboratory at the University of North Carolina medical school.

"They're going to take some toxin tests at a laboratory," Reyes said after confirming that a jacket and a belt inside the exhumed coffin belong to the poet.

"It's a technical skill and we want them to take all the time in the world to do it and that it doesn't leave a single doubt," Reyes told Radio Cooperativa.

Judge Mario Carroza, who approved a request by Chile's Communist Party for the disinterment, said he will receive a preliminary report about tests performed in Chile on April 22.

The judge said he needs the report before he can order the return of Neruda's casket to his home in Isla Negra, a rocky outcropping overlooking the Pacific Ocean.

Neruda was also a leftist politician and would have been a strong voice in exile against Pinochet's regime.

That ended with his death just 24 hours before he was to have escaped Chile in the chaos after the Sept. 11, 1973, military coup.

He was 69 and suffering from prostate cancer when he died 12 days after the coup that led his close friend, socialist President Salvador Allende, to kill himself rather than surrender to Pinochet's troops attacking the presidential palace.

For long, the official version was that Neruda died of natural causes brought on by the trauma of witnessing the coup and the killing of many of his friends. But suspicions remained, even after Pinochet lost power and Chile returned to a democracy in 1990.

For years, Neruda's driver and aide said dictatorship agents injected poison into Neruda's stomach while he was bedridden at the Santa Maria clinic in Santiago.

"We're hoping the analysis of the results in the United States will be positive and will add to all the new evidence," Araya told The Associated Press on April 12. "I feel very peaceful. It was so difficult to get him exhumed and it has finally been done. I'm just searching for the truth."