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- <text id=89TT0823>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: Peru:Lurching Toward Anarchy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 54
- PERU
- Lurching Toward Anarchy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Can the country cope with terrorism -- and 10,000% inflation?
- </p>
- <p> On an average day in Peru, six people die by political
- violence. One day it is a government agent organizing peasant
- cooperatives. One day it is a ruling-party mayor. One day it is
- a government-aligned journalist. Most days it is peasants who
- get in the way.
- </p>
- <p> There was the day in early February when the killing came
- to SAIS Cahuide, a private co-op in Peru's central Junin
- department. It was a thriving agricultural concern then,
- boasting up to 130,000 head of livestock, 800 workers who sold
- 10,000 liters of milk a day, and 170 administrative and
- technical advisers. A column of guerrillas armed with machine
- guns, members of the 5,000-strong Maoist revolutionary group
- Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path), marched in to destroy
- everything and starve anyone who did not cooperate with them.
- The rebels killed or took most of the animals, executed one
- director and three administrators of the co-op, and destroyed
- tractors, before disappearing into the countryside. Today the
- cooperative is nearly deserted, and those who remain live in
- constant fear that the guerrillas will return. "We are
- abandoned here," says a co-op official, whose requests for
- protection from the authorities have been in vain.
- </p>
- <p> The fate of SAIS Cahuide has become a familiar tale in
- Peru, which is reeling from the double punch of guerrilla
- insurgency and economic stagflation. The confluence of crises
- has brought the country to the brink of bankruptcy and shaken
- the nation's institutional foundations. While a military coup
- does not appear imminent, the basic conditions for civilian
- democracy are eroding at an alarming rate. Approximately 150,000
- Peruvians emigrated last year. Rural families who lack the money
- to leave have migrated to urban centers, straining city budgets
- and turning the pueblos jovenes, or shantytowns, into breeding
- grounds for subversion.
- </p>
- <p> Violence has become a fact of Peruvian life. Government
- studies count 12,965 people dead in terrorist-related violence
- since 1980, when Sendero Luminoso began its campaign to
- overthrow the government. Already this year, 794 killings have
- been tallied, though the actual number is no doubt much higher.
- Outside the major cities, hundreds of police officers and mayors
- have deserted their posts after receiving death threats from
- terrorists. In the area around Huancayo, the capital of Peru's
- breadbasket department of Junin, Sendero Luminoso is locked in
- a battle for dominance with the Cuban-oriented M.R.T.A. rebels.
- The city, says Raul Gonzalez, a sociologist and expert on the
- Sendero Luminoso, "is now the critical spot to Sendero's
- future." From there, the Shining Path, which already controls
- at least one-third of the countryside, intends to take Lima,
- only 120 miles away, by encircling it and cutting it off from
- the rest of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Yet despite the looming guerrilla menace, the deteriorating
- state of the economy is the immediate worry of most Peruvians.
- The country's inflation rate topped 1,720% last year, and could
- reach an unbelievable 10,000% in 1989. Buying power has dropped
- 50%; up to two-thirds of the working population is either under-
- or unemployed. In the capital, bread, rice and sugar are
- becoming scarce, and powdered milk is unavailable in many
- neighborhoods.
- </p>
- <p> Outside help is not likely to rescue the country. One of
- President Alan Garcia Perez's first moves after taking office
- in 1985 was to reduce payments due on Peru's $14 billion foreign
- debt. As a result, Peru is virtually cut off from all fresh
- foreign credits. Last September Garcia imposed a rigorous
- austerity plan designed to curtail imports, stimulate exports
- and cancel subsidies. But critics say his efforts are still
- insufficient to halt Peru's downward slide. And Garcia refuses
- to make any deal with international banks that would require the
- country to pay more on its debt than it would receive in new
- money. "It's not that Peru is refusing to pay," says Garcia.
- "But we are going to negotiate in such a way that the flow is
- positive or equal."
- </p>
- <p> Garcia's erratic economics have cost him his once
- overwhelming popularity. A February poll by Apoyo, Peru's
- leading independent polling firm, charted his approval rating
- at a dismal 13%. Last December Garcia's support within his own
- APRA (Popular American Revolutionary Alliance) Party eroded to
- the point where he was forced to resign as its leader.
- Nevertheless, the President, whose five-year term expires in
- 1990, has stubbornly ignored calls for him to step down.
- </p>
- <p> Despite persistent rumors that it might attempt a coup, the
- military has shown no desire to end nine years of civilian
- rule. But Peruvian society is on the verge of polarization
- between the extreme left and right. Last July marked the
- appearance of the Rodrigo Franco Command, a death squad said to
- be made up of dissident APRA Party members. The group has
- assassinated several leftists and critics of the government and
- has threatened to kill many more.
- </p>
- <p> At least 80% of Peru's weary populace wants the government
- to open a national front against terrorism. Perhaps in response,
- the government two weeks ago announced an ambitious campaign
- against the rebels. Still, few Peruvians are confident the
- government can quell the warfare before the economy reaches the
- point of no return. As retired General Sinescio Jarama warns,
- "Sendero is not winning, we are losing."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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