• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Abimael Guzman, founder of Peruvian rebel group Shining Path, dies at 86

September 11, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 11, 2021

By Marcelo Rochabrun

LIMA (Reuters) -Abimael Guzman, leader of the Shining Path rebels who nearly toppled the Peruvian state in a bloody Maoist revolution, died on Saturday while in prison and following several weeks of poor health, the government said. He was 86.

Guzman was captured in 1992 in Lima and jailed for the rest of his life after being convicted as a terrorist. He died one day before the anniversary of his capture, when he was paraded in front of the press in a striped white and black uniform that is not normally used in Peru.

Susana Silva, head of Peru’s prison system, told RPP radio on Saturday that Guzman had been ill in recent months and had been released from a hospital in early August.

She said his health condition worsened in the past two days, without elaborating further, adding Guzman was set to receive more medical attention on Saturday but died in his cell around 6:40 a.m. local time (1140 GMT).

“I was informed in the morning that Mr. terrorist Abimael Guzman had died because of a generalized infection,” said Defense Minister Walter Ayala.

A former philosophy professor, Guzman was a lifelong communist who traveled to China in the late 1960s and was awed by Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution. He resolved to bring Mao’s brand of communism to Peru through a class war that he launched in 1980 on the day that Peru held its first democratic elections following over a decade of military dictatorship.

Guzman founded the Sendero Luminoso, or Shining Path, transforming it from a ragtag band of peasants and radical students into Latin America’s most stubborn guerrilla force. An estimated 69,000 people, mostly in Peru’s poor interior, were killed between 1980 and 2000 in the internal conflict launched by the Shining Path, mostly in indigenous Andean communities.

Shining Path’s bold and immaculately planned attacks, its networks of informants and spies, and Guzman’s uncanny ability to evade arrest gave him an almost legendary reputation for seeming to be in all places at once.

During years of fighting, he had been rumored to be dead, gravely ill, or living a comfortable life in Europe.

In 1980, after years of preparation, Guzman, a former university professor, led a band of supporters into the Andes Mountains outside the town of Ayacucho.

Armed with shotguns, dynamite and machetes, they began attacking security forces, elected officials and peasants who resisted their indoctrination with a fervor and ruthlessness never seen in a Latin American rebel group.

Fanning out from the Southern city of Ayacucho, the Shining Path attracted thousands more militants from poor peasant communities and universities.

People in the capital city of Lima got their first taste of the Shining Path in 1981 when guerrillas hung dozens of dead dogs from lampposts – “the dogs of capitalism,” said signs pinned to the animals.

By the late 1980s, the group had become such a threat to the state that two-thirds of Peruvians lived in areas under emergency rule – essentially, martial law.

His followers called Guzman the Fourth Sword of Marxism, after Marx, Lenin and Mao, and idolized him in revolutionary chants, songs, posters and literature.

His few written works, though little esteemed by Marxist academics, became like mantras for Shining Path followers who repeated his sayings as if they were biblical truths.

Shining Path propaganda posters showed the bespectacled Guzman towering over peasant masses and guerrilla armies, pointing with one hand and holding Mao’s revolutionary “Little Red Book” in the other.

But the first image most Peruvians saw of Guzman was anything but revolutionary. Apparently drunk, he danced to the main tune of the film Zorba the Greek and posed for snapshots with supporters in a Shining Path video captured by police in 1990 and shown on television.

The video made it clear he was alive and still in charge, but it punctured his reputation for austerity and demoralized Shining Path militants.

Nevertheless, their attacks intensified, leading then-President Alberto Fujimori to seize near-dictatorial powers, in what he said was an attempt to crush the revolt.

After Guzman was captured by police at a spacious safe house in a middle-class neighborhood of Lima in 1992, he was sentenced to life imprisonment.

The Shining Path largely collapsed as a military threat, although remnants remain to this day. Authorities say that rebels claiming to belong to a dissident faction of the Shining Path killed 16 people https://ift.tt/3hHGZ4j in a remote jungle area just this year.

In 2018, Guzman was given a second life sentence for a 1992 Lima car bomb attack that killed 25 people.

Guzman’s first wife, Augusta La Torre, died in mysterious circumstances in the late 1980s. In 2010, he married his longtime girlfriend, Elena Iparraguirre, who, like Guzman, is serving a life sentence. Both women were Shining Path leaders.

(Reporting by Marcelo Rochabrun; Edited by Rosalba O’Brien and Diane Craft)

Source Link Abimael Guzman, founder of Peruvian rebel group Shining Path, dies at 86

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Tennis – Azarenka calls for mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations
  2. Apple offers small concession in easing App Store rules for Netflix, others
  3. U.S. weekly jobless claims fall; layoffs at 24-year low
  4. Explosion snags $6M on $120M valuation to expand machine learning platform

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Meet Sutter Buttes: “The World’s Smallest Mountain Range”
  • As The Rest Of The World Heats Up, “The North Atlantic Warming Hole” Is Set To Get Even Cooler
  • What Are The White Stripes You Find On Chicken Breasts?
  • The Biggest Explosion Event Since The Big Bang, Dead Sea Scrolls May Have Been Written By Original Authors Of The Bible, And Much More This Week
  • The Strange “Egg-Laying” Rockfaces Of Planet Earth
  • One Of The World’s Largest And Rarest “Fancy Red” Diamonds Has Been Studied For The First Time
  • The Simple Rule That Seems To Govern How Life Is Organized On Earth
  • This Paradisiacal Island In The Philippines Had Advanced Maritime Culture 35,000 Years Ago
  • Neanderthals Faced A Catastrophic Population Collapse 110,000 Years Ago
  • Why Travelers Are Putting Their Luggage In Hotel Bathtubs
  • NSFW Video Shows Two Male Gray Whales Seemingly Having Sex
  • Space Explosions, Dead Sea Scrolls, And Why It’s So Hard To Sex A Dino
  • This Image Of Earth (And Saturn) Will Change You
  • Watch Inquisitive Humpback Whales Blow Bubble Rings At Whale Watchers
  • How Long Did Neanderthals Live For?
  • Want To Use Dragons As Dice? Now You Can, Thanks To Math
  • Why Did Humans Start Using Fire? New Theory Suggests It Wasn’t To Cook Food
  • Controversial “Alien’s Math” Has A New Translator. Can He Reform Its Reputation?
  • How To Watch A Rare Daytime Meteor Shower This Weekend
  • Over 250 Years After Captain Cook Arrived In Australia, Final Resting Place Of HMS Endeavour Confirmed
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version