Everything about The Peruvian Prison Massacres totally explained
The
Peruvian prison massacres occurred on June 18–19, 1986, after a series of
riots in the
San Juan de Lurigancho,
Santa Mónica, and
El Frontón prisons in
Lima and
Callao. The military repression of these riots resulted in the loss of at least 224 lives.
Antecedents
During the
internal conflict in Peru, the bloody campaign by Peruvian
Maoist group
Shining Path was responsible for the deaths of thousands of inhabitants of the rural regions of Peru. The
Military of Peru, which had been dispatched to put down the
insurgency, was also responsible for the deaths of thousands of Peruvians, as it treated
campesinos as potential
terrorists or terrorist sympathizers.
At the beginning of his 1985–1990 term, President
Alan García demonstrated an interest in changing the counter-subversive strategy of his predecessor,
Fernando Belaúnde Terry, with the purpose of reducing
human rights violations against the civilian population, by calling on the civil society to propose solutions to the problem of political violence in Peru. Nevertheless, his government authorized the prison massacres, putting Peru's human rights violations back into the national and international spotlight.
Riots
On June 18, 1986 at 6:00 am, the prisoners began to riot. The riot occurred while a congress of the
Socialist International, of which Alan García's
APRA party was a member, was taking place in Lima. The prisoners in San Juan de Lurigancho, El Frontón, and the women's prison in Santa Mónica, who had tacit control of the prison interiors, rose up and took prison guards and three journalists as
hostages. They demanded the immediate release of 500 people imprisoned for terrorism. García and his government were caught off guard by the uprising. At 10:00, an emergency cabinet session began with the participation of García and military commanders. Three hours later, the Minister of the Interior,
Abel Salinas, announced that if the prisoners didn't surrender, the prisons would be taken by force. That day, Shining Path started a wave of murders and attacks in Lima that left several dead.
Negotiations
The government of Peru sent a negotiating commission formed by
Caesar Samamé,
Augusto Rodriguez Rabanal and
Fernando Cabieses, who arrived at El Frontón at 4:30 pm to negotiate with the prisoners. However, these negotiations didn't bring about results.
Assault
At 6:00 pm, as the negotiations hadn't brought about favorable results, the order to assault the prisons was given. The first attack began in the women's prison at Santa Mónica, where the
Republican Guard, which at the time was responsible for protecting Peru's borders and prisons, regained control relatively quickly. They demolished a wall and they sent tear and paralyzing gases into the prison. In two hours the hostages were released, and two people had died.
At midnight, June 19, the assault on the prison on the island of El Frontón commenced. The assault was carried out under the command of the
Peruvian Navy. The director of the prison, a judge, and the public prosecutor had protested against the Navy intervention, and declared that they were no longer responsible for what occurred inside the prison as a result of the assault. Meanwhile, from the island of El Frontón the vice-minister of the Interior,
Agustín Mantilla, announced that the island was under the control of the
Joint Command of the Armed Forces as it had been declared a restricted military zone.
Later Navy attacked the "Blue Ward" of El Frontón, which was where Shining Path members were imprisoned, with
Naval Infantry support. Later, the walls of the prison were destroyed with the aid of helicopters. During the assault three members of the Peruvian Armed Forces, one of the hostages, and 135 prisoners were killed. Also at midnight, a swarm of the Republican Guard arrived at Lurigancho prison, and placed explosives around the outer wall of the Industrial Pavilion of the prison where the Shining Path members held a hostage. A joint offensive by troops of the Republican Guard and the
Peruvian Army followed. At 3:00 am, after heavy fighting with guns and grenades, the rioters surrendered. Hours later, the 124 prisoners that occupied the building lay dead: they'd been
executed, one by one, of a shot in the nape of the neck.
According to a cable from the
United States Department of State, "at least 100 prisoners were summarily executed." The Peruvian government itself concluded that all 124 rebellious prisoners in Lurigancho prison died in the assault, and that no fewer than ninety were victims of extrajudicial executions.
[
The national and international scandal that resulted from this multiple crime was enormous. During President García's delayed visit to the scene of the events, he declared that there were two possibilities: "or they [theauthors of the massacre] go or I go." Nevertheless nothing was ever done to the punish the guilty. In fact, Luis Giampietri, the author of the massacre at El Frontón, would later become Alan García's vice president.
]Citations
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