54 Shining Path hostages rescued, Peru reports
Some adults had been held by the rebels for two decades
LIMA, PERU— Peruvian security forces rescued 54 adults and children, mostly members of the Ashaninka indigenous group, being held captive by Shining Path rebels in a remote jungle region, an official said Saturday.
Anti-terrorism police chief Gen. Jose Baella said some of the adults were kidnapped from Puerto Ocopa and nearby towns between 20 and 30 years ago, when the Maoist rebel movement was still strong.
Baella said the women were used to produce child soldiers for the guerrillas and grow crops for them. The oldest of the 34 children was 14, he said.
The group was rescued by a special forces unit comprising soldiers and police in helicopter-borne missions Monday and Friday.
Members of the group have been reunited with relatives they had not seen for decades.
Baella said none were being imme- diately presented to the news media. They were receiving medical treatment and being interviewed by prosecutors at the counter-narcotics police base in Mazamari.
The rescued group was living in various camps in a thick jungle with a 50-metre canopy in a place called Sector Cinco (Sector Five) in Rio Tambo in the province of Pangoa, Baella said.
Two young Shining Path deserters who were raised in the camps had led authorities to them, he said. A total of 70 people have been rescued from such camps in the past year.
Baella said the operation further weakens an already debilitated Shining Path, whose principle funding source is cocaine trafficking and whose numbers analysts estimate at no more than 200 fighters. The group’s last refuge borders Peru’s main cocaine-producing region, the Apurimac, Ene and Mantaro river valley.
Last year, its two top leaders — brothers Victor and Jorge Quispe Palomino — were indicted in the United States on charges including conspiracy to commit narcoterrorism.