While international attention is
currently centered on issues including the protests and violence in
Syria, the ongoing spats between Argentina and the United Kingdom over
the Falkland/Malvinas islands, and the presidential race in the U.S.,
there seems to be a lack of attention regarding the new critical
development regarding Peru’s national security situation which took
place in February. On Sunday, February 12, Peruvian military and police
forces captured Florindo Eleuterio Flores Hala, commonly known as
Artemio. He is the last major leader of the Peruvian terrorist movement
Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso – SL), which has waged war against the
government since 1983 (though this group was founded in the late 1960s).
Artemio’s capture counts as a huge victory not only for Peruvian
intelligence capacity and security services but also for President
Ollanta Humala, who has been in office for just over six months.
Nevertheless, it is still too early to consider placing a “Mission
Accomplished” banner outside the government palace in downtown Lima.
The Operation
According to international media reports
and statements by Peruvian officials, the key to Artemio’s capture was
the recruitment and cooperation of one of his troops who became a
defector. From what has become public information, it appears that the
individual was approached by Peruvian police intelligence officers,[1]
and chose to act as a government informant. Both the individual’s
identity and motives are still unknown, though he may have been enticed
by the five million dollar reward offered by the U.S. government for the
capture of Artemio.[2]
In February, Artemio and his entourage
were led by the mole to an area in the Amazon’s Huallaga Valley, where
they were ambushed by Peruvian police and military troops who were
waiting for them. In the ensuing firefight, Artemio was shot in the
stomach and severely injured in the left hand. It has been speculated
that the mole actually shot at his former leader but the rifle he used
was faulty and the bullet took a skewed trajectory once it was fired,
and ending up hitting Artemio’s hand.[3]
Three of Artemio’s troops, known as
Leo, Browning and Elias carried their wounded leader onto a raft, and
managed to escape the security forces down a river. A Peruvian nurse who
works in an isolated health center, close to where the firefight took
place, received Artemio in his home during the middle of the night.[4]
The nurse later told the media that he had treated Artemio for severe
injuries, and he fully expected the Shining Path leader to die if he did
not receive surgery in a timely fashion.[5]
Soon after, on Sunday, February 12, Artemio was finally captured, along
with two of his troops, in a hut in Puerto Pizana, a small town in the
Upper Huallaga. He was promptly flown to Lima and was sent to the
Peruvian Police Hospital where he received an operation.[6]
He spent 10 days in said hospital and was then handed over to the
country’s anti-terrorist police, the Counter-Terrorist Directorate –
Direccion Contra el Terrorismo,who will hold him until his eventual
trial.
In any case, Artemio’s fate seems to
already have been decided even before his eventual trial (which will
take place later this year), as the Peruvian government has stated that
he will receive a life sentence.[7]
In an interview with COHA, a researcher in The Netherlands who focuses
on international law in internal armed conflicts argues that:
The Peruvian government’s statement that he will be given a life imprisonment is rather premature. Artemio is entitled to fair trial rights and judicial guarantees under both international human rights law and international humanitarian law. This includes the right not to have a sentence pronounced against him except pursuant to a conviction by a court of law offering essential guarantees of independence.
The Significance
After Artemio’s capture, COHA
interviewed a retired Peruvian army colonel, who preferred not to be
identified. The retired officer stated that:
Artemio’s capture is a victory at three different levels: first of all it is a victory for the country’s intelligence operations. Then it is a victory for the entire Peruvian security forces for their continuous operations that weakened and trapped Artemio and his troops over the years. Finally it’s a political victory for President Ollanta Humala.
Indeed, in the immediate aftermath of
the capture operation, Humala, unsurprisingly, is experiencing a surge
in his domestic popularity. For the past decade, since the capture of
Oscar Ramirez Durand, also known as Comrade Feliciano, Artemio had
become the last free major Shining Path leader. Successive governments,
from Alejandro Toledo to Alan Garcia Perez, had vowed to capture him and
finally defeat Shining Path; but it would be Ollanta Humala – himself, a
one-time military officer who at times has been compared to Venezuela’s
Hugo Chavez – who finally managed to achieve this suppression of the
SL. After the capture, Humala declared that he was pleased that he had
managed to accomplish such a victory, this time as a civilian head of
state, after having spent years fighting this insurgent group while he
was a member of the armed forces.[8]
In terms of domestic implications,
Artemio’s capture could serve as a message to potential international
investors that Peru is now a safe country in which to do business. This
is particularly important for Humala, who recently traveled to Spain to
promote new investment in his Andean nation,[9]and
who wants to continue dismissing the idea that he will nationalize
companies and scare off investors like Venezuela’s Chavez has done. The
faction that Artemio led is located in the San Martin region, which is
one of Peru’s poorest and most undeveloped areas. More military
successes against this Shining Path faction will help not only to
promote security in the country, but also will be, as the saying goes,
“good for business”. In an interview with COHA, a researcher who works
for a U.S.-based consulting firm took a less sanguine position arguing
that “investors won’t come running in to Peru just because of Artemio’s
capture. The country is still a major drug producing state so even if
Shining Path disappears, investors will be wary of shadowy drug
trafficking networks, the potential for a presence of Mexican cartels
and general protests and violence like in the Conga [an area in northern
Peru]”, where a controversial gold mine is under construction.
To accentuate the importance of the
capture, even foreign leaders have expressed their congratulations for
the achievement. In one such example, Colombian President Juan Manuel
Santos stated on his official Twitter account on February 14,[10],
that he had just spoken with President Humala to congratulate him on
Artemio’s capture and wanted to schedule a meeting between the two heads
of state. In addition, the U.S. already has promised that it will pay a
five million dollar reward for Artemio’s capture.[11]
Washington has offered an additional five million dollar for
information that will lead to the capture of the next major terrorist
leader known as Jose.[12]
While it was feared that Lima-Washington
relations would worsen with a Humala presidency, for the most part they
have generally remained unchanged. In fact, only several weeks ago,
Washington gave $2.3 million worth of military equipment (sensors,
night-vision goggles and other non-lethal high-tech equipment)[13]
to Peruvian security forces to aid them in fighting drug trafficking
and narco-terrorism. When Washington pays the bounty for Artemio’s
capture, it will be another strong sign that bilateral relations between
the two governments will remain as solid as they have ever been. After
learning of Artemio’s capture, U.S. ambassador to Peru Rose Likins
stated that “this reward goes to those outside the government, the
civilians who cooperated with this effort.”[14]
Shining Path without Artemio
Amidst all of the ventilated hype
surrounding Artemio’s capture, it would nonetheless be inaccurate to say
that Shining Path has disintegrated. One oft-overlooked aspect of
Shining Path’s contemporary operational structure is the fact that there
are two separate factions of the organization still functional. Artemio
was the leader of the faction that operates in the Huallaga Valley in
the San Martin region – now harshly weakened by his capture. The other
faction is led by Victor Quispe Palomino, also known as “Comrade Jose,”
who now becomes the next target for the Humala government. Artemio’s
faction is now under the orders of Servando Herrera, known as Diablo
(Devil), but the Peruvian police think the faction is severely weakened
at this point.[15]
The aforementioned Peruvian colonel interviewed by COHA explained that
“I wouldn’t be surprised if Jose tries to merge the two remaining
factions under his command, but it’s unclear what the Huallaga block
without Artemio will choose to do.” Meanwhile, the aforementioned
research consultant interviewed by COHA added, “look at what happens in
Mexico, whenever ‘El Chapo’ Guzman’s men are eliminated, another
individual is appointed, sometimes more brutal than the previous one;
there’s simply too much money to be made in drug trafficking.”
From an academic point of view, an
interesting issue regarding Shining Path, when it comes to Latin
American researchers, will be determining how to label this Peruvian
insurgent group after Artemio’s fall. Should the remaining factions
still be collectively defined as a narco-terrorist organization? Does
this violent group still fight for a political ideology (to install
Maoist Socialism in Peru with Abimael Guzman as president)? Or, are the
remaining members of Shining Path nothing more than a group of
criminals, profiting from drug trafficking and who pretend to wage
combat for a political ideology instead of financial gain?
Why Lima should not put up a
“Mission Accomplished” banner yet
As important as Artemio’s capture is,
there are still Shining Path members on the loose, including Jose,
leader of the faction in the Apurimac and Ene River Valley (Valle de los
Rios Apurimac y Ene – VRAE), and the aforementioned Diablo, who is the
next leader of the Huallaga faction. Will Shining Path break down into a
drug trafficking operation, or will Jose manage to maintain some kind
of cohesion between the other factions still on the loose? Only days
after Artemio’s capture, 30 armed Shining Path members visited a town in
Papaplaya, in the San Martin region, where they shouted in the town
square, demanding that their leader should be freed.[16]
Hence it is no secret that there are still Shining Path members among
the Peruvian population. According to a recent report by the Peruvian
police’s intelligence services, Jose may have as many as 360 troops
under his command, between men and women, divided into 12 units of 30
people.[17]
In addition, for years there have been
concerns that the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia
(Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia – FARC), have a growing presence
in Peru (as they have in Ecuador and Venezuela), as the Colombian
security forces score victory after victory in their homeland. A major
concern for Lima would be that the remaining Shining Path factions may
agree to some alliance with the FARC. There is also the concern that
Mexican cartels will try to expand into the Peruvian cocaine market.
Only recently it was reported that the Peruvian government is thinking
about reinstating visas once again for Mexican citizens if they want to
visit the Andean country. The reason for this is that between 2010 and
2011, 98 Mexican citizens were arrested in Peru, accused of drug
trafficking and being tied to different cartels.[18]
Do Military Strategies Work?
Finally it is important to consider how
Artemio’s capture should be properly interpreted. While Colombia and
present day Mexico are looked at as examples of post-Cold War case
studies regarding the highly controversial success of military
strategies, Peru is a country that is often overlooked. Unlike Colombia
with the M-19 movement in the late 1980s, there were no negotiations
with either Shining Path or Peru’s other terrorist group, the Movimiento
Revolucionario Tupac Amaru (Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement – MRTA).
Such strategy so far has proven to be successful. The MRTA’s last major
operation was in 1997 when they took dozens of people as hostages at
the Japanese embassy in Lima. Regarding Shining Path, although still
operational, and morphed into a drug trafficking organization, the group
has become more isolated and with only a few hundred troops compared to
the several thousand fighters and sympathizers it enjoyed during the
1980s at the height of its power and control.
With that said, this almost exclusive
military strategy came at no small cost, namely mounting human right
abuses and a war that has dragged along for almost three decades since
Sendero’s first major operation in 1983 in Lucanamarca in the Ayacucho
region. It is important to highlight that over 30,000 deaths caused by
this internal conflict were not just by Shining Path and the MRTA, but
also by abuses committed by Peru’s security forces (i.e. the death
squads created by former dictator Alberto Fujimori). Successive
governments have carried out civilian operations, like promoting the
growth of alternative products so peasants would be convinced not to
cultivate coca, which has quickly became the insurgent movement’s de
facto currency.
Artemio and International Law
A final issue that will gain prominence
in the coming months is how the Peruvian government and the judicial
system will treat Artemio; whether or not he will face a fair trial. As
mentioned earlier, Lima is fully expecting the Shining Path leader to be
handed a life sentence (Peru does not have the death penalty) for his
terrorist and drug trafficking activities. In late February, Artemio was
charged with terrorism and drug trafficking.
Recently, the Peruvian media reported
that Artemio had declared after his capture that he was responsible for
the activities carried out by his Shining Path faction in the Huallaga
region against the Peruvian police and armed forces, as well as ambushes
and the elimination of civilians in Huanuco and San Martin over the
past couple of decades. Artemio is on record as having stated to the
Peruvian authorities, while in capture, that “I assume [responsibility
for] everything. I assume these actions as chief of the Regional
Committee of the Huallaga [faction of the Shining Path]. What you have
mentioned are acts of war.”[19]
He has assumed responsibility of being the master-mind for around 100
attacks, which left 131 people dead (56 members of the military, 43
police members and 32 civilians). Nevertheless, he denied being involved
in drug trafficking operations, even though it has been revealed that
he has ties with drug trafficking groups that operate out of the
Huallaga. [20]
Lima already has a history of dealing
with the judicial process for high-profile insurgent leaders, like
Shining Path’s Abimael Guzman or the MRTA’s Victor Polay Campos in the
1990s. As mentioned earlier in this piece, Shining Path’s major leader
after Guzman, Feliciano, was tried in 2005.[21]
Considering that Artemio’s operations occurred over the span of two
decades, it will be interesting to see how Lima can reconcile the
Shining Path leader’s legacy with the changes in the country’s laws
regarding terrorism and the appropriate punishments. The aforementioned
international law researcher in The Netherlands explained to COHA that:
… International humanitarian law is clear; no one should be held guilty of a criminal offence for an act which did not constitute a criminal offence at the time it was committed. Likewise, it states that no one should be punished with a heavier penalty than that which was applicable at the time when the criminal offence was committed.
Certainly, Artemio’s trial will be
heavily analyzed not only for the facts that will inevitably come forth,
but by how transparent and fair the process turns out to be. Undue
influence by Humala’s government to secure a conviction or heavier
punishment would look bad on his presidency in the eyes of the
international law community, even if it may be regarded as just by those
civilians and members of the security forces affected by Artemio’s
murderous operations over the years. It is expected that he will have
one single trial for all the charges against him, which so far include
terrorism and drug trafficking .[22]
Conclusion
It will be interesting to see how
Artemio’s capture will impact in the long run both Shining Path and drug
trafficking in Peru. In any case Humala, his security forces, and the
government can boast of this success. The retired Peruvian colonel
concluded by stating that “after being in the army for years fighting
Shining Path and the MRTA, I am pleased to see that the new generations
of young people that have joined the armed forces continue to fight with
the same courage and goals as the homeland orders them to.”
COHA Research Fellow W. Alex Sanchez often writes about the
security situation in Peru. Some of his extensive analyses of the
military and diplomatic situation include:W. Alex Sanchez. “Humala: Chavez clone or Washington Partner?” (Washington DC: Foreign Policy in Focus, February 6, 2012). Available: http://bit.ly/zne1mm
W. Alex Sanchez. “Give War a Chance Revisited – The Price to Pay: The Military and Terrorism in Peru.”Defense Studies. 11/3. 2011. Pages 517-540. http://bit.ly/sbMJo4
W. Alex Sanchez. “The Rebirth of Insurgency in Peru.” Small Wars and Insurgencies.14/3.2003. http://bit.ly/cNNVMY
Please contact COHA if you would like a .PDF copy of these analyses.
Please accept this article as a free contribution from COHA, but
if re-posting, please afford authorial and institutional attribution.
Exclusive rights can be negotiated.
Exclusive rights can be negotiated.
[1]http://www.larepublica.pe/14-02-2012/bica-y-rene-los-agentes-que-sembraron-al-topo-para-lograr-la-captura-de-artemio
[2]http://www.larepublica.pe/14-02-2012/bica-y-rene-los-agentes-que-sembraron-al-topo-para-lograr-la-captura-de-artemio
[3]http://www.cronicaviva.com.pe/index.php/politica/2-politica/35874-revelan-que-qtopoq-disparo-contra-terrorista-qartemioq
[6]http://elcomercio.pe/politica/1373447/noticia-llego-limacamarada-artemio-trasladado-al-hospital-policia
[11]http://www.intereconomia.com/noticias-/negocios/eeuu-entregara-5-millones-dolares-peru-por-capturar-artemio-20120214
[12]http://www.intereconomia.com/noticias-/negocios/eeuu-entregara-5-millones-dolares-peru-por-capturar-artemio-20120214
[13]http://www.infodefensa.com/?noticia=estados-unidos-dona-equipos-para-la-lucha-contra-el-narcotrafico-al-peru
[14]
http://www.elregionalpiura.com.pe/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=11076:ee-uu-espera-una-victoria-del-peru-contra-terroristas-del-vrae-afirma-embajadora-&catid=37:lima&Itemid=397
[15]http://www.cronicaviva.com.pe/index.php/politica/2-politica/35874-revelan-que-qtopoq-disparo-contra-terrorista-qartemioq
[16]http://periodismoenlinea.org/politica/12168/subversivos-incursionan-en-el-bajo-huallaga-y-piden-libertad-de-artemio
[18]http://insightcrime.org/insight-latest-news/item/2058-peru-to-place-visa-restrictions-on-mexicans-to-stem-criminal-flow
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