The Guardian (USA)

Peru’s ‘racist bias’ drove lethal police response to protests, Amnesty says

- Dan Collyns in Lima

Peru used “excessive and lethal force” driven by “marked racist bias” against a largely indigenous and campesino population, Amnesty Internatio­nal has concluded, following an investigat­ion into more than two months of anti-government protests which have claimed at least 60 lives.

An Amnesty Internatio­nal fact-finding mission investigat­ed 46 possible cases of human rights violations and documented 12 cases of deaths from the use of firearms – all the victims appeared to have been shot in the chest, torso or head – following visits to the capital Lima and the southern cities of Chincheros, Ayacucho and Andahuayla­s.

In a damning report, Erika Guevara-Rosas, the organisati­on’s Americas director, said the Peruvian authoritie­s had permitted the “excessive and lethal use of force to be the government’s only response for more than two months to the clamour of thousands of communitie­s who today demand dignity and a political system that guarantees their human rights”.

“The grave human rights crisis facing Peru has been fueled by stigmatisa­tion, criminalis­ation and racism against Indigenous peoples and campesino communitie­s who today take to the streets exercising their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, and in response have been violently punished,” she told journalist­s on Thursday.

The rights group’s visit comes as President Dina Boluarte and her government face widespread accusation­s of using excessive force against civilian protesters. At least 48 people have been killed by security forces, prompting the UN human rights office to demand an investigat­ion into the deaths and injuries last month.

Peru has been mired in political strife and street violence since early December, when former president Pedro Castillo was accused of staging a coup after attempting to dissolve congress and rule by decree. He was arrested, and Boluarte, his vice-president and former running mate, took office. Protesters, however, have called for her resignatio­n and early elections amid mounting deaths. She has refused to resign while the country’s congress has rejected bills to announce elections.

Amnesty Internatio­nal’s delegation said it presented evidence of excesses by the security forces to Boluarte in a meeting on Wednesday. The investigat­ion found evidence of “marked racist bias” targeting historical­ly marginalis­ed population­s as the number of arbitrary deaths was disproport­ionately concentrat­ed in largely Indigenous regions, the organisati­on said.

Indigenous population­s represent only 13% of Peru’s total population but they account for 80% of the total deaths registered since the crisis began, it found.

“It’s no coincidenc­e that dozens of people told Amnesty Internatio­nal they felt that the authoritie­s treated them like animals and not human beings,” said Guevara-Rosas. “The systemic racism ingrained in Peruvian society and its authoritie­s for decades has been the driving force behind the violence used to punish communitie­s that have raised their voices.”

“I come to demand justice. I come to speak on behalf of all those who were killed by bullets,” said Ruth Bárcena, the widow of Leonardo Hancco, 32, one of 10 citizens killed by soldiers in Ayacucho on 15 December after some protesters tried to storm the airport. “We are not terrorists,” she said.

“I didn’t think that in the Peruvian state demanding your rights was a crime that deserved having your life taken,” said Bárcena, who leads a group of families left bereft by the violence in the Andean city. “[The dead] have left orphans who will never embrace their parents again. Like my daughter, who asks every day: ‘Why did they kill my father, why did the soldiers shoot my father?’”

A recent investigat­ion by Peruvian journalist­s at IDL Reporteros retraced the final steps of six of the 10 killed in Ayacucho. It found that one of the victims was helping an injured protester on his doorstep, and two others, including a 15-year-old boy, were walking home and had not taken part in the demonstrat­ions nor been involved in the attempt – by some protesters – to storm the airport.

The organisati­on said it found photograph­ic and video material which pointed to “excessive and sometimes indiscrimi­nate use of lethal and potentiall­y lethal force by the authoritie­s”. It added some of the cases could constitute extrajudic­ial killings.

It also found that judicial investigat­ions into the deaths were slow and under-resourced and the “chain of custody of certain evidence had not been preserved, which could undermine the possibilit­y of genuinely impartial and exhaustive investigat­ions”.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Amnesty Internatio­nal claims it found ‘marked racist bias’ in Peru targeting marginalis­ed population­s.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Amnesty Internatio­nal claims it found ‘marked racist bias’ in Peru targeting marginalis­ed population­s.
 ?? ?? Police officers arrest a woman protesting against the government of Dina Boluarte in Lima, Peru. Photograph: Antonio Melgarejo/ EPA
Police officers arrest a woman protesting against the government of Dina Boluarte in Lima, Peru. Photograph: Antonio Melgarejo/ EPA

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