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English Pages 64 [72] Year 2003
Tupac Amarii Revolutionary Movement f
ral
Suzie Baer
BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY Copley Square Boston,
MA 02116
1
1
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2014
https://archive.org/details/perusnnrtaOOsuzi
Inside the World's
Most Infamous Terrorist Organizations
Peru's
MRTAl
Tupac Amarti Revolutionary 7
.
Movement
Suzie Baer
The Rosen Publishing Group,
New York
Inc.
— For Tom and Stefan for
their love
and support
Published in 2003 by The Rosen Publishing Group,
29 East 21st Street, Copyright
New
York,
NY
Inc.
10010
© 2003 by The Rosen Publishing Group,
hic.
First Edition
All rights reserved.
book may be reproduced in any form writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer.
No part of
without permission in
this
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Baer, Suzie.
MRTA
Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement / Suzie Baer. (Inside the world's most infamous terrorist organizations) p. cm. Summary: Discusses the origins, philosophy, and most notorious attacks of the Tupac Amaru terrorist group, including their present activities, possible plans, and counter-terrorism efforts directed Peru's
:
—
against them. hicludes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8239-3824-7 Terrorism — Peru—History—20th Violence—Peru—History—20th Berenson, Foreign— Tupac Amaru Revolutionaiy Movement. Terrorism — Berenson, Peru—Histoiy— 19801.
Movimiento Revolucionario Tupac century.
century.
Amaru
History.
3.
Lori. 5. Prisoners,
4.
2.
Lori. 4. Political prisoners. 5. I.
Title.
II.
2.
Peru.
[1.
Peru.
3.
.]
Series.
HV6433.P42M6817 2002 985.06'4— dc21 2002010600
Manufactured
in the
United States of America
Contents 4
Introduction
MRTA
CHAPTER
1
CHAPTER
2 Early Strikes and
The
Birth of the
8
Major Setbacks
18
CHAPTER
3 Uninvited Guests
26
CHAPTER
4 Lori Berenson
35
Conclusion
48
Glossary
53
For More Information
55
For Further Reading
58
Bibliography
59
Index
61
Introduction
The
Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement
(in
Spanish,
MRTA)
Movimiento Revolucionario Tupac Amaru, or
was formed
in
1983 by university student radicals
Nestor Cerpa, Victor Polay, and Miguel Rincon to fight corruption in the
Peruvian government. The name of the movement
came from
a
famous Incan warrior, Tupac
x-\maru,
who.
had conquered the
1570s, fought against the Spaniards w^ho
Inca Empire.
Tupac Amaru was defeated
in this
executed. His
name
in the 1780s,
and
lived on, however,
war and was another
native hidian group fighting against oppressive leaders
themselves Tupac its
Amaru
II.
in the
named
This group was also defeated, and
leaders were executed.
The
MRTA
stated goal of the
was
government and create a new society treated equally enjoyed the perity,
wanted
to
and
start their
reform the Peruvian
which
all
the people were
same opportunities and
and shared ownership
schools, companies,
in
to
of
all
property (including land, Cerpa. Polay, and Rincon
factories).
own
level of pros-
political party,
one that was not
dependent on money from the outside world, specifically the United States.
When money
is
lent
from one government
to
another, the donor country often puts restrictions on the govern-
ment
that accepts the loan, forcing
it
to
adopt certain economic
Mf?TA_
an undated photo of Nestor Cerpa, one of the three founding members of the MRTA and its miUtary commander. UnHke other MRTA leaders who came from the middle class, Cerpa (also known as Commandante Evaristo) was from a working-class family and was active in the Peruvian labor movement of the 1970s. As a young trade union official in 1978, Cerpa and his fellow workers took control of a bankrupt textile factory near Lima after its owners tried to close it down. Four people died in the conflict, and Cerpa served a year in prison. This
is
5
Miguel Rincon (center), the MRTA's second-in-command,
is
escorted
by police following his capture on December 1, 1995, after an armed standoff in a wealthy neighborhood of Lima. As he wa^ led away, Rincon shouted, "My capture is a blow to the MRTA, but the MRTA does not depend on one or two persons."
The
MRTA felt that these restrictions were
and
political policies.
put
in place to benefit foreign countries
Peruvians, but not the poor. of
its
government
people fairly and
and
The
and wealthy,
influential
MRTA did not trust the motives
wanted
to
serve
the
Peruvian
justly.
6
I
— Introduction Like
its
namesakes, the
ered to be an oppressive
MRTA was at war with what
—
power
it
consid-
the Peruvian government.
MRTA
members decided that the best way to fight this war was to attack with nonlethal force
—people and
organizations that had power and
money. They fek that only by targeting the poweiiiil could they get the government's
—and
the world's
—
attention
and expose the
Peruvian government's corruption and human-rights violations for all to see.
president,
stealing
Members
were long suspected of bribing judges and
politicians,
money from the government ti'easury for personal
ficking drugs cal
of the Peruvian government, including the
and weapons, and
misti'eating
use,
and murdering
ti'af-
politi-
opponents and prisoners. This misuse of government funds and
suppression of democracy helped to insure that wealthy citizens
would only get
wealthier, while the vast majority of
poor Peruvians
would not get the help that they desperately needed.
The element organizations violence.
The
that set the
was
its
group's
MRTA apart from most other terrorist
commitment
members
even members of
the social
Throughout most of
its history,
whenever
to the
felt
that the
and the
avoidance of unnecessary
harming
political
—was
elite
wrong.
MRTA sought to avoid violence
possible. However, this respect for
save the group fi*om a violent end.
of civilians
human
life
would not
The Birth the
of
MRTA
1533, the Spanish explorer Francisco Pizarro conquered
Inthe
name
hicas and took control of Peru in the
of
the
Spanish Empire. The coastal city of Lima, founded by
became Peru's
Pizarro in 1535,
capital,
and the country turned
out to be an important and prestigious acquisition for Spain. Eventually, Peruvian colonists wanted to gain independence
from Spain, which had no interest
in losing a valuable colony.
After several hundred years of fighting, Peru
won
independ-
its
ence on July 28, 1821.
Independence, however, did not bring democracy and freedom for
all.
Since overthrowing Spanish rule, the Peruvian govern-
ment has repeatedly swung back and ment (run by
forth between civil govern-
civilian representatives of the country's citizens)
and military dictatorship (run by one member forces
who has
had been drawn up, and presidency
Unfortunately, to fix the
armed
absolute authority). Peru's most recent military
dictatorship ruled from 1968 to 1980.
the
the
of
it
in
in 1980,
Peru's
By
1979, a
new
constitution
Fernando Belaunde Terry won
first
fully
would take more than a
democratic
freely elected president
economic problems that Peru was
now
facing after
years of government instability and mismanagement.
8
election.
The Birth
Armed
Opposition many
Civilian rule failed to solve Peru's
many
ment's response to terrorism led to
and freedoms.
ties
MRTA
of the
The govern-
problems.
restrictions
on
civil liber-
In addition, corruption continued to flourish in
and
the executive, legislative,
judicial
branches of government.
Most important, poverty was as crushing as
response to
ever, hi
years of suffering under corrupt governments and a repressive military,
two
rebel
groups formed with the purpose of defeating the
They remain
ruling government in order to create a better society. active today
and continue
One group was the Peruvian
was not on
to inflict terror
called the Shining
Communist
their side
citizens.
Path and was an offshoot of
members
Party. Its
was
on the nation's
felt
that
actively fighting against
anyone who
them and was
Members
of the
Shining Path have killed thousands of people over the years,
many
therefore
of
an appropriate
target for a violent attack.
whom were innocent civilians. The
other group
Movement, or
was
called the
Tupac
MRTA. The MRTA was
Polay, Nestor Cerpa,
Amam
founded
in
Revolutionary
1983 by Victor
and Miguel Rincon. These men had grown up
in
a repressive society that was dominated by the military. They wanted to create a political party that
and
would help Peru become a
fairer place to live. Originally, they
better, freer,
had been members of the
American Popular Revolutionaiy Alliance (APRA). They soon however, that this political party
toward
its
they
felt
was not working hard enough
goal of helping the poor and disenfi"anchised (those
are excluded from wealth, power, that the
were better
APRA party
off in order to
gain
felt,
and the
who
political process). Instead,
was focusing on helping people who theii"
9
financial support
and
votes.
4 •
A mother and two of Monzon
Valley.
her children clear weeds from a plot of coca in Peru's
Peru
is
the
\\x)rld's
largest single source of coca leaves,
pro\-iding about two-thirds of the total cocaine cultivation
used coca groups in
an
was practiced by the ancient Andean Inca Empire. The Incas for religious
like the
effort to
MRTA
and medicinal purposes. In recent times, terrorist and Shining Path have used peasants to farm coca
fund their guerrilla
Polay, Cerpa,
wanted
produced in the world. Coca
acti\ities.
and Rincon formed the
to get the attention of the
them how corrupt
their
MRTA was going to
do
government was,, and to
to explain
change things. Young
what the
MRTA members
equalit>^ for millions of
many young Peruvians
10
because they
Peruvian people, to reveal to
were told that they would be fighting for Peruvians. Inspired,
MRTA
eagerly joined up.
The Birth
of the
MRTA
Taking from the Rich and Giving to the Poor In 1980, about half of the population of
Millions of people lived in
bathi-ooms, or
enough
not earn them enough
make a
homes without
The crops
food.
Peru lived
electiicity,
in poverty.
running water,
grew and
that they
sold did
money to live on. The one crop that they could
substantial profit on, coca,
plant h'om which cocaine
is illegal to
produced.
is
grow because
Though very
it is
profitable,
also a very risky crop. Coca fields are routinely destroyed
the it is
by
Peruvian and U.S. antinarcotic government agents.
The
MRTA wanted to combat both the extreme poverty outside
Peru's cities first
and the corrupt government
in
Lima.
One of
the group's
waves of attacks involved hijacking trucks that were delivering
food to supermarkets in Lima.
amount
of ammunition,
trucks and handed
it
Armed
MRTA
it
was
recruiting people to
A Ray of
members
stole the food off
also a
this allow the
MRTA to feed a few
good way of creating good
there
was a
and
Hope Extinguished
of the
Victor Polay,
will
become members of the group.
In 1985, another democratic election took place,
member
the
out to the poor people in the area, like modern-
day Robin Hoods. Not only did
hungry people,
with a few guns and a small
APRA
became
and Alan Garcia, a
and a childhood fiiend of
MRTA
founder
president. For the first time in Peru's history,
peaceful exchange of power from one democratically
elected president to another.
Peru seemed to be heading down a new
road into a far brighter future.
Because President because the
MRTA
Gai'cia
had been a
friend of Victor Polay 's
sought to work within the
11
political
and
system, the
Alan Garcia was elected president of Peru in 1985, riding a wave of optimism that greater social equality and good government would finally
become
however, he
a reality throughout the country. Five jyears later,
left office in
disgrace amid economic chaos, guerrilla and
drug-related violence, and corruption charges.
group put out a statement saying
it
would
halt all attacks
and give
President Gairia the opportunity to run the government for the benefit
of the poor.
The
MRTAs
goal
was
not the destruction of social
order and government institutions, but instead the creation of a broad populai" possible.
movement
to
make
They sought a
the ti'ansition to a new, socialist society
so-called quiet revolution, not a bloody one.
12
-~
The Birth
of the
MRTA
Unfortunately, President Garcia's attempts to rebuild Peru only created greater poverty.
By the end of
his term, the
economy
orated further and President Garcia's administration
be corrupt. The
resume
its
to
attacks.
In late 1987, the
Terrorism
MRTA
took over the city of Juanjui (population:
by overpowering and locking up
the officials were behind bars, the in
was found
MRTA lost faith in his leadership and felt obliged to
A New Kind of 20,000)
deteri-
its
entire police force.
Once
MRTA organized a town meeting
which the people were offered a rare opportunity
about their needs and those of their
city.
to
speak out
After the meeting, the
MRTA organized a soccer game and thi^ew a big party. Not wanting to miss an opportunity for good press, MRTA members invited a television
news a'ew to
cast the footage nationwide.
Juanjui and to
They
show them and
film the party
and
later
broad-
did this to help the people of
the rest of the country the kind of
good things the group wanted
to
people were thankful for this
new kind
do
for all Peruvians.
Though some
of "terrorism,"
it
was not
appreciated by the Peruvian government. President Garcia issued a state of
emergency
quickly followed.
Moving
in the Juanjui region,
As a result, many
and a military
offensive
MRTA members were killed.
to the City
In the mid-1980s, the
MRTA and
the Shining Path both
strike targets in the city of Lima. Until this time,
most
began
to
terrorist
violence took place in the countryside, not in the cities where the
wealthy people
lived.
As the terrorists began to venture out of
the
Peru's and
hills
MRTA
into residential areas, Lima's
wealthy residents were
suddenly being threatened. They wanted immediate action from their leaders.
The U.S. Embassy the
MRTA
was
felt
Lima represented power and money, which
in
an
at the root of Peru's problems. In
effort to
protest against U.S. imperialism (the belief that the United States
exerts economic tried to
political control
over other nations), the
filled
MRTA guerrillas
with
drove past the U.S.
automatic weapons at the building. Another
stopped
MRTA
launch an attack against the embassy. In November 1985,
two cars firing
and
in front of the
embassy and a
Embassy
MRTA
guerrilla tossed
two
vehicle
sticks of
dynamite at the outer gate. None of the weapons actually struck the inside of the embassy,
building's exterior. assault, the ity for the
and the
and only minor damage was done
No one was harmed
in the attack.
to the
After the
MRTA got on a local radio station to claim responsibil-
attack
and
to
U.S.
money
bought that was doing harm
to the
spread the message that
political influence
it
it
was
Peruvian people.
A New President In 1990, a relatively
won
Gets Tough on Terrorism
unknown
professor
named Alberto Fujimori
the presidential election based on his tough stance against
terrorism and with the help of his closest adviser, Vladimiro
Montesinos. Fujimori had the support of the U.S. government
and assured the people safe again.
He promised
of to
Lima go
that he
would make
their
to great lengths to rid the
homes
Peruvian
capital of terrorism. It
was very
difficult,
however, for President Fujimori to put a
quick halt to the terrorist activities that had been going on for
14
The Birth
of the
MRTA
Attacking the United States The
MRTA has launched more anti-U.S. attacks than any other
terrorist organization in Latin
•
•
A A
America.
Some
of these include:
1984 small arms attack on the U.S. Embassy in Lima 1985 bombing of the Lima offices of the Texaco Corporation
•
An attempted
•
A
•
Repeated attacks using rockets, mortars, and car bombs on the
1985 attack on the U.S. Embassy in Lima
1987 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Lima
U.S.
ambassador's residence
ten years.
The
MRTA and the Shining Path had many members
who could survive in the jungle and fight a long guerrilla war. Many politicians had widely differing views on how to solve the problems that Peru was facing, and many of these opinions contradicted those of
Fujimori. So,
Fujimori chose to bypass Peru's
in
April
1992,
President
new democratic system and
instead dissolved the Congress, fired the judges
who
disagreed
with him, and wrote a new constitution. Fujimori
now
ruled the country as a dictator and created
antiterrorism laws
and an
antiterrorist police force
DINCOTE to speed the arrest of
known
alleged terrorists. These
new
as the
new laws
would not have been accepted by the Peruvian Congress because they denied people their basic
civil rights.
International
human-
rights groups say that these laws were designed to convict as
many
people as possible with very
little
they received very long prison sentences.
15
evidence and to ensure
President Alberto Fujimori
iiiienor Minister General Cesar
(center),
and Police Chief General Fernando Dianderas of Peru make the sign of the cross during a ceremony in a police station in Callao, Peru. A former agricultural economist, dean of the faculty of sciences at the Agrarian National University in La Molina, Peru, and talk-show host, Fujimori created a populist, grassroots political party called Cambio 90, which capitalized on popular anger and disappointment with Alan Garcia's administration. In the 1990 elections, Fujimori beat Garcia and famous author Mario Vargas Llosa to gain the presidency of Peru. Saucedo
One
(left),
of the
new laws
President Fujimori created
Repentance Law, which states that of a terrorist
group and turn
if
you admit
in other
members
truth of your accusation), you will be given
The
idea
was
to
have terrorists turn
16
to
more
was
called the
being a
member
(regardless of the lenient treatment.
in other terrorists in
exchange
The Birth
of the
MRTA
Government Terrorism A
little
was an
more than a year
after President Fujimori's election, there
Lima known
attack on a neighborhood party in the area of
as Barrios Altos. At 10:30 PM, two four-wheel-drive vans pulled up to the party
and men carrying automatic weapons with
jumped
They ordered everyone
out.
to
lie
down on
silencers
the floor
and
then started shooting. Fifteen people, including a nine-year-old boy,
were
killed.
Although blamed on antigovernment
terrorists at the
time, human-rights groups have long believed that the Barrios
Altos massacre, as terrorist
it is
commonly known, was not committed by a
group but instead by La Colina, a division of Peru's
National Intelligence Service (SIN), present at the block party. Today, that
La Colina was responsible
who
it is
thought terrorists were
generally accepted as fact
for the massacre.
for lighter sentences. Unfortunately, the people
were often unjustly accused and Frequently, an accused terrorist
wanted
who were turned
tell
the police
what they
to hear, regardless of the truth, in order to receive leniency
(better treatment
and a shorter
sentence). Fujimori
admit that there were hundreds of innocent people result of the to
any crime.
entirely innocent of
would
in
would
in prison
later
as a
Repentance Law. In essence, Fujimori was attempting
sweep away
With very
all
opposition, regardless of the cost.
little
remaining opposition, Fujimori gave the
tary emergency powers to launch an all-out
Shining Path and the
say there was a sharp
MRTA. As
17
war against the
a result, human-rights groups
rise in violations
special forces.
mili-
by the Peruvian
military's
Early Strikes and Major Setbacks 1992, despite
government claims
Inand attempts by
to ease Peruvians' suffering
and the
the Shining Path
MRTA
to bring
about a more equal distribution of wealth, almost half of the population of Peru
still
lived
below the poverty
line.
Meanwhile, the government of Peru, the Shining Path, and the
MRTA
were fighting and
killing
one another
in their
competing
attempts to gain control of the country. According to the Washington Post, 35,000 people
were
killed
from 1980
terrorism (the Peruvian government)
to
1990 by state-sponsored
and guerrilla terrorism (Shining
Path and MRTA). Amnesty International attibutes 53 percent of the killing to the
Peruvian government, 46 percent of the killing to the
Shining Path, and
1
percent to the
MRTA.
estimated that the
It is
MRTA killed approximately 200 people from 1983 to the mid-1990s. The MRTA was always more interested in getting publicity than in killing people to achieve its goals.
Attacking U.S. Interests By
the mid-1980s, the
strikes, often against
MRTA was well
known
for its high-profile
wealthy businesspeople and U.S. property.
The group was also known to fight back against the police and military,
The
MRTA
the
though not always successfully. U.S.
filled
Embassy was
a favorite target. In April 1986, the
a car with dynamite
and parked
it
in front of the
Early Strikes and Major Setbacks embassy.
When
wall that
was
the
the car exploded,
it
blew a hole
bomb exploded
day, a
in the concrete
No one was hurt, but was clear. On that very
built to protect the embassy.
MRTA's anti-American statement
same
at a
Kentucky Fried Chicken restau-
MRTA
rant in Lima, injuring twelve people.
The
pamphlets
know who was
at the restaurant to let people
sible for the
On
—
bomb and what
October
1987, the
8,
the
group stood
MRTA
planted
scattered
respon-
for.
bombs
at the U.S.
Consulate and the Bolivian Embassy. Group members said that
meant
the attacks were
to
commemorate
the twentieth anniver-
sary of the death of the Latin American revolutionary leader
Che Guevara, a major inspiration
to the
MRTA. Once
again, no
one was physically injured at the U.S. Consulate or at the Bolivian Embassy.
The warn
MRTA
that a
Typically,
would often
bomb had been
MRTA
resulted in few,
attacks that
if
any, injuries.
was so potent
Tactic:
In order to have
cause, the
MRTA
ahead of time
to
placed and urge an evacuation.
attacks were
American property and
A New
call its targets
full It
—the
of
was
sound and the
fury,
symbolism
destruction of
but
of the
vulnerable
interests.
Kidnapping
any hope of inspiring Peruvians
to join its
needed both publicity and money. With
its
attacks against American interests, the group received plenty of attention from the press,
message out to acquire.
which helped
to the public.
Money was
to get its
a
much
anti-American
harder resource
Future terrorist operations had to be funded with
the help of
other criminal activities, such as kidnapping.
MRTA
Peru's
MRTA
The
was
able to raise
who worked
business executives
By
tions.
The
feel safe
walk-
executive from Coca-Cola
was abducted
The ransoms were
relatively
for large, wealthy corpora-
way home from work.
maceutical executive car.
An
Lima.
ing the streets of his
the kidnapping of
most businesspeople did not
early 1990,
kidnapped on
money through
collected,
was
A few days later, a phar-
right out of his bulletproof
and both men were returned
unharmed.
MRTA
project that
Peruvians.
continued to state that
was based on
Its
the
it
did not support any
random
innocent
of
killing
members' actions throughout the 1990s, however,
would not always support these claims.
On September
MRTA kidnapped mining executive Once he was in MRTA custody, MRTA
11, 1992, the
David Ballon Vera
in
members contacted
Lima.
his family
and demanded a ransom. Even
though the family paid the ransom, he was not returned. In February 1993,
more than
five
months
after
he had been kidnapped, Ballon's
body was found with two bullet wounds
in the head.
It
appeared that
he had also been starved.
The murder and
is
obey
of
David Ballon Vera violated
MRTA
thought to have been carried out by members
their leaders.
a turning point
It is
regarded
—a new embrace
a regrettable low point in
MRTA
among
MRTA
of violence
principles
who
did not
members
and murder
not as
—but as
history.
Another Source of Income In addition to kidnapping, the
build an arsenal of
MRTA was able to raise money and
weapons by protecting coca farmers from the
Early Strikes and Major Setbacks The
authorities. fields,
fickers
MRTA
would act as a security force
in the
coca
and the
traf-
protecting the peasants
who grew
who bought and
In exchange, they received
sold
and weapons from the similar deal with the
A Movement
it.
traffickers.
drug
the coca
money
The Shining Path struck
a
lords.
Weakened by Arrests
With President Fujimori's new
antiterrorist
laws and antiterrorist
police force in place, thousands of people were being arrested.
Among them
MRTA
were
MRTA leaders and members.
cofounder, Victor Polay,
Fujimori came into
office)
Canto Grande Prison
MRTA
in
1990, they
arrested in 1989 (before
and was sentenced
Lima. While
members dug a
was
to
in prison,
life
in prison at the
he and several other
tunnel thi'ough which to escape.
By
July
had successfully completed digging a 275-foot-long pas-
sageway, beginning inside the prison and ending just outside walls. Before
other
MRTA
dawn one July morning, members
what had happened,
escaped.
the police
its
Victor Polay and at least fifty
Once the prison
officials realized
began a house-to-house search
for the
fugitives thi'oughout Lima, eventually detaining over 20,000 people.
In 1992, Victor Polay
was found and
arrested again, this time
during Fujimori's antiterrorist regime and was sent to a prison at the El Callao Naval Base. At El Callao, he would spend the
years of his
life
MRTA
the mid-1990s, the
members were
goals of those
eight
sentence in a dark six-foot-square concrete box, fi"om
which he was allowed out only one hour each
By
first
still
MRTA
was
day.
essentially defeated.
either in prison or dead.
free changed.
The
Most
practical
Rather than waging war against
21
MRTA members
stand and huddle in their prison cells within one of By the mid-1990s,
Peru's notorious prisons for convicted terrorists.
most MRTA members were either government antiterrorist forces.
in prison or
22
had been killed by
— Early Strikes and Major Setbacks government corruption and American imperialism,
was now random
far narrower.
arrest
MRTA
and imprisonment
in calling attention to the
nation's jails, they
imprisoned
members were now
hoped
their focus
fighting the
of innocent people. In addition,
human-rights abuses occurring
in the
improve prison conditions and free
to
MRTA members.
A New Constitution Seeking a new and stronger weapon with which to attack rorists. President
ter-
Fujimori rewrote the Peruvian constitution in
April 1992, allowing him to combat terrorism without having to
go through the proper checks and balances that ensure that innocent people are not convicted. These constitutional changes
allowed suspects to be rounded up, held indefinitely, charged,
and convicted based upon very
little
evidence (sometimes just
upon an accusation made by another suspect trying lenience). President Fujimori felt it
was worth
jailing
—and
many Peruvian
to
earn
citizens
some innocent people as long as
the ter-
rorists got convicted as well.
In addition to the Repentance Law, Fujimori also created a judicial
system for
terrorists as well as
designed specifically for convicted
new
new
prison regulations
terrorists. In these
new
courts,
the judge wore a hood to protect his or her identity for fear of reprisals
from
practice led
and
if
terrorist
some
groups when members were convicted. This
to question
who was
actually under those hoods,
he or she was really qualified to conduct such a
Lawyers were allowed period, giving
to
them very
meet with little
trial.
their clients only for a limited
time to prepare an informed defense.
23
Peru's
MRTA 1
I
The MRTA's Good Works MRTA was not only involved with bombings, kidnappings, and
The
drug
lords,
but with other, more positive aspects of Peruvian
well.
When
workers and peasants went on strike they could usually
count on support from the
MRTA. The MRTA
deteriorating human-rights situation in the called
San Martin. In
this area, there
was a
as
also publicized the
Andean area
lot of
life
violence
of Peru
and many
by the Shining Path, the Peruvian military, and the DENCOTE
killings
(antiterrorist police force), as well as the antinarcotic police force.
According is
to
human-rights groups, the Peruvian prison system
designed to slowly
kill
convicted terrorists.
No terrorist prisoners
are allowed visitors during the first year of their imprisonments.
They
are often allowed out of their cells for only half an hour per
day and are fed a poor
diet of
mostly starch and water. Each
cell
contains two prisoners and one hole in the ground to be used as a All visits take place with a plastic
toilet.
fence between inmate
and
visitor.
located at a very high altitude
perature cells.
is
The
cold.
None
Some of
where the
or
meshed metal
the terrorist prisons are air is thin
and the tem-
of the terrorist prisons provide heat to the
conditions of several Peruvian prisons do not meet the
basic requirements of
Peru has been asked
By
window
1996,
all
international human-rights groups,
to close them.
of the founders of the
and hundreds of
its
of being a terrorist
and
members were was
MRTA (except Nestor Cerpa)
in prison.
Everyone convicted
sent to the jails set aside specifically for
24
—
Colonel Jorge Sarmiento of the Peruvian national police holds a copy of the
MRTA's underground newspaper during a 1997 press conference.
Both rebels and government counterterroinst forces attempt to win the hearts and minds of Peruvians through propaganda ideas, facts, or claims deliberately spread to further one's own cause or damage the cause of an opponent.
—
radical political prisoners.
Those who were convicted
founder of a terrorist group
—such as
the
MRTA's
of being a
Victor Polay
and Miguel Rincon, and Abimael Guzman of the Shining Path were put
in solitary confinement.
25
Uninvited Guests
On
the evening of
December
of Lima, the Japanese
elite
wealthy suburb
ambassador was holding a party
Japans emperor. All of
celebrate the birthday of
to
Lima's
17, 1996, in a
attended the event, including judges from Peru's
Supreme Court,
retired
members
of Peru's military
and
police,
business executives, and diplomats from around the world, including the United States. Fujimori,
was
Not long party, the
Even
the president's brother, Pedro
present.
after the
American ambassador, Dennis
few remaining unimprisoned
Jett, left
the
MRTA members pulled off
a surprise attack that would finally get the whole world's attention.
This stunning success would come at a steep
The MRTA's biggest
attack would also be
price,
however.
its last.
Hostages for Prisoners With the help of some
members disguised as
strategically placed
waiters, fourteen
the residence of Japan's ambassador.
dynamite and several
MRTA
They immediately took
more than 700 guests hostage and announced the president of Peru, Alberto Fujimori,
have been
in
demands
to
who was supposed
to
their
attendance at the party that night.
President Fujimori's flight to
rebels stormed
A
rain delay in
Lima spared him from becoming a
hostage himself.
26
The Japanese ambassador's residence in Lima, Peru, rooftop on January 7, 1997, during the
teen rebels
initially
MRTA
is
seen from a nearby
hostage taking.
The
four-
took 700 of the ambassador's guests hostage during a
party commemorating the Japanese emperor's birthday, but within houi^s
began releasing many of the female, ill, and elderly captives. Seventy-foiuhostages would remain in the residence throughout the four-month ordeal. The MRTA's flag can be seen flying from the roof of the residence, hi exchange for the release of the hostages, the rebels demanded the release of jailed
MRTA members and better living conditions for the nation's poor.
The captors' primary demand was the release of 400 imprisoned
MRTA members who were being held in the inhumane conditions of several Peruvian terrorist prisons.
MRTA Most
leader Nestor Cerpa,
of
the imprisoned
was
MRTA
Nancy
in the
Gilvonio, the wife of
Yanamayo
members had
27
terrorist prison.
received lengthy
%J
'f
During the hostage crisis in the Japanese ambassador's residence in Lima, Peru, MRTA members regularly hung banners from the roof of the building in an attempt to
make
their case directly to the public in
—
Peru and worldwide. The banner on the left reads, "MRTA Mothers, wives, and children of our prisoners also wait for their freedom. Peace for all Pei-uvians." The second banner reads, "MRTA Peru of today, 13 million in extreme poverty. Where is the progress?"
—
k5PQ5R5EH\70fi
MRTA
Peru's sentences is
—from
thirty years to
life
in prison.
A life sentence in Peru
exactly that, imprisonment for the rest of the prisoner's
no opportunity for parole or early
The
MRTA
fourteen
wanted to receive safe passage with the freed prisoners
rebels also either the
release.
with
life
Dominican Republic or
overriding goal
was
to
to
Cuba. Their
politically like-minded
expose the conditions of Peruvian
terrorist
prisons to the rest of the world.
The Long Wait Within hours of hostages.
They
of diplomats politicians.
the takeover,
freed the
MRTA
the
women, most
of
began releasing
whom
were the wives
and businessmen, though some were journalists and
Among the women released were President Fujimori's
mother and
sister.
rebels divided
They
ill.
The
different groups.
The
also freed the elderly
up the hostages
into
two
and the
people they considered innocent were put on the the people
second
whom
floor.
and
first floor,
they considered their enemies were held on the
Most
of the people put
on the second
floor
were
associated with the Peruvian military or government.
During the next four months, the leader of the takeover, Nestor
The
rebels slept
their hostages
and placed
residence, in doorways,
and around
the grounds to prevent the hostages from escaping or
government
Cerpa, negotiated with the Peruvian government. in shifts in order to
keep an eye on
booby traps throughout the
troops from invading.
They accepted
the help of the
which brought box lunches for the hostages and the
Red
Cross,
rebels,
who
occasionally ate together.
The hostages passed talking to each other.
It
the time playing card games, writing,
and
did not take long, though, for a sense of
30
I
Uninvited Guests
—
I
High Ideals and a Holiday Gesture In late December, a
released
week
after the
embassy
more hostages as a Christmas
takeover, the
gesture.
The media
viewed some of these newly released hostages. One the time
by the New York Times said
MRTA inter-
man quoted at
that their captors were
"obviously professionals in what they do and believe in what they
do deeply."
A released Canadian businessman
told the
New
York
limes he spoke with his captor and got the impression that one
MRTA's] principal preoccupations
of their [the
poverty of the country." This would be the
would
release a large
number of
last
is
the extreme
time the
MRTA
hostages. Over the following long
weeks, a few more were released for health reasons. Seventy-two hostages would remain for the duration of the embassy takeover.
disappointment and despair to set
in as they realized that the
negotiations were going to take a long time.
how
No one
could imagine
long, however.
Just
when
it
seemed as though negotiations were moving
for-
ward, the Peruvian government chose to end the hostage situation
through violent rather than diplomatic means. Looking back, unclear
if
the
On
MRTA.
Conclusion
April 22, 1997, 126 days after the
residence, 150
began
is
government ever intended any outcome other than
the complete elimination of the
A Bloody
it
members
rebels took over the
of the Peruvian military's special forces
their rescue mission.
their daily indoor soccer
MRTA
At
3:30 PM, while the rebels played
game, a bomb exploded
31
just
below
their
A Peruvian soldier peers out of
a hole on the grounds of the residence of the Japanese ambassador in Lima, Peru. On April 22, 1997, soldiers stormed the residence using timnels to gain entry in a successful attempt to surprise MRTA rebels and end the four-monthold hostage crisis. Inset: Peruvian police officers
a fallen
MRTA
rebel
lift
the dead body of
from the roof of the ambassador's residence.
Peru's feet.
The
military
MRTA
had dug a tunnel under the
residence, having
been told by one of the released hostages exactly where the captors played soccer every day.
by the playing
The sound
of digging
extremely loud music, which the terrorists
of
assumed was the government's attempt
Many blast.
at psychological warfare.
of the rebel players were killed immediately
Moments
later,
front door, blowing
on the
had been masked
roof.
by the
another explosion occurred at the mansion's
it
was
open, while another explosion
The Peruvian
special forces
stormed the residence.
The hostages had been given a warning by ten minutes before the rescue effort
ignited
the
Red Cross
began and were
liaison
told
where
not to be.
Once the
special forces
were quickly brought out to
stormed the embassy, the hostages
to safety.
Some of
the
MRTA rebels tried
defend themselves against the special forces, but they were
severely outnumbered
was
later reported that
and poorly armed; they were
some
rebels were shot after they
had
sur-
growing evidence that the military had been
rendered. There
is
given "shoot to
kill" instructions,
and that when rebels surren'
dered they were executed instead of arrested. In a
all killed. It
statement regarding the hostage situation. Amnesty
International asked the Peruvian authorities
"to
act on the
appalling fact that several hundred innocent prisoners
been falsely accused of terrorism International
condemned
residence, but
it still
the
still
languish in
MRTA takeover of
who have
jail."
Amnesty
the ambassador's
supports the need to improve the inhumane
conditions of Peru's terrorist prisons and the release of
all
inno-
cents unjustly convicted under the nation's tough antiterrorist laws.
34
Lori Berenson Despite the fact that the MRTA was passionately opposed to
American influence
more
woman
than
group would receive
in Peru, the
international attention thanks to an it
While opinions
could ever have gained through differ
Berenson was, there trated the plight of
its
on just how involved with the is
American
own
actions.
MRTA
no doubt that she has graphically
Lori illus-
Peru's political prisoners to a previously
unaware American audience.
The Road
to
Lori Berenson
grew up
Peru in
New
York
City.
She studied music
in
high school and attended college at the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), majoring
in anthropology. In 1989,
while a freshman at MIT, Berenson participated in a student
exchange program with the University of Central America
in El
Salvador. There, she experienced firsthand the violence of that country's civil war. She
was moved by
the inequality she
decided to take a leave of absence from
something
MIT
saw and
so that she could do
to help.
Berenson eventually
left
college for
good and moved
to
Nicaragua, where she lived and worked for two years assisting
members
of the Salvadoran refugee community.
35
During
this
Lori Berenson relatively
was born and
raised in
New York
City.
few females to attend the Massachusetts
She was one
Institute of
of the
Technology
(MIT). Her studies brought her to El Salvador in the late 1980s where she
examined the problem of unfair income and land
distribution. In 1990, she
work among El Salvadoran refugees displaced by covmtry. She traveled to Peru in November 1994 and
traveled to Nicaragua to
the
civil
became
war
in their
intrigued with the country's history, culture,
time, she also
worked as
a secretary,
and
politics.
computer programmer, and
translator for Salvadoran rebels living in exile in Nicaragua.
After a peace treaty
ernment and the
was signed between
rebels,
the Salvadoran gov-
ending the twelve-year
36
civil
war,
Lori Berenson Berenson moved
San Salvador
to
and spent two years working racy's
newly elected
for
(the capital of El Salvador)
one of the developing democ-
As she
politicians.
learned more about
Latin America, Berenson became interested in Peru.
An
Acquaintance with Terrorists
Berenson began her
trip to
she was twenty-five years
South America old.
As
in the fall of 1994,
a student of antlii'opology, she
By December
enjoyed learning about different cultures.
had decided
when
1994, she
Lima. She acquired journalist credentials from
to live in
two small New York-based magazines so that she could write about the fate of
Once architect,
women
in
in
Peru as well as other human-rights
issues.
Lima, Berenson became friends with a Panamanian
and together they rented a house
area of that
city. It
was a
large house,
in the
La Molina
which the architect also
used as a studio for his paintings. Berenson spent most of her time enjoying Lima and other parts of Peru, immersing herself in all aspects of
To floor
offset
Peruvian culture.
some
apartment
to
of the costs of the house, they sublet the fourth-
someone who claimed
to
be an engineer (He was
actually Miguel Rincon, one of the founders of the
claims to have been unaware of his
identity.)
MRTA. Berenson
The engineer had
houseguests staying with him fi'om time to time. After a few months,
Berenson claims that she wanted more privacy than the house provided, so she
moved
to
an apartment
Borjia, closer to central Lima.
in
another neighborhood, San
Berenson was on her
way back to this
apartment fi'om the congressional building where she worked when she was arrested.
MRTA
Peru's
The Arrest and Raid On the evening of November 30, Rosa were riding a Lima ing a session of
city
Congress.
1995, Lori Berenson
bus on
As
their
way home from came
the bus
unmarked policemen climbed aboard
and her friend attend-
the bus, dragged
them
and arrested them both. Berenson had been doing research article
women
she was writing about poverty and
claimed that she had no idea
(DINCOTE) were Berenson would
arresting her. Neither,
later allege that
Gilvonio, the wife of
high-ranking
off,
for
in Peru,
an
and
why the Peruvian antiterrorism police seemed, did Rosa.
it
her friend Rosa,
as a photographer from Bolivia,
herself
two
to a stop,
was
who
presented
Nancy
actually
MRTA cofounder Nestor Cerpa and an alleged
MRTA member herself.
They were taken to the DINCOTE headquarters and questioned.
A
few hours
DINCOTE
later,
officers
Berenson was put into a car with
and diiven
to the
borhood of Lima where she once
house
lived.
house, Berenson could see hundi"eds of the area.
The police told
She was very hesitant
in the
La Molina neigh-
When they pulled up armed
soldiers surrounding
to follow their orders
Some
DINCOTE
knew
there were children in
stormed the house
in
a neighbor's home, and took the residents
—
car.
MRTA
search of
of the rebels fired back. Others fled the house,
went
to
thi"ee children, their
—hostage. With Berenson held
mother, and a grandmother
bell.
because there was obvi-
nearby houses. Berenson said she would not get out of the
rebels.
to the
her to go to the front door and ring the
ously going to be a gunfight, and she
Instead, the
armed
fully
in the
MRTA and the police fought through the night. By morning, three MRTA rebels and one policeman were dead. After negotiating car,
the
38
Lori Berenson, guarded by two police officers, enters a house used as a rebel hideout during a judicial investigation two
weeks
after her arrest
by Peruvian security forces on November 30, 1995. Before her arrest, the New York City native had lived in a house in a Lima suburb shared by MRTA members. Berenson claims she was in the country working as a freelance journalist and that she never knew her housemates were suspected terrorists.
with a local neighbor's
priest,
Miguel Rincon released the hostages from the
home and gave
The DINCOTE
who had been
himself up as a prisoner of war.
police arrested sixteen
living at the
members
of the
MRTA
house and found a large supply of
weapons and ammunition. They
39
also found floor plans
and a
Peru's
MRTA MRTA
three-dimensional model of the Peruvian Congress.
The
rebels were accused of planning an attack on the
government
building during which they were going to kidnap several congressional representatives,
the release of
whom they would free in exchange for
MRTA
imprisoned
members. Berenson was
included in the arrest, accused of being an
MRTA
leader
and a
participant in the planning of the attack on Congress.
Interrogation and Trial Berenson was again interrogated when she was returned to the
DINCOTE to repent.
headquarters after the La Molina arrests and pressured
During the following days, she was held
in
a
the
cell at
headquarters and was told that others had repented and implicated her as a leader of the
MRTA. Thanks
of respected groups such as
known
that the
DINCOTE
to the investigative research
Amnesty
International,
it
Berenson. She told her interrogators that she
had never been a member of the MRTA,
let
was not
and
leaders.
its
opposed
to a
which, according to the antiterrorist laws of Fujimori's
constitution, is the appropriate court for people being tried
high-level terrorism charges. different
The rules for a
than those of a regular
civil tiial;
much time to speak to his or her the prosecutor does not always are.
(as
work on
currently
alone one pf
Berenson was very quickly given a military
new
widely
uses torture and the threat of torture to
get people to confess or repent, though this did not
civil) trial,
is
There
vSented
is
no
by both
a person
is
trial
sides
as
military
guilty or not based
in
Peru are
the defendant does not get
lawyer, the judge wears a hood, tell
the defendant
we would understand
and a jury
ti'ial
on
it,
and
what the charges
with evidence pre-
of regular citizens deciding whether
upon
40
this evidence.
There
is
also
no
Lori Berenson opportunity for cross-examination (when a defendant's lawyer can question prosecution witnesses and accusers). These hial conditions are
condemned by
tions because
it
international human-rights
makes
it
legal organiza-
impossible for accused people to properly
defend themselves.
As a result,
the military courts
is
Berenson's
and
the conviction rate of people tried in
almost 100 percent, unless they repent.
"trial" violated international
standards of justice to
an even greater degree than Peru's typical military Rather than taking place trial
more
in a
courtroom with a judge and
closely resembled a series of conferences
judge, the prosecutor,
and the defense
attorney.
claimed that Berenson was a leader of the
Her lawyer did
her parents,
between the
The prosecutor
—not a Peruvian
his best to defend her, but he let
Mark and Rhoda, know
jury, her
MRTA and a traitor to
Peru (despite the fact that she's an American zen).
terrorist trials.
that he
citi-
Berenson and
would have a
difficult
time proving her innocence given the restrictions placed upon him.
During the
trial
quarters and
period, Berenson
was
was
held at the
DINCOTE
head-
able to see her parents almost every day.
The Conviction and Sentence As predicted by her lawyer, Berenson was
MRTA
being a leader of the ing her sentence, she street tion,
was
from the
and a
was moved
DINCOTE
quickly found guilty of
traitor to Peru.
to a cell in the prison across the
headquarters. Even after her convic-
she was interrogated at
all
hours of the day and night and
occasionally denied bathroom privileges.
her sentence
was handed down, she was forced
rat-infested cell with a
While await-
Two weeks
before
to share her filthy,
woman who had just had surgery and was
suffering from injuries that no one
41
was tending
to.
Lori Berensoii Degaii serving the
Peruvian military tribunal
at
lite
sentence nancled clown to her by a
Yanamayo Prison
(pictured here),
miles southeast of Lima, and 12,700 feet above sea
level,
525
high in the
Andes. The prison is said to be so cold that inmates' hands turn purple when they wash their own clothing (as they are required to do). Following the overturning of the life sentence and a new conviction in a civil court,
Berenson was moved
to
Socabaya Prison outside Arequipa,
Peru, to begin a twenty-year sentence.
After ten days of this treatment, sleep deprived and emotionally unstable, she
was
told that she
given sixty seconds to
tell
would be presented
to the
media and
her side of the story. Following almost
two weeks of sleepless nights shared with an injured and helpless
woman, Berenson suddenly found with television cameras,
and spoke
in a
all
herself thrust into a
room
filled
pointing at her. She looked disheveled
very loud and angry voice. She had been told to
42
yell
Lori Berenson because there was no microphone. Berenson seemed out of control.
Her parents said they had never seen her
like this before.
dered what must have been done to her in prison to
and sound
this way. In her presentation,
They won-
make
her look
Berenson spoke about the
hunger, misery, and injustice that exists in Peru and said that the
MRTA are not terrorists, but revolutionaries. She said she loves the people of Peru and
is
someday
confident that
there will be justice
for all Peruvians.
Under usual circumstances, once prisoners are convicted of terrorism and sentenced, they are then presented to the press, giv-
ing them one last opportunity to speak before being taken off to prison. This way, a prisoner's final statement cannot be used
against
him
however,
or her
when determining a
was presented
to the
prison sentence. Berenson,
media before her sentencing. As a
result of her speech, the thirty-year sentence that
by
the prosecution
was
reconsidered,
was requested
and the judge gave her a
life
sentence instead.
In
Yanamayo
Berenson was quickly sent prison, located in the
Andes
to the
infamous Yanamayo
at 12,700 feet
above sea
remote, frigid location, she would begin seizing her
life
Yanamayo, there
by
the walls
is
no heating, the
and the beds are made of
the floor that sei"ves as a
a small
cells are six feet
window close to
toilet.
concrete,
level.
and there
is
a hole in
cell,
there
is
The win-
Two inmates share each cell
and sleep on the cona'ete slabs. The inmates are allowed out of cold cells for only half an hour each day.
43
At
ten feet long,
the ceiling with bars but no glass. cold.
In this
sentence.
Across from Berenson's
dow lets in a little light and a lot of
terrorist
their
Peruvian police guard the Lima house where Lori Berenson allegedly helped MRTA members plot an attack on the Peruvian Congress in 1995. During Berenson's civil retrial on terrorism charges, she was brought back to her old home for a re-enactment of events surrounding her arrest. Berenson continues to insist that she never met the MRTA rebels living upstairs from her and certainly never
members
knew they were
of a terrorist organization.
Berenson was not allowed visitors during her
Her parents flew
to
Yanamayo from New York
first
year in prison.
City as soon as they
heard she had been sentenced and were surprised and deeply disappointed to find out that they could not see
theii'
however, allowed to leave some sweaters and
44
daughter.
They
toiletiies for her.
were,
Lori Berenson 1
1
Lori Berenson: In Her When
asked by the author
how
Own Words
she would describe her situation,
Lori Berenson, currently serving her sentence at the Huacariz
Prison in Cajamarca, Peru, had this to say:
"My
situation
(and millions of
oned for
human
my belief
in
my
same
as] that of
thousands of Peruvians
beings on Earth).
and work
extremely
in prison is
renouncing
the
[is
difficult,
principles or
I
am
currently impris-
for social justice.
much worse
Although being
than that would be
becoming an accomplice
to a
system
of injustice."
Berenson 's parents would travel from her as often as
They brought
who is
was
New
allowed, usually twice a
food, clothes, vitamins,
York City
month
and medicine
for
one hour.
for Berenson,
shared them with her fellow inmates. Without these
would have been able
unlikely Berenson
to visit
gifts,
it
to stay healthy in the
harsh living conditions of Yanamayo.
A New Trial In 2000, after
spending
Berenson's conviction
five years in
Peruvian terrorist prisons,
was overturned when some
at the
hostage
publicly offered proof that she
the
MRTA. She was
opposed
who
Japanese ambassador's residence during the
had been held crisis,
politicians,
given a
new
trial,
this
was
one
not a leader of
in a civilian (as
to a military) terrorism court. Peru's civil terrorist courts
have three judges (who do not wear hoods) but no parents continue to visit her in prison a
45
jury. Berenson's
minimum of once a month.
Lori Berenson's parents attend the retrial of their daughter on April 4,
2001, year
in civil court.
jail
The
trial
would
result in a conviction
and a twenty-
term. Berenson's parents continue to wage a public-relations
on their daughter's behalf, lobbying members of the U.S. Congress, the Inter-American Human Rights Commission, and the Organization of American States. battle
46
Lori Berenson In the
summer of
2001, Berenson
was found
guilty
by
this civil
court of being a collaborator (defined as having befriended an
MRTA member, the person
regardless of whether or not she
was a member
of the group)
was aware
and sentenced
to
that
twenty
years in prison. According to the U.S. State Department, Peru's civilian terrorism court
of openness, fairness,
has failed "to meet international standards
and due
process." Human-rights groups
around the world condemn Peru's terrorism courts military
—and
the antiterrorism laws.
—both
Many have
civil
said that
impossible for Lori Berenson to find justice in Peru.
and it
is
Amnesty
International considers her a political prisoner.
Berenson appealed her conviction as a collaborator, but her request
was denied
in
February 2002. Unless the new president of
Peru, Alejandro Toledo, or a future successor pardons her or
grants her clemency antiterrorist
laws
in
(a
reduced sentence), or the controversial
Peru change, Lori Berenson
from prison on November
She
will
be released
be forty-six years
old.
Her chances of an early release do not seem promising.
On
March 25,
29, 2015.
will
2002, according to the Associated Press, President Toledo
told U.S. president
George W. Bush,
her, that the issue of Lori
who had suggested clemency for
Berenson
47
is "totally
closed."
Conclusion Even began
as the
MRTA died, the government
to unravel, sinking
it
sought to replace
under the weight of the crimes
MRTA members had long sought to expose. In the midst of a widening scandal involving government corruption and humanrights abuses, Fujimori resigned as president in
and is
fled to Japan, the
country where his parents were born. There
also reason to believe that Fujimori himself
a fact he hid
in
November 2001
was born
in
Japan,
order to be eligible to run for the presidency of
Peru. Japan quickly gave
him
be extradited (sent back)
to
citizenship,
Peru
and as a
result,
he cannot
to face the charges against him.
Japanese law does not allow extradition of Proof of the corruption that the
its citizens.
MRTA long claimed was pres-
ent within the Fujimori government emerged in 2000
when
video-
tapes turned up that showed Vladimiro Montesinos (head of Peru's National Intelligence Service ident) bribing judges
and
and a close adviser
politicians.
Montesinos
to the pres-
is
currently
being investigated on charges of arms and drug trafficking and illegal
money
transfers.
He was
also found to possess several
Swiss bank accounts containing more than $100 million
most of
it
dollars,
probably stolen from the government treasury, while
millions of Peruvian citizens continued to live in utter poverty.
Since his flight to Japan, Fujimori has been indicted on crimes linking
him and Montesinos
to the death
48
squads responsible for the
The grave
and cofoiinder of the MRTA, stands alone in a corner of Nueva Esperanza Cemetery in the Villa Maria section of Lima, Peru. Cerpa and thirteen other MRTA members were killed by antiterrorist commandos when the Pemvian govenmient put an end to the MRTA's takeover of the Japanese ambassador's residence in Lima. The government buried the fourteen dead MRTA rebels in various graveyards in shantytowns on the outskirts of Lima, without any fimeral services. The families of the dead MRTA members had wanted to give them Christian burials, but their requests were denied. of Nestor Cerpa, military leader
Barrios Altos massacre. Following the capture of Montesinos in 2001, the existence of state-sponsored terrorism has been proven,
supporting what human-rights groups have said for years
thousands of innocent people were Peruvian government's special
forces.
49
killed at the
—
that
hands of the
Peru's In 2000, Alejandro Toledo
was
Peru. In the previous election, he
but that earlier race was
MRTA elected as the
had come
in
new
president of
second to Fujimori,
later declared unfair. President
Toledo has
said that his administration's first priority will be reducing poverty.
The Peruvian people have heard
the exact
same words from
previ-
ous presidents and are understandably skeptical. In 2002, approximately half the Peruvian population continued to
On the human-rights and democracy fronts, is
live in poverty.
the
new president
not doing any better. President Toledo has yet to restore the
1979 constitution abolished by Fujimori and undo the
illegal
imprisonments brought about by the Fujimori government's antiterrorism laws.
Nor has he closed any
deemed unacceptable by
of the terrorist prisons
international human-rights groups.
Following the release of a forensic report in
showed
that eight of the
May
2002 that
MRTA members killed in the ambassador's
residence had been shot execution-style in the base of the neck,
Peruvian prosecutor Richard Saavedra filed homicide charges against eighteen
army
officers
and Montesinos. Fujimori's
role in the execu-
tions is also being investigated. In July 2002, Montesinos
victed of abuse of authority
and sentenced
The MRTA was never a very height of
its
popularity,
Membership began
it
con-
to nine years in prison.
large group. In the late 1980s, at the
had no more than 2,000
to fall after the
operatives.
1992 arrest of Victor Polay. In
October 1993, over 100 mid-level members of the to the
was
MRTA surrendered
Peruvian security forces under the guidelines of President
Fujimori's Repentance Law.
decreased the
The
number
MRTA
The La Molina shootout and
of high-ranking
tried to
make
a
members even
arrests
further.
comeback with the 1996 takeover
of the Japanese ambassador's residence
50
by gaining the
release of
image taken from a surveillance videotape, former Peruvian spy chief Vladimiro Montesinos (right) hands over money to the president of Panamericana Television (Channel 5 in Lima), Ernesto Schutz, in 1998. This bribe was paid in exchange for Channel 5's support for the government of then-president Alberto Fujimori and his reelection campaign. This is exactly the sort of government corruption and misuse of public funds the MRTA sought to expose and publicize before the group's ranks were depleted by arrests and deaths. In this
its
still
imprisoned comrades and generating a new wave of publicity
for its cause. Instead, the
The
MRTA
is
group was
now thought
to
all
but buried.
have no more than 100 active
members, mostly young fighters who lack leadership
skills
and
experience. Over the years, the group's focus has shifted from
51
Peru's
MRTA MRTA
revolutionary activity to attempts to free imprisoned
members. The group has not pulled
off
any major
terrorist
attacks since the takeover of the ambassador's residence, and in 2001,
it
was removed from
the U.S. State Department's
list
of for-
eign terrorist organizations.
The ]\IRTA emerged from for
economic and
Peru's impoverished villages to fight
political justice for all Peruvians.
members' commitment
Because of
its
to the well-being of their fellow citizens,
they sought to avoid harming the innocent in their attacks upon the symbols of
According used
to
all
MRTA
that they thought
founder
\'icror Polay. the
\'iolence to achieve its goals of
rejected political
Ultimately, the
changes
it
social
MRTA
Peru.
sometimes
change but never
dialogue that could have a\"oided
war.
civil
MRTA failed to bring about the social and political
wanted.
The MRTAs tion to
was destroying
relatively bloodless actions did indeed call atten-
government corruption and human-rights abuses. Perhaps
whate\'er improvements occur in Peruvian society as a result of this
new awareness can be
attributed at least in part to the
MRTAs efforts. Nearly all of
the group's
selves to their ideals, ending
up
that tried
—and sometimes
destroyed
b\'
members
either in prison or dead.
failed
—
to
avoid bloodshed
A group
was
the kind of government-sponsored \'iolence
seeking to expose. Perhaps the clearly illustrated than
it
was
MRTAs
it
itself
was
message was never more
in the group's violent death.
52
them-
saiJrificed
Glossary ambassador A his or her
high-ranking diplomatic
government as
The ambassador
Andes The
lives
its
official,
appointed by
representative to a host country.
and works
in the host country.
principal mountains of Peru with peaks that rise
higher than 20,000 feet above sea level and that run along the
western edge of South America.
DINCOTE
(Counter- Terrorism National Directorate)
Peruvian antiterrorist police force that was created by the Fujimori government specifically to fight terrorism,
diplomat
A person who
deals with international relations,
negotiating treaties, alliances, and agreements between countries.
imperialism
When
ence weaker ones.
powerful nations try to control or
The United
States
is
influ-
accused of practicing
these policies.
Inca Empire
In the fifteenth century, the Incas built a
wealthy and complex empire of over nine million people the Andes.
The Spanish conquered
the Inca
Empire
in
in the
early sixteenth century.
Incas Native South American people whose empire flourished from about
AD
1438 to the arrival of the Spanish
The descendants
in
AD
1532.
of the Incas account for roughly 50 percent
of today's population of Peru.
Peru's revolutionary
MRTA
Somebody who
is
committed
to causing, sup-
porting, or advocating a political or social change;
fighting for the overthrow of a government tion of a
new system
someone
and the
installa-
of rule.
SIN (National Intelligence Service) The Peruvian government's national intelligence service that was led
by Vladimiro Montesinos during President Fujimori's term in office.
terrorist
A person who uses terror,
violence,
and intimidation
to create a state of fear to achieve a political or social goal.
Yanamayo One feet
above sea
of Peru's terrorist prisons, located at 12,700 level in the
Berenson spent the
first
northern town of Puno Peru. Lori
three years of her sentence there.
54
For More Information Amnesty
International
322 Eighth Avenue
New
York,
NY
10001
(212) 807-8400
Web
site:
http://www.amnesty.org
Central hitelligence
Agency (CIA)
Office of Public Affairs
Washington,
DC
20505
(703) 482-0623
Web
site:
http://www.cia.gov
Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence
Department of International Relations University of St.
St.
Andrews
Andrews, Scotland KY16
Web
site:
9AL
http://www.st-and.ac.uk/academic/intrel/research/cstpv
Federation of American Scientists (FAS) Intelligence Resource
1717
Program
K Street NW
Suite 209
Washington,
DC
20036
(202) 454-4691
Web
site:
http://www.fas.org/irp/index.html
55
Peru's Human
MRTA
Rights Watch
350 Fifth Avenue 34th Floor
NewYork,
NY
10118-3299
(212) 290-4700
Web
http://www.hrw.org
site:
National Security
Agency (NSA)
Public Affairs Office
9800 Savage Road Fort George G. Meade,
MD 20755-6779
(301) 688-6524
Web
http://www.nsa.gov
site:
National Security histitute (NSI)
116 Main Street Suite 200
Medway,
MA 02053
(508) 533-9099
Web
Terrorist
'
http://nsi.org
site:
Group
Profiles
Dudley Knox Library Naval Post Graduate School 411 Dyer Road Monterey,
Web
site:
CA
93943
http://web.nps.navy.mil/~library/tgp/tgp2.htm
56
For More Information Washington
Office
on Latin America
1630 Connecticut Avenue
NW
Suite 200
Washington,
DC
20009
(202) 797-2171
Web
site:
Web Due
http://www.wola.org
Sites
to the
changing nature of hiternet hnks, the Rosen
PubHshing Group,
Inc.,
has developed an online
related to the subject of this book. This site
Please use this link to access the
list:
http://www.rosenlinks.com/iwmito/pemr/
57
is
list
of
updated
Web
sites
regularly.
For Further Reading Berenson, Rhoda. Lori: Peru. Everts,
New
My Daughter
Wrongfully Imprisoned in
York: Context Books, 2000.
Tammy.
Peru: The People and Culture. Minneapolis,
MN:
Econo-Clad Books, 1999.
Kalman, Bobbie. Peru: The Land.
New
York: Crabtree Publishing
Co., 1994.
King, David C. Peru: Lost
Benchmark Books, Landau, Elaine. Peru.
Cities,
Found Hopes. Boston:
1997.
New
York: Childi*en's Press, 2000.
MacDonald, Fiona, and David Salariya. Inca Town. Franklin Watts, Poole, Deborah,
Inc.,
New York:
1999.
and Gerardo Renique. Peru: Time of Fear.
London: Latin America Bureau, 1992. Worth, Richard. Pizarro and the Conquest of the Incan Empire in
World History. Berkeley Heights, NJ: Enslow Publishers,
h-ic.,
2000.
58
Bibliography
Associated Press. "Berenson Case
New
York Times,
March
Associated Press. "Fujimori
New
Is Closed,
Bush Hears
26, 2002. Is
Charged
York Times, September
6,
in
Death Squad Murders."
2001.
Associated Press. "Peruvian Rebel Refuses to Repent." Times, March
7,
New
Berenson, Mark, interview with author.
New
2002.
York, NY,
New
York, NY,
29, 2002.
Berenson, Rhoda. Lori: Peru.
2,
29, 2002.
Berenson, Rhoda, interview with author.
March
York
2002.
Berenson, Lori, written reply to author's questions, April
March
in Peru."
New York: Miami
Wrongfully Imprisoned in
Context Books, 2000.
Bridges, Tyler. "Peru's Poverty."
My Daughter
New President Vows to Lift Nation from
Herald, July 29, 2001.
Brooke, James. "The Rebels and the Cause: 12 Years of Peru's Turmoil."
New
York Times, December 19, 1996.
Escobar, Gabriel. "Peru Rebels
Abroad than
at
More Agile
Home." Washington
Forero, Juan. "Prisoners in Peru
Demand New Hilton, Isabel.
Trials."
New
Seek a
Post,
January
Way Out;
Message
19, 1997.
Captives of
War
York Times, March 30, 2002.
"The Government
Montesinos Vanished
at Delivering
Amid
Is
Missing; Fujimori and
Strange Stories of Soothsayers,
59
MRTA
Peru's Bribes,
and Secret Videos. But
New
The
Yorker,
March
Ki'auss, Clifford. "Released
Restraint."
New
5,
Who Was Really
in
Charge?"
2001.
Hostages Say Rebels Acted with
York Times, December 24, 1996.
Krauss, Clifford. "Rescue in Peru:
The Overview; Peru Troops
Rescue Hostages; Rebels Slain as Standoff Ends."
New
York
Times, April 23, 1997.
and Gerardo Renique. Peru: Time of Fear. London:
Poole, Deborah,
Latin America Bureau, 1992. Reyes, Francisco. "Peru's Deadly Front, Corruption
New President Outi'aged by 4,
Ai"e
Booming."
28, 1993.
Robinson, Eugene. "Amid Peru's
August
Habit: Behind the Fujimori
and Cocaine Trafficking
Washington Post, February
Post,
Drug
Ills,
Justice
System Heads the
List;
Prison Conditions." Washington
1990.
Rudolph, James D. Peru: The Evolution of a
Crisis.
Westport, CT:
Praeger Publishers, 1992. Sheridan,
Mary
Crisis."
Beth. "Peruvian Prison Life Is Backdi'op to Hostage
Los Angeles Times, December
27, 1996.
Simpson, John. In the Forests of the Night: Encountersin Peru with Terrorism, Lh'ug-Running,
Random Stavig,
and Military
Oppression.
New York:
House, 1994.
Ward. The World of Tupac Amaru:
Community, and
Conflict,
Identity in Colonial Peru. Lincoln,
NE:
University of Nebraska Press, 1999. Strong, Simon. Shining Path: Terror
York:
Times Books,
1993.
60
and Revolution
in Peru.
New
Index A Amaru, Tupac, 4
El Callao Naval Base, 21
American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA),
Amnesty
9,
11
International, 18, 34, 40, 47
Fujimori, Alberto, 14-17, 21, 26, 30, 50
antiterrorism legislation and, 14-17,
B
21, 23, 40,
Barrios Altos massacre,
17,
new
48-49
Berenson, Lori, 35-47 arrest
of, 37, 38,
in Central
trial of,
in Peru,
resignation
40
of,
Berenson,
48
41-43
45-47 Garcia, Alan, 11-13 Gilvonio, Nancy, 27, 38
43-45
Guevara, Che, 18
quote from, 45 trial of,
of,
Fujimori, Pedro, 26
37
in prison,
constitution and, 15, 23, 40, 50
America, 35-37
conviction and sentence
new
50
Barrios Altos massacre and 48-49
Ballon Vera, David, 20
Guzman, Abimael, 25
40-41
Mark and Rhoda,
41, 43,
H
44-45 Bush, George W., 47
Huacariz Prison, 45
human-rights violations 15, 17,
coca, 11,
4,
23-24, 40-41, 47, 48-49,
50, 52
Canto Grande Prison, 21 Cerpa, Nestor,
in Peru, 7,
9-10, 24, 27, 30, 38
I
20-21
Inca Empire,
4,
8
D DINCOTE
(antiterrorist police force),
15, 21, 24, 38, 39, 40, 41
drug
lords, 21,
Japanese ambassador's party, attack on,
24
2^34,
61
45, 50-51,
52
7
Peru's Jett,
MRTA P
Dennis, 26
Juanjui, Peru, 13
Peru democratic elections and,
L La
economic problems Colina,
of,
4-6,
7, 8,
government corruption and,
1
Lima, Peru, 11,20,
2L
26,
37
Barrios Altos massacre
in,
13, 23,
in,
7,
13
8-11,
48
independence from Spain, 8
17
military dictatorships and, 8
Francisco Pizarro and, 8 terrorism
14
8, 11,
13-14, 15, 19
poverty and,
6, 7, 9, 11, 13, 18, 48,
50
state-sponsored terrorism and, 17,
M
18, 24,
48-49, 52
Peruvian Communist Pary, 9 Montesinos, Vladimiro,
14,
48-49, 50 Pizarro, Francisco, 8
MRTA (Movimiento Revolucionario
Polay, Victor,
4,
Tupac Amarti) arrest
arrests of
members, 21-23,
9-10, 11,52
of, 21, 25,
50
24,
27-30, 39-40, 50
R
attack on Japanese ambassador's party, 26-34, 45, 50-51, 52
attacks by/methods
rebel groups, 9
of, 11, 13, 14,
Repentance Law, 16-17,
18-19, 24
Rincon, Miguel,
avoidance of violence, 20,
7, 12, 18, 19,
in prison, 25,
4,
23,
50
9-10, 37
39
52
coca and, 20-21
death of members, deaths caused by, decline
goals
of,
of,
13, 34, 38,
18,
50 Saavedra, Richard, 50
20
Shining Path,
21-23, 48, 50-52
9, 15, 17,
Abimael Guzman and, 25
4-6, 9-10, 13, 21-23, 51-52
hostages and, 26-34, 38-39
drug lords and, 21
kidnappings and, 19-20, 24
killings and, 9, 18,
Lori Berenson and, 35, 37-47
terrorism and, 13
origins
of,
18
24
Spaniards/Spanish Empire,
4-7, 9-10
4,
8
positive acts by, 24
protesting/attacking United States, 14, 15,
recruiting
4,
T
18-19, 23
terrorism in Peru,
members,
10, 11,
19
9, 13,
18
attack on US. Embassy, 14, 15, 18-19 in
Lima, 13-14
President Fujimori and, 14-17, 21,
National Intelligence Service, 17, 48
23, 40,
62
50
Index
u
prisons for convicted terrorists,
23-25, 27-30, 34, 43, 45, 50 U.S. resti-ictions
on
civil liberties
Embassy
in
Lima, Peru, attacks
and, 9 against, 14, 15, 18-19
state-sponsored, 17, 18, 24, 48-49, 52
terrorism 45,
Terry,
trials,
15-17, 21-23, 40-41,
Y
47
Fernando Belaunde, 8
Yanamayo
Toledo, Alejandro, 47, 50
Tupac
Amam
II,
4
63
Prison, 27, 43-45
Peru's
MRTA
About the Author Suzie Baer
is
an independent filmmaker who
husband and son
in
New York
lives
with her
City.
Photo Credits
© Fernando Llano/ APAVide World Photos; p. 1 © Luis Romero/AP/Wide World Photos; pp. 5, 6, 10, 42, 51 © APAVide World Photos; pp. 12, 25, 49 © Martin Mejia/ APAVide World Photos; pp. 16, 44, 46 © Corbis; p. 22 © Fotos De MRTA; pp. 27, 28-29 © Scott Dalton/APAVide World Photos; p. 28 (inset) © Douglas Engle/ APAVide World Photos; p. 33 (inset) © Ricardo Mazalan/AP/Wide World Photos; p. 36 © Mark and Rhoda Berenson; p. 39 © Silvia Izquierdo/ APAVide World Photos. Cover, pp. 32-33
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