Poole, Deborah; Rénique, Gerardo
Perú: time of fear
1992
London. Latin America Bureau, 1992, 212 pp
Biblioteca PUCP. Biblioteca CCSS Código: HN 350.V5 P77 IN
english, inglés, terrorismo, sendero luminoso, abimael guzmán, fuerzas armadas, alberto fujimori, política
Resumen:
When, on the night of his capture, Abimael Guzmán, leader of Sendero
Luminoso, came face to face with General Antonio Vidal, head of Perú´s elite anti-terrorism police (DIRCOTE),
he apparently told him: sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. This time it was
my turn to lose. This equanimity, appropriate to a former philosophy professor,
has been echoed in statements by his followers abroad. According to Adolf
Olaechea, spokesman for Sendero Luminoso in London: “it’s more of a problem for
Fujimori’s regime than for us, rally. They have relieved the party of the
responsibility of looking after the Chairman. He added, almost as an
afterthought: “it is a big blow, of course, losing the Chairman. It will delay
a few things, but in the end it will change nothing”. Such apparent nonchalance
suggests a bullet-proof confidence in the eventual out come of the “people’s
war” launched by Sendero Luminoso more than twelve years ago. Olaechea said
that the strategic equilibrium which Sendero claims to have reached with the
forces of the Peruvian state would not be affected by Guzmán’s detention; nor
would the “rottenness” of the regime and the peruvian people’s determination to
be rid of it.
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