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maddezmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-31-08 11:33 AM
Original message
Peru's Shining Path guerrillas on the rise again
Peru's Shining Path guerrillas on the rise again
By MONTE HAYES – 29 minutes ago

MATUCANA, Peru (AP) — Matucana's mayor is a worried man. The Shining Path rebels who terrorized Peru decades ago are back, moving across the jungle-draped slopes near his remote village and recruiting young fighters to their born-again insurgency.

And unlike before, the rebels have almost unlimited financial support. Earning cash by protecting coca fields and cocaine-smuggling routes, they are able to buy powerful weapons and pay salaries to men and women who take up arms against the government.

It is a nightmarish prospect for Peru, which saw nearly 70,000 people killed from 1980 to the mid-'90s in the Shining Path's brutal effort to impose a Maoist communist regime. Most of the victims were peasants, caught in the crossfire between guerrillas and security forces.

The country has enjoyed more than a decade of political stability since the rebel threat was virtually eliminated by former President Alberto Fujimori, a democratically elected leader who ruled with an iron fist from 1990 until his regime ended in scandal in 2000.

Fujimori, 69, was extradited from Chile in September and is now on trial for human rights violations committed during his crackdown, including the killings of university students and the massacre of Lima tenement dwellers targeted as Shining Path collaborators by a military death squad.

more:http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jw-wGPrynK9OI3OsLr8IVOMozabQD910NE501
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-31-08 03:57 PM
Response to Original message
1. This is a strange article. Fujimori is finally on trial -- so we get an article
Edited on Sat May-31-08 04:00 PM by struggle4progress
lauding him for his policy towards the Senderistas

It is quite credible, of course, that some people in the communities targeted by Senderistas have some good feelings towards Fujimori, as Guzman was captured during his presidency. But Fujimori certainly belongs on trial for his own substantial human rights abuses

The article suggests that the Senderistas are resurgent and are more dangerous than ever because now funded by drug-smuggling

But in their decade of activity, the Senderistas managed to alienate almost everyone: they began by calling themselves the Peruvian Communist Party, infuriating the existing Peruvian Communist Party, which wanted nothing to do with them; and they continued by targeting anybody who disagreed with them, so that in short order the peasants they claimed to defend were not only in grave danger of being killed as an alleged Senderista sympathizer but also in equally grave danger of being killed for allegedly not being a Senderista sympathizer. It is quite difficult to believe that many people remember that state of affairs warmly: it seems much more likely that any remaining Senderistas have essentially no credibility and that a resurgence is therefore unlikely

What about the drug-smuggling charge? It is not a new charge: anyone who followed events in Peru in the 1980s, and who was then interested in American policy towards Peru at that time, will remember that the Reaganites continually described the Senderistas as narco-terrorists. Of course, to say "The Senderistas are more dangerous than ever because now they have turned to drug smuggling" is sexy, but it also implies the narco-terrorist accusation of the 1980s was simply bullshit. And if it was bullshit in the 1980s, one should wonder if it's not still bullshit today.

The natural conclusion is: It's amateur hour at the State Department. The re-emergence of this accusation indicates that the Bushistas have no recent thinking about Peru, so when they needed something to say, they reached into the archives of the prior Republican president and repeated what was said then

The re-emergence of drug-smuggling Senderistas in our corporate media is even stranger, viewed in the context of the supposed US response, to wit, sending troops to Peru to build hospitals:

US troops to do humanitarian work in Peru where Shining Path rebels active
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=102x3323389

Riiight :eyes:
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-01-08 11:10 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. It was hard to take simply reading that in Ayacucho government troops lured villagers
Edited on Sun Jun-01-08 11:12 AM by Judi Lynn
who were hiding in the mountains from them, back to their town, telling them that they planned to create a small lake and stock it with fish, then having the townsmen start digging a hole, letting them dig a deep hole, and then slaughtering the whole group of them and burying them in the mass grave. Their rationale was that these people were supporters of Sendero.

That's as bad as it gets anywhere. It's as bad as the death camps in Europe in the Second World War. My God. Such treachery, such mind-boggling dishonesty, not to mention the hideous racist, fascist hellish hatred.
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-01-08 04:50 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. it isn't surprising at all
in an impoverished country like Peru. most of the coca is grown in Peru and Bolivia and processed in Colombia.
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-01-08 07:06 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Not quite sure what in my post you think you're replying to
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-01-08 07:12 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. you said the resurgence of S L was unlikely and dismissed the story
I don't think its so unlikely that they have reformed. even if its just a new group under the same name, perhaps some morbid romantic nostalgia. coca certainly is cultivated in Peru.
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-01-08 09:46 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. There will be very little "romantic nostalgia" for SL for the reasons I indicated:
they alienated almost every sector of Peruvian society
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 09:26 AM
Response to Reply #6
8. well maybe you should discuss this with the mayor of Matucana
in the original post. he seems to believe the Sendero Luminoso is reconstituting.
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 11:40 AM
Response to Reply #8
9. Of which district, in which province, is Velasquez alcade? Spanish versions of this story
use the district head title alcade for Velasquez. A natural guess might be that Matucana means the small village Matucana Alta in La Mar, but La Mar seems to have no Matucana district. If Matucana is not even a district, one wonders how Velasquez could be alcade of Matucana.

It is highly unlikely that there is "romantic nostalgia" for SL anywhere near Matucana Alta, since 1993 is recent enough for almost everyone to remember the events there that year
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 11:50 AM
Response to Reply #9
10. try this
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matucana,_Peru

Matucana is a town in Central Peru, capital of the province Huarochirí in the region Lima. It's located to the East of Lima at 2.378 m above sea level, along the Central Road (Spanish: Carretera Central) at km 74.



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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 12:21 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. No: something's wrong. "Matucana is a six-hour trip from the provincial capital of Ayacucho over
a rutted dirt road that twists down into the narrow Apurimac Valley"

No chance in hell one is going to get anywhere near the location you indicate by a mere six hour drive from Ayacucho over a primitive dirt road
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 12:27 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. the location is pinpointed on the link in the original story
other than that I can't help you. maybe contact the AP writer and ask him, or the mayor as I have already said.


http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jw-wGPrynK9OI3OsLr8IVOMozabQD910NE501
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:11 PM
Response to Reply #12
14. Does this look right? Link says "jungle-draped slopes near his remote village"
This seems to be the Matucana Google's automatically-generated map associated with its automatically-collected news:

Matucana Photos
http://members.virtualtourist.com/m/pb/187a41/

Not so very jungle-draped
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:23 PM
Response to Reply #14
16. Ayacucho jungle
LIP-jl) -- A laboratory which produced a reported 1 ton of cocaine hydrochloride a week was destroyed by Peruvian Anti-Drug agents in the jungle department of Ayacucho, Peru.

The clandestine lab, which authorities say was run by a presumed Colombian drug cartel, was located between the Apurimac and Ene River Valleys (dubbed as VRAE) , home to one of the world's largest coca plant growing regions.

According to a press note released by the Peruvian National Police, the clandestine laboratory was purposely built in the middle of very inaccessible terrain near the small village of Retiro. Due to the difficulties in arriving to the site, some 50 law enforcement agents were brought in by military helicopters.

30 henchmen were reportedly guarding the sight, each armed with AK-47 assault rifles.

The massive site, which was perfectly hidden under the jungle foliage, consisted of 6 areas. The laboratory's electricity and water systems were powered by heavy duty generators.

Authorities confiscated numerous drug making machines as well as countless ingredients used to produce cocaine.

According to reports, local townspeople unsuccessfully attempted to prevent authorities from shutting down one of the biggest known labs in the region.

Although the operation was classified as 'important' by Peruvian officials, more needs to be done before a dent can be made into Peru's growing drug trade and production businesses.

Peru has produced 100,000 tons of coca leaves, of which, only 9,000 tons have been verified to be used for traditional and legal purposes.

http://www.livinginperu.com/news/advice



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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:39 PM
Response to Reply #16
19. So we agree Ayacucho is not Lima? In #10, you directed me to the Matucana in Lima
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 02:07 PM
Response to Reply #19
20. it sounds like an error in the story. the story line is from Matucano
you should write to the AP and get clarification. meanwhile, see post 18 which is germane to the subject.
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:27 PM
Response to Reply #14
17. more on the Ayacucho jungle
http://artourperu.com/ENGAya.htm

The department of Ayacucho is located in the south central Sierra of the Peruvian Andes. With an extension is 44,181 km² (17,050 sq ml), 88% of its territory is located in the Sierra and the rest is the High Jungle. Its has a population of over 541,000 people.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 04:51 AM
Response to Reply #3
7. Maybe you should tell Alan Garcia this. It could save him a lot of trouble.
Last Updated: Tuesday, 3 April 2007, 09:05 GMT 10:05 UK

Peru to bomb Amazon cocaine labs
By Dan Collyns
BBC News, Lima

The Peruvian President, Alan Garcia, has ordered the use of warplanes to destroy clandestine airstrips and drug laboratories in the Amazon jungle.

Mr Garcia said drug barons must also be pursued and warned that Peru could face an insurgency funded by illicit drugs.

Peru must kill the drug-trafficking trade or have to deal with an insurgency like that of neighbouring Colombia, Mr Garcia said.

Peru is the second-largest producer of cocaine in the world after Colombia.

Tough talk

In a characteristically dramatic speech, Mr Garcia said Peru must do away with every last jungle drug factory and secret airstrip by either bombing or machine-gunning them.

More:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6520863.stm



It will allow him more time to perfect his passion, The Danse.
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:06 PM
Response to Original message
13. PERU: Shining Path Rebels and the War on Drugs
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40232


LIMA, Nov 27 (IPS) - A surviving faction of Peru’s Shining Path guerrillas has launched an offensive against anti-drug police units in the Apurímac and Ene river valleys -- an area known by the acronym VRAE -- in one of the country’s main coca-growing and cocaine-producing regions.

The attacks staged by the insurgents are in reprisal for the growing crackdown by the security forces in that vast region in Peru’s southern highlands and on the main drug routes in the area.

The Central Operations Commando (COC), a combined armed forces and police unit whose mission is to destroy the remnant Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso) faction, has stepped up its activity this year in the area.

In addition, the Division of Investigation and Inspection of Chemical Inputs (DICIQ), a specialised anti-drug police team dedicated to cutting off the flows of chemicals used to produce cocaine from coca, began to operate in January, with a special focus on the VRAE region.

The guerrillas killed a police chief and blew up a police station early this month in Ocobamba, in Apurímac province, and ambushed and killed four police officers on Nov. 13 in Tayacaja, in the neighbouring province of Huancavelica.

The assailants are Shining Path guerrillas who survived the 1980-2000 counterinsurgency war, which peaked in 1992, when the Maoist group’s founder, Abimael Guzmán, and many other leaders were captured.

Because of the gravity of this month’s attacks, Prime Minister Jorge del Castillo, Defence Minister Allan Wagner and Interior Minister Luis Alva Castro were called in to brief Congress on the situation in a closed-door session.

The support base of the Shining Path rebels who mounted the attacks on the police in that area in southern Peru are thousands of campesinos (peasant farmers) who grow coca on an estimated total of nearly 16,000 hectares of land.

To bolster their meagre incomes, many coca-growers also produce cocaine base, the intermediate product used to manufacture cocaine hydrochloride.

That explains why the total area planted in coca in the VRAE region increased 72.5 percent from 2000 to 2006, while the potential cocaine production grew from 141 to 280 tons, according to the latest report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

Estimates by the government’s National Commission for Development and Life Without Drugs (DEVIDA) indicate that 58 percent of the cocaine produced in Peru comes from drug labs in the VRAE region, which includes the country’s poorest provinces: Apurímac, Ayacucho and Huancavelica.

Although the government of Alan García initially blamed the attacks on drug traffickers, it later reported that they were staged by "narco-terrorists" -- members of an alliance between Shining Path guerrillas and drug traffickers.

An expert on Peru’s insurgent groups, Raúl González Chávez, explained to IPS that in the 1980s, when Shining Path launched its armed struggle, it initially had a bad relationship with the local coca-growers, before it began to win them over.

"At the start, the coca producers formed anti-subversive civil defence groups to fight the Shining Path guerrillas," he said. "But over the last 15 years or so, the column has sought to win support among the local campesinos by changing its political discourse and offering to defend them from anti-drug operations."

González Chávez said the recent violence makes it clear that Shining Path is still a problem in Peru.

"The big problem is that in Peru, for reasons that are not very intelligent, there is a reluctance to accept the fact that the Shining Path is still a pending issue," he maintained. "That’s why the emphasis is put on the ties between the guerrillas and drugs -- ties that exist, it's true, but which are not yet the determining factor in their actions."

But national security analyst Rubén Vargas Céspedes says there is a cause and effect relationship between the anti-drug operations in the VRAE region and Shining Path’s reaction. "The attacks in Ocobamba and Tayacaja are violent responses to the anti-drug and anti-subversive operations in that area," he told IPS.

"If the drug business is strangled, the local economy suffers, especially the coca-growers," he pointed out.

That is why, "according to the guerrillas’ reasoning, by breaking down the barriers that the security forces put in the way of the flow of chemical inputs and cocaine, they are fighting in favour of poor farmers who grow coca for a living. They are seeking to consolidate their support base among the coca-growers."

There is strong evidence that Shining Path rebels are involved in the production of cocaine.

Two members of Shining Path were riding in a truck intercepted by the anti-drug police on May 22, in the town of Churcampa in Huancavelica province. The truck, which was heading towards the VRAE region, was carrying 17 tons of chemical inputs.

And on Sept. 20, in Huancayo, the capital of the central highlands province of Junín, the police seized seven tons of chemical inputs that were being transported to the VRAE region, bringing the total between January and September to a new record of 510 tons. Three of the people arrested at the time were Shining Path insurgents.

One and a half weeks before the Shining Path attack on Ocobamba, the police intercepted 82 kg of cocaine base that was being shipped out of the VRAE region.

Although the army is not authorised to arrest drug traffickers, on Oct. 17 a military patrol killed seven local campesinos who were transporting drugs in a mule train. According to the official report, the incident occurred in Putis, in the province of Ayacucho, and the victims were from the VRAE region.

"They were not simple drug carriers, because they were armed," a military source with the COC told IPS. "The weapons are an indication that the victims included Shining Path rebels, who protect the circulation of cocaine base and cocaine in the area. They have stopped being subversives and are now at the service of the drug mafias."

For his part, González Chávez said "the drug question is very important, but it doesn't explain these actions (the incidents in Ocobamba and Tayajaca) that are carried out periodically every year, both prior to and after the (Sept. 12, 1992) capture of Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán."

While Prime Minister del Castillo announced the strengthening of counterinsurgency and antinarcotics efforts in the conflict zone, the chief of the armed forces joint command Jorge Montoya asked for nearly 27 million dollars in additional funds to build six military bases over the next six months.

"It would be counterproductive for the government to militarise the fight against the drug mafias in the VRAE region, not only because the local population could identify with the Shining Path as its members put up armed resistance, but also because recent experience has shown that drug trafficking corrupts the security forces," said Vargas.

"The solution must be political," he argued. "You can't fight the Shining Path by treating them simply as common criminals; that would be the worst error the government could commit. The illegal drug economy has developed in the VRAE region because of the absence of the state."

As the security forces tighten the noose around the centres of cocaine production, the Shining Path will, in response, step up its violent activities to win support among the rural poor in that area, many of whom form the lowest rung of the drug trafficking ladder.

Another alternative would be for the state to make its presence felt in infrastructure, development programmes and initiatives to encourage farmers to grow legal crops instead of coca. But for now, the government’s only plan is to increase the activities of the anti-drug police. (END/2007)


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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:21 PM
Response to Reply #13
15. Peru interior minister: deadly attack on police station not sign of new insurgency group
Posted on November, 6 at 7:35 pm

Interior Minister Luis Alva Castro rejected claims that a new insurgency is responsible for the attack on an Ocobamba police station in Peru’s southern Apurímac department ...

Officers at the station said 70 to 80 people attacked them on November 1, killing police Lt. Colonel Héctor Zegarra, and wounding three others. Authorities maintained the attack was orchestrated by drug traffickers trying to recuperate 180 pounds of cocaine paste confiscated days earlier.

... sociologist Jaime Antezana ... said the attack has less to do with recuperating cocaine paste and more with a new internal armed conflict and resurgence of Shining Path activity in Peru ... He added that drug barons who finance the drug trade should be the main concern, not the Shining Path ...

http://www.peruviantimes.com/peru-interior-minister-deadly-attack-on-police-station-not-sign-of-new-insurgency-group/
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dinalight Donating Member (7 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-06-08 03:40 PM
Response to Reply #13
21. Bacchus is right. FARC can be destroyed but only
if the U.S. is committed full-strength to purifying South America in its entirety. That means full-strength commitment to the War on Drugs and getting allies (Colombia) what they need and ask for.
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-02-08 01:32 PM
Response to Original message
18. Peru reports death of top guerrilla
http://news.notiemail.com/noticia.asp?nt=12423490&cty=200


Lima, May 20 (EFE).- The Shining Path guerrilla group's No. 2 commander was killed in a clash with the Peruvian army in the Upper Huallaga region, but soldiers could not recover his body, military spokesmen told Efe Tuesday.

Juan Laguna Dominguez, alias "Piero," died in battle late Sunday night in the Huamalies district, located 415 kilometers (257 miles) northeast of Lima.

The army launched the operation after military intelligence obtained information that the rebel might attend a birthday party.

Soldiers were waiting for Piero when he arrived with several other members of the Maoist-inspired guerrilla group.

Although the Shining Path commander was killed, two of the guerrillas with him managed to grab his body and flee even though they were wounded, leaving behind weapons and the two-way radio used by Piero.

Even without the body, the commander of the army's 3rd Special Forces Brigade, Gen. Walberto Zevallos, confirmed that Piero was killed.

The military patrol intercepted a radio conversation between Shining Path members who called for assistance and reported Piero's death, Zevallos said.

Laguna spent more than 20 years with the Shining Path, according to police, who said he participated in several ambushes of police and army troops.

Last month, two Shining Path guerrillas were killed and another captured in a clash with a military patrol in Quebrada de Piota, a remote area in Peru's central jungle region.

In March, a high-level Shining Path guerrilla commander was captured by the army in the Alto Huallaga jungle region.

Felix Mejia Atencio, a logistics chief, was considered the No. 3 man in the Regional Committee of the Alto Huallaga, an area where the rebel group's remnants work with drug traffickers.

In February, police arrested a suspect described as a "key man" in Shining Path's financing operations.

Hurda Josafat Rubina Torres headed one of the largest drug-trafficking organizations in the El Monzon Valley, one of the main coca-growing areas in Peru, located some 600 kilometers (about 373 miles) northeast of Lima, the Peru.21 newspaper reported.

The Shining Path and its role in drug trafficking have been blamed for the rise in violence in the interior of Peru.

On March 5, two police officers were killed when their patrol was ambushed by unidentified gunmen near the jungle town of Villa Rica, located some 460 kilometers (about 285 miles) from Lima.

Two National Police officers were killed on Dec. 24 in a grenade attack in Ayacucho province that the government blamed on "narcoterrorists."

The Christmas Eve attack occurred in an area that is part of the Valley of the Apurimac and Ene rivers, known as the VRAE region, which includes Ayacucho and Junin provinces, as well as part of the Amazon, and is one of the main coca-growing and cocaine-production zones in Peru.

Another officer was killed Nov. 1 in an attack on a police station in Ocobamba, in Apurimac province, which borders Ayacucho.

Two weeks later, four police officers were killed and two others wounded in an ambush in Ayacucho.

The VRAE was the last bastion of remnants of the Maoist Shining Path, which launched its uprising on May 17, 1980, with an attack on Chuschi, a small town in Ayacucho province.

The remaining active units of the Shining Path are operating in Peru's central jungle region, led by Comrade Artemio, the only remaining high-profile fugitive of the group that terrorized this Andean nation in the 1980s.

Comrade Artemio leads a force, which calls itself Proseguir, of between 200 and 300 insurgents who spread constant fear among the inhabitants of distant areas of the central jungles who live chiefly off growing coca leaf, the raw material of cocaine.

In February 2006, Peruvian police killed the Shining Path's military leader, Victor Aponte, known as "Comrade Clay." The guerrillas have strayed away from Shining Path's Maoist ideology, surviving by providing security for drug traffickers and growing coca.

Artemio did not comply with Shining Path founder Abimael Guzman's order more than a decade ago to end the armed struggle. Guzman, for his part, does not recognize the Proseguir group as Shining Path members.

The peasant insurgency led by "Sendero Luminoso," as the group is known in Spanish, rocked Peru in the 1980s.

A truth commission appointed by former President Alejandro Toledo blamed the Shining Path for most of the nearly 70,000 deaths the panel ascribed to politically motivated violence during the two decades following the group's 1980 uprising.

The guerrilla group also caused an estimated $25 billion in economic losses, according to commission estimates.

Guzman, known to his fanatic followers as "President Gonzalo," was captured with his top lieutenants on Sept. 12, 1992, an event that signified the "defeat" of the insurgency.

Since then, isolated guerrilla bands have engaged in sporadic and largely ineffective activity in a few regions.

Guzman, who was a professor of philosophy at San Cristobal University before initiating his armed struggle in the Andean city of Ayacucho, once predicted that 1 million Peruvians would probably have to die in the ushering-in of the new state envisioned by Shining Path.

The group became notorious for some of its innovations, such as blowing apart with dynamite the bodies of community service workers its members killed, or hanging stray canines from lampposts as warnings to "capitalist dogs." EFE

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