Ocnus.Net
The Rise and Fall of Shining Path
By Waynee Lucero, COHA 6/5/08
May 8, 2008 - 10:32:56 AM
In
the Beginning:
The Shining Path (Sendero Luminosos) Maoist guerrillas were formed by
university professor Abimael Guzman in the late 1960s and were based upon
Marxist ideology. At the time, Guzman was teaching philosophy at San Cristóbal
of Huamanga University, while engaging in left-wing politics. He attracted many
like-minded young academics to his cause of staging a radical revolution in
Peru. He visited the Peoples Republic of China in the mid-1960s and his
collection of inchoate ideas was profoundly influenced by a mumble-tumble of
Maoist theories, which became the basis of the ideological foundations of the
Shining Path. In 1980, he launched his campaign to overthrow the Peruvian
government.
The Shining Path’s main goal was to destroy existing Peruvian political institutions
and replace them with a communist peasant revolutionary regime, while resisting
any influence coming from other Latin American guerrilla groups like the Tupac
Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA), as well as from foreign ideologies.
According to researchers, Shining Path’s basic strategy was to use violence to
bring down the country’s imperfect democratic institutions, prevent citizens
from participating in local government, destroy Peru’s economy, and to thwart
government-sponsored programs to provide aid and services to the population. As
a result of a series of clandestine meetings, Shining Path officials
established a military school to teach young recruits military tactics and
weaponry use. At first, Shining Path was successful in many of its endeavors
because the Lima authorities were beset by organizational instability,
corruption, and were ill-prepared to fight the internal war that would
foreshadow the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent villagers caught in the
middle of the struggle.
The Revolution Begins:
Shining Path formally initiated its uprising against the Peruvian government in
1980 after decades of inequality and marginality immiserated the peasantry. Led
by Guzman, the revolution based itself mainly in the rural areas of the country
where it carried out the bulk of its activities; this tactic had been used by
other revolutionary guerrilla groups like Colombia’s FARC, due to usual
presence of a weak government, as was the case in Peru. The country’s armed
forces did not have the necessary physical presence in the area to allow it to
effectively deploy against the revolutionary cadres. This lack of on-site
military credibility on the government’s part gave Shining Path the opportunity
to deploy its forces to wage an effective guerrilla war against its enemies
with near impunity. Shining Path initially based its headquarters in the
mountainous region of Ayacucho and Huanta, to the remote regions around the
central selva and south of Vilcabamba (the site of the last Inca resistance).
Characteristically, it launched attacks on agricultural areas in the Upper
Huallaga Valley and the southern part of Puno, which also helped to sever any
lingering urban ties for its recruits. Guzman played the role of all-powerful
military and spiritual leader of his organization; in this sense, Shining Path
was organized as a hierarchical cult rather than on a cell-based model.
Buying and Selling:
Similar to the FARC in Colombia and other revolutionary insurgencies, Shining
Path in part funded its operations through the process of narcotrafficking,
ransoms from kidnapping and forced taxes on small businesses and individuals.
Shining Path also required Colombian dealers and buyers operating locally to
pay higher than prevailing prices for raw coca in return for protection and the
opportunity to buy weapons from them. Today, on a much smaller scale, Shining
Path is attempting to revive and re-establish such a financial relationship. It
has been listed by U.S. authorities as a terrorist organization based on the
tactics it has utilized which include car bombings, kidnappings, and staged
political assassinations. In 2006, Shining Path ranked 41 on the U.S. list of
top terrorist organizations. Initially, Shining Path targeted local authorities
(mayors, governors and mid-level bureaucrats) police barracks, and local
political leaders. However, experts believe that by 1983, the group gradually
began to target wealthy peasants and state agency heads with violence and the
threat of abduction, as well as launched comparable attacks against left-wing
activists, grass-roots organizers, and left-liberal intellectuals. This change
in strategy eventually proved counterproductive for the insurgents because they
were not able to capture the hearts and minds of the average Peruvian by their
violent tactics. Instead, villagers were subject to the unremitting brutality
by Shining Path and were unprotected by the military and intelligence services.
Both the first Alan Garcia administration and his successor, Alberto Fujimori,
used intimidation to tromp out local citizens. The Garcia government, as did
the Belaúnde government before it, used tortures and randomly assassinated
citizens for their alleged backing or at least sympathy for Shining Path.
Peruvian Citizens
Caught in the Middle:
There is no doubt that the average Peruvian often experienced traumatic
brutality from both government forces and Shining Path. The U.S. Department of
State, among other sources, determined that the combined death total caused by
several decades of conflict reached at least 70,000. The total death toll from
the beginning of the uprising in 1980 to 1990, just before the decade-long
conflict under Fujimori, can be found in a study conducted by DESCO, in which
fatalities attributed to the conflict between the government and Shining Path
have been carefully scrutinized. The mid-1980’s, during the Garcia
administration, proved to be the years in which a surge of fatalities occurred.
This includes casualties inflicted upon ordinary Peruvian citizens, government
personnel and security forces, as well as Shining Path recruits. In the early
years of the revolution, Shining Path was estimated to have ten to
fifteen-thousand members; with its recruitment efforts targeted at the most
poverty stricken areas of the country and in the Quechua-speaking part of the
highlands. Harsh tactics were an integral step in the organization’s operation
and its devilishly skillful propaganda efforts were employed to engage those in
the general population who were experiencing the greatest degrees of injustice
at the hands of Lima authorities. A key factor contributing to the large number
of resulting fatalities in the uprising was that the government found it
difficult to distinguish between a Shining Path member and an ordinary inhabitant
of the Altiplano, because of the similar native attire. In 1983, President
Belaúnde was reported to have announced a 60-day national state of emergency,
in which he suspended civil liberties and gave the police broad powers to seize
suspected guerrillas for up to ten days without charges. In this account, 200
people were reported as being arrested just 24 hours after the announcement was
made. The country had been attempting to move towards democracy before Shining
Path declared its war, but President Belaúnde’s action in declaring martial law
along with several of these authoritarian initiatives, countermanded the
democratic trend taking place in Peru. Ordinary citizens were forced to pay the
price, as the then Peruvian leader earned the well-deserved reputation for
tolerating human rights abuses.
Under Garcia and Fujimori, the country again found itself caught in the middle
of mounting ideological strife and was made to suffer severe human rights
abuses from both Shining Path and government forces.
Shining Path singled out the poor, indigenous populations, whose interests it
disingenuously claimed to have at heart. It forced farmers to slash production
to subsistence levels and to destroy whatever modern farm equipment the
campesinos possessed. In addition, Shining Path imposed puritanical regulations
that outlawed fiestas and prohibited drinking as part of a strategy of
strong-arming local populations into submission and self-abnegation. Any person
believed to be sympathetic to the government or to even slightly disagree with
Shining Path’s fundamental beliefs, was a candidate to be tortured and killed.
Outlandishly, Shining Path then abandoned its professedly leftist ideology and
began to identify leftists as candidates to be kidnapped, tortured and/or
murdered.
Not surprisingly, Shining Path failed to capture the hearts and minds of the
natives due to this extremely bizarre metamorphosis. With leftist and trade
union officials being specifically targeted, more and more Peruvians learned to
lean more heavily in favor of government efforts to bear down on Shining Path’s
revolutionary operations. In the DESCO study, leftist assassinations carried
out by Shining Path began to rise a few years after the revolution was
triggered—peaking in 1988 and then slowly declining. In 1992, now under
Fujimori, assassinations increased drastically, and then dropped after Guzman’s
capture. During the Garcia era, leftist assassinations were targeted against
two main groups when ideological factors gave way to more bare-boned battles
between Shining Path and the government: Garcia’s American Popular
Revolutionary Alliance (APRA) and the more radical United Left (IU). Shining
Path’s tactic to force individuals into submission was a strategy calculated to
eliminate the competition. Considering its goals of ousting foreign influence
and rival organizations, it was Shining Path’s sudden and unpredictable
strategy to turn against its own people as well as like-minded potential allies
which foredoomed its end. In the ensuing struggle, large numbers of deaths
occurred, helping to transform its revolution into a stark case of conflicting
interests. The question of principle was increasingly not in play.
In 1992, the Alberto Fujimori administration staged a coup against itself which
led to the dissolving of Congress and the dismantling of the country’s legal
system. This cynical ploy enabled his administration and the military police to
carry out large numbers of murders and kidnappings of those though to be
enemies of the state without having an opposition party or legal capacity
capable of challenging various illegal acts.
The various degrees of power under the administrations Belaúnde, Garcia and
Fujimori worked to subvert law and order more than to uphold it. Under these
governments, Lima’s security forces exponentially increased the murders of
ordinary Peruvians, who were suspected of being part of the Shining Path. In
addition to the unrestricted power of the government, the Fujimori
administration did little to solve the country’s stressful economic situation.
Research reports at the time found that 4.5 million people in Peru were living
in extreme poverty (lack of sanitation, water, electricity, and gas). Fujimori
then sought to enlarge the death squads that carried out orders to kidnap,
torture and murder those suspected of being part of the Shining Path or known
to harbor anti-Fujimori sentiments. For example, in 1997, the gruesome
discovery of anti-Fujimori activist Mariella Barreto Fiofano’s body was found
with her hands cut off and spine broken in half. This demonstrated how far the
regime was prepared to go in order to suppress and silence those it saw as its
foes.
The Decline of Shining
Path:
After his 1992 auto-coup, Fujimori took control of the press and almost all of
the country’s other institutions, promising a return to democracy within a
year. This formula enabled him to rule Peru by decree, with a massive number of
killings taking place during this period as the result of fierce fighting
between Shining Path and Lima’s security forces. On September 12, 1992, Abimael
Guzman was captured by local authorities without a drop of blood spilled. This
resulted in a major decrease of fatalities and the shrinking of the Shining
Path’s armed effectiveness. One of Guzman’s top lieutenants had been
interrogated after being detained and eventually was induced to reveal some of
Guzman’s hiding places. By the local authorities rummaging through trash cans
looking for any signs of his presence, the security forces were able to close
in on him, finally locating him and placing him under arrest. Subsequently,
Fujimori displayed him in an outdoor cage so the press could witness this act
of public humiliation—simultaneously boasting of his success. Since capturing
Guzman meant the destruction of Shining Path’s hierarchy, the group began to
disintegrate due to organizational issues and opposition in the ranks. Research
by DESCO demonstrates this decline in political assassinations of moderate
leftist figures as part of the general trend after Guzman was captured. Looking
back on the process, the government was able to bring down Shining Path, but
only at the cost of suppressing civil rights and by carrying out a barrage of
human rights violations against Peru’s general population. A few years after
his capture, Guzman called for a supposed peace deal which caused the Shining
Path to split into two groups: those who insisted on continuing to fight and
those who wanted to put down their arms. Since then, the Shining Path has not
come near having the success that it achieved as a guerrilla group in the
mid-1980s. It has remained relatively quiet in comparison to the past, racking
up relatively few kidnappings and murders.
The Return of Shining
Path:
Recent reports show that Shining Path may be making something of a comeback,
reorganizing its cadres and military capabilities to combat the Peruvian state.
Over the past decade a number of Shining Path leaders have been peacefully
apprehended. For example, news articles reported in 1999 that Ramirez Durand,
who goes by the
nom de
guerre “Comrade Feliciano,” had been cornered, along with three
women rebels, after being pursued for two weeks by a force of more than 1,500
commandos. Durand was captured without a shot being fired.
On March 25, 2008 Shining Path rebel members working with drug traffickers
killed a police officer and wounded 11 on anti-drug patrols. The unit is said
to have been led by one of Shining Path’s last remaining leaders—Comrade
Artemio. Comrade Mono—who eventually was caught in March of this year was, in
fact, part of another branch of the Shining Path hierarchy. Their apprehension
demonstrated that police efforts have been achieving some success in
dismantling the organization. Along with these efforts, Peruvian authorities currently
hold ex-President Fujimori. Fujimori now faces trial for corruption, fleeing
his presidential office, and the ordering of death squads. Others are to be
tried for a range of human rights and law violations. This shows that Peruvians
may finally be witnessing some sort of justice, rather than the past neglect of
democratic standards and the exercise of privilege in the country. Peruvians
are responding to this movement toward justice. “Human rights groups in Peru
and family members of the victims killed in a 1992 massacre are celebrating now
that four members of a paramilitary group will spend between 15 and 35 years in
prison” (LivinginPeru.com).
In recent months, there have been accounts of political kidnappings and murders
which could be an indication of the recrudescence of the Shining Path. Other
reports have told of police forces closing in on them. Shining Path is rumored
to be financing their reviving terrorist activities by charging for protecting
drug-traffickers and intertwining the organization with coca production and
distribution networks. Consequently, Peruvians may soon find themselves dealing
with an increase in drug violence, a growing insurgency and an increase in
government repression.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008