The Cordillera prison, located on an army base, offers the officers jailed for killings, torture and other abuses during Gen Augusto Pinochet's 1973-90 dictatorship far better conditions than Chile's normal penitentiaries. The inmates live in small cabins with private bathrooms, have hot showers and get lots of natural light.
President Sebastian Pinera said his government decided to close Cordillera taking into account "equality before law" as well as the security of the prison's 10 inmates, who will now serve time at Punta Peuco, another special jail for human rights offenders.
Cordillera was built in 2004 during the presidency of Ricardo Lagos to avoid overcrowding at Punta Peuco. Former President Michelle Bachelet, who was held and tortured during the dictatorship, praised the decision to close Cordillera.
But the public outcry reached a high point on Wednesday when supporters of former Brigadier Miguel Krassnoff tried to organise a BBQ in his honour at Cordillera, where he is also serving a sentence of more than 100 years. An event honouring Krassnoff in 2011 ended in clashes between his supporters and human rights activists.
"It's unbelievable that Chilean society allowed jails with these types of luxuries for human rights criminals," Claudio Escobar Caceres, 51, said at a demonstration by human rights activists outside the prison. He held up a sign that read in Spanish: "Justice. Nothing more."
