Toronto Star

Leader of Peru’s infamous guerrilla group dies at 86

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Guzmán, the leader of the brutal Shining Path insurgency in Peru who was captured in 1992, died on Saturday in a military hospital after an illness, the Peruvian government said. Guzmán, 86, died at 6:40 a.m. after suffering from an infection, Justice Minister Aníbal Torres said.

Guzmán, a former philosophy professor, launched an insurgency against the state in 1980 and presided over numerous car bombings and assassinat­ions in the years that followed. Guzmán was captured in 1992 and sentenced to life in prison for terrorism and other crimes.

President Pedro Castillo tweeted that Guzmán was responsibl­e for taking “countless” lives. “Our position condemning terrorism is firm and unwavering. Only in democracy will we build a Peru of justice and developmen­t for our people,” Castillo said.

“We do not forget the horror of that time, and his death will not erase his crimes,” Economy Minister Pedro Francke said.

Guzmán preached a messianic vision of a classless Maoist utopia based on pure communism, considerin­g himself the “Fourth Sword of Marxism” after Karl Marx, Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and Mao Zedong. He advocated a peasant revolution in which rebels would first gain control of the countrysid­e and then advance to the cities.

Guzmán’s movement declared armed struggle on the eve of Peru’s presidenti­al elections in May 1980, the first democratic vote after 12 years of military rule.

A truth commission in 2003 blamed the Shining Path for more than half of nearly 70,000 estimated deaths and disappeara­nces caused by various rebel groups and brutal government counter-insurgency efforts between 1980 and 2000.

 ??  ?? Abimael Guzmán, a former professor, was the founder of Shining Path rebel group.
Abimael Guzmán, a former professor, was the founder of Shining Path rebel group.

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