The itinerary that was made for us to include all of the areas that we wanted to visit was excellent, you did a great job in fitting a lot into a 3 week period....... There was no one stand out highlight of our trip as we enjoyed every place we visited and they were all individually exciting and quite different. If we had to pick one it would be a toss up between Easter Island and Machu Picchu. Thank you for all of the organization that went into our trip, we did not have to worry about any aspect other than to turn up at the allotted time and someone would look after every detail for us.
Many Thanks
The Shining Path Movement represented the Communist Party in Peru and reached its peak in the 1980s as a formidable rebel movement, waging a brutal war with the Peruvian state. Its leader was Abimael Guzman, who formed the movement in the 1970s and was inspired by Mao's Cultural Revolution in China.
Dramatic Beginnings
When the Shining Path movement first launched itself in 1980, it burned
the ballot boxes the night before the first democratic election in twelve
years. Its goal was to replace the existing democracy in Peru which it considered
bourgeois with its own “New Democracy”. The Shining Path would
arrive at pure communism by instituting a dictatorship of the proletariat
and bringing on a cultural revolution followed by a world revolution. The
means to this goal was to kill villagers suspected of agreeing with current
government policy. The Shining Path movement believed that it was the leader
in promoting communism in the world.
Terrorism in Peru
The results of its efforts put large areas of the countryside under its
control. It also struck at various areas in the capital city, Lima, consequently
concerning many that it would eventually take over the entire country. Nearly
70,000 people died in the rebellion and the war of counter-terrorists it
triggered. It was a brutal organization, employing violence against peasants,
trade union organizers, and the general civilian population. In 1983, sixty-nine
villagers were killed and a van was bombed in Lima that killed about 20
people in July 1992. It is considered a terrorist group by the United States,
the European Union and Canada.
The Fall and Re-Emergance of The Movement
Only when the Shining Path leader Abimael Guzman and six other rebel leaders
were apprehended in 1992 did the violence subside. Guzman had a speedy trial
by a military court behind closed doors and was sentenced to life imprisonment,
which was basically a death knell for the movement. However, in 2003, Guzman’s
sentence was overturned when the constitutional court of Peru reversed the
laws against terror enacted under former President Alberto Fujimori. This
was then followed by a civilian trial and a few years later by a call from
Guzman for a peace deal. The civilian trial ended in 2006 with the calling
of a life sentence for Guzman. This action caused the membership of the
Shining Path movement to decline. A government amnesty program initiated
in 1994 enabled about 6,000 terrorists to surrender. A resurgence of the
movement was spearheaded by guerrilla leader Oscar Ramirez Durand in the
mid-1990s but was backed up only by a few hundred men and confined strictly
to jungle regions in eastern Peru. Ramirez himself was captured in 1999
and also underwent a civilian trial. Some terrorist activity occurred after
his capture with a car bomb in Lima in 2002 and a kidnapping in 2003.
The Threat is Removed
In September 2004, police arrested seventeen members, further weakening
the movement so that it no longer has the power to destabilize the state
of Peru. Apart from fairly harrowing stories from Peruvians that experienced
the years during the Shining Path movement, tourists planning a trip to
Peru will have no contact with the Movement, and there is nothing to worry
about.
Author: Gary Sargent - Escaped to Peru / Escaped to Latin America