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- <text id=90TT0855>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Peru:Politics Is Now His Muse
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 56
- PERU
- Politics Is Now His Muse
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Mario Vargas Llosa, one of Latin America's most famous
- novelists, is on the verge of becoming President of Peru. And
- you thought his fiction was surreal
- </p>
- <p>By Cristina Garcia/Lima
- </p>
- <p> "It was true: that cancerous family of mine had every
- expectation that I'd be a millionaire someday, or at the very
- least President of the Republic."
- </p>
- <p>-- Mario Vargas Llosa, "Aunt Julia and the
- Scriptwriter"
- </p>
- <p> It's at least 100 degrees in the noonday sun. Mario Vargas
- Llosa stands on an outdoor stage draped with sewn-together
- sheets pinned with red and white paper flowers. He is in Bagua,
- a dusty town in the north Peruvian jungle known more for its
- rice growing than for its literary sophistication. As the
- primarily Indian audience of several thousand watches, a
- partially toothless man wearing sunglasses and a pale blue
- guayabera hoarsely yells, "Mario, Presidente! Mario,
- Presidente!" Then the candidate speaks, promising, if he is
- elected this coming Sunday, to bring prosperity to the Amazonas
- province. "In this region," he proclaims, "the future of Peru
- is hidden!" As his words echo through the primitive
- loudspeakers, the crowd reacts enthusiastically.
- </p>
- <p> What is one of Latin America's most famous--and
- controversial--writers doing running for President? "Risking
- everything! I wouldn't be doing this otherwise!" Vargas Llosa
- says with a laugh. He is not exaggerating. Peru suffers from
- an inflation rate of nearly 3,000% a year. Ten people are
- killed daily in political violence in Peru, the majority by the
- Maoist terrorist group Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path). The
- average Peruvian's standard of living has dropped more than 50%
- since 1985. Corruption thrives in the bloated, inefficient
- state bureaucracy. Only Vargas Llosa seems to want the job of
- managing the nearly unmanageable country. Even for those who
- oppose him and his politics, which are supported by the
- country's wealthy conservatives, Vargas Llosa remains the only
- reasonable option.
- </p>
- <p> Vargas Llosa is not the most natural of candidates. In
- style, he is the exact opposite of incumbent Alan Garcia Perez,
- a fiery speaker whose high-profile antics wore thin as he ran
- the Peruvian economy into the ground. When Garcia tried in 1987
- to nationalize the banks, Vargas Llosa successfully rallied
- against the move. He has been in the limelight ever since. In
- fact, the handsome 54-year-old novelist is openly disdainful
- of the occupation that engages him. "Politics is intimately
- related to human mediocrity," Vargas Llosa observes wryly. So
- far, this attitude has been to his advantage in Peru, where
- voters seem as cynical about those who govern them as he is.
- </p>
- <p> The latest polls show Vargas Llosa with an estimated 44% of
- the vote, well ahead of the closest of his three opponents,
- Luis Alva Castro of the American Popular Revolutionary
- Alliance. Because a candidate must attract 50% of the vote to
- win, a June runoff is likely. Vargas Llosa is expected to
- prevail, but once ensconced in the presidential palace in Lima
- he may look back upon his campaign days with longing. His
- party, Libertad, is one of three parties in the Democratic Front
- </p>
- <p>is unlikely to win a majority in the national congress. "That
- for me would be the worst scenario," Vargas Llosa says. "To win
- the election but not have the mandate to make clear and
- necessary reforms."
- </p>
- <p> The cornerstone of Vargas Llosa's platform is his economic
- program, which promises to bring the flourishing informal
- economy above ground, push down inflation to 10% a year,
- attract foreign investment and privatize bankrupt state
- businesses. The blend of belt tightening and free-market
- policies may, however, hurt the poorest of Peru's 21 million
- citizens. Political experts are concerned that Vargas Llosa's
- weak relations with the Peruvian military might jeopardize his
- ability to combat Sendero Luminoso, now active in every region
- of Peru. In recent weeks the terrorists have stepped up a
- violent campaign of car bombings aimed at intimidating voters
- so they will not go to the polls. Last year Shining Path
- executed 696 political candidates, public officials, soldiers,
- policemen and rural peasants. Since 1980, when the group
- launched its offensive, Peru has been swept up in a civil war
- that has claimed more than 17,000 lives and last year alone
- cost the country over $500 million. Recent reports indicate
- that the subversives are cooperating with eastern Peru's
- cocaine producers, whose drug trafficking accounts for an
- estimated $1 billion black-market economy. The underpaid and
- ill-equipped military, cited frequently for human-rights
- abuses, can do little to stem the violence.
- </p>
- <p> Vargas Llosa's antipathy toward the military, sharpened
- during the brutal 1950s dictatorship of General Manuel Odria,
- has remained the one constant through his chameleon's life of
- political affiliations. Like many of his Latin American
- contemporaries, Vargas Llosa supported the leftist ideals of
- the Cuban revolution. But his growing disillusion with
- socialist politics in the 1970s estranged him from other Latin
- writers, most notably his former friend Colombian novelist
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, whom he once belted in front of a
- Mexico City movie theater. Since then, Vargas Llosa has cast
- about with the zeal of his fictional characters for other
- ideologies. In The Real Life of Alejandro Mayta (1986), the
- antihero is an aging revolutionary confounded by how to effect
- change in a corrupt and unjust society. Today Vargas Llosa has
- only two modern political heroes: Charles de Gaulle and
- Margaret Thatcher. "Thatcher is the only stateswoman whom I have
- never seen make concessions in the values that, for her, are
- very important," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Vargas Llosa has committed mistakes that a more seasoned
- politician in Peru would have avoided. A campaign television
- ad last summer, for example, depicted the current government
- bureaucracy as a urinating monkey, a stunt that insulted many
- viewers. Vargas Llosa, who has spent 16 years in self-imposed
- exile in Europe (and is often accused of being more European
- than Peruvian), was reluctant to criticize the American
- invasion of Panama in December--a move denounced by many
- Latin American countries--then spent his Christmas holidays
- in Puerto Rico.
- </p>
- <p> Many Peruvians continue to wonder what makes Mario run. Some
- say Vargas Llosa's writing has lost much of its vitality in
- recent years and he is seeking less abstract challenges. Others
- speculate that he requires a larger playing field for his
- considerable talents and ego. "For a man of his fame, politics
- is the only game in town," says Peruvian poet and journalist
- Mirko Lauer. "Mario is hooked on success. To keep on
- succeeding, he must step into politics."
- </p>
- <p> There is another, irresistible question. Will Mario Vargas
- Llosa, whose fiction is often derived from his life, turn his
- political career into novelistic fodder? Vargas Llosa insists
- that for him art and politics are separate worlds with
- precisely opposite requirements. "In politics you can't be the
- master of the game," he says. "You must create consensus, have
- great flexibility, accept criticism. Not in literature. When
- you write a novel, you should be very intolerant, very
- intractable about the goals that you have set." His critics say
- this stubborn streak has kept the author from building the
- alliances, particularly with leftist groups, that he needs to
- govern Peru effectively. Instead, they say, he relies on advice
- from a small cadre of confidants that includes his wife
- Patricia, 43. "He is very alone out there," says Hernando de
- Soto, a leading Peruvian economist and onetime friend.
- </p>
- <p> The challenge of remaking Peru has taken a toll on Vargas
- Llosa's writing. Aside from a brief erotic novel, In Praise of
- My Stepmother (1989), a book that Vargas Llosa considers a
- "diversion" and in which he devotes rapturous pages to the joys
- of a woman's bottom, he has written very little during the past
- two years. He considers this curtailment of his vocation as a
- "contribution to emergency times." Says he: "When you are in
- a situation like Peru's today, you can't change it with a novel
- or a poem."
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, Vargas Llosa tries to steal two or three hours
- in the mornings for reading, writing and contemplation. Mostly
- he reads poetry for its quick burst of language, but he admits
- that he finds it hard to concentrate these days. No doubt
- Peruvian reality rivals even the most artful and engaging of
- his novels. In Conversations in the Cathedral (1969) and The
- War at the End of the World (1984), the two books of which he
- is proudest, Vargas Llosa explored fanaticism, apocalypse and
- corruption. If he is elected President, Vargas Llosa will have
- to contend more directly with these themes, which exist in
- ample supply in contemporary Peru.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-