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Caribbean-Latin America
Shining Path planning a comeback?
2006-03-21
Peru's brutal rebel movement, the Shining Path, long thought to be all but extinct, is on the warpath again, boosted by an alliance with drug traffickers.

Its Maoist guerrillas almost vanished after the capture of their founder and leader, Abimael Guzman, in 1993, with only a few hundred left sheltering in remote highlands.

But those mountains are now the setting for a dramatic growth in cultivating coca to produce cocaine, and veteran fighters are now serving new masters, the drug barons.

The Shining Path once forced the whole country to its knees in a war that claimed 70,000 lives. The front line in this conflict is Aucayacu, a cradle for the insurgency in the past and centre of the cocaine trade now.

Peru threatens to reclaim its title as the world's foremost coca producer, snatched from it by Colombia in the mid 1990s.

"All the conditions are ready for a rapid expansion of the Shining Path, as happened with Colombian rebels in the 1980s," said Col Benedicto Jimenez, the policeman who caught Guzman.

Little has changed in the jungle over the years and much of it is controlled by Jose Flores, known as "Artemio", the most senior Shining Path commander still at large.

Eight policemen were killed in an ambush outside Aucayacu last December after a local police major refused to come to an "arrangement" with the drug lords.

"The Shining Path have become contract killers for drug traffickers," said a former interior minister Fernando Rospigliosi.

The ambush was followed by a police raid in which Artemio's second-in-command was killed and, in revenge, the murder last week of three suspected informers.

"Alipio", the commander of the Shining Path's other major surviving wing, commands 150 fighters from the Vizcatan mountain, a peak never conquered by the state.

His new recruits are drawn from subjugated Ashaninka indigenous Indians. He also imposes taxes on the local industries - logging and coca growing.

"In this area the Shining Path have their own drug crops and laboratories," said Gen Carlos Olivo of the anti-narcotics police. "Alipio is making serious money."

But the Shining Path's bloody reputation ensures that few are drawn to support the resurgent guerrillas voluntarily.

A former commander who would not give his name said: "Peru will never be taken in again by them."
Posted by:Dan Darling

#2  "El sendero luminoso de Jose Maria Mariategui" to reference the old group by its proper nomenclature. They followed a strict Maoist doctrine and I don't believe would throw in with a garbage ideology populist such as Chavez. But who knows...
Posted by: borgboy   2006-03-21 21:54  

#1  Wouldn't be surprised to see Hugo Chavez behind this.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows   2006-03-21 02:34  

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