Pubdate: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Will Weissert, Associated Press PERU QUASHES MUTINY, SEIZES REBELLIOUS SOLDIERS LIMA, Peru -- Peru's military said a mutiny of soldiers against President Alberto Fujimori was all but over Monday, even as the nation still awaited fallout from the armed insurrection challenging the president's authority. The army said it rounded up more than 40 soldiers and civilians Monday who were involved in an uprising of renegade troops in the remote southern Andes. Those involved in the revolt, reportedly 51 soldiers, demanded Fujimori's ouster and imprisonment for his former spy chief, Vladimiro Montesinos. Eight remained at large, the army reported, including a disgruntled lieutenant colonel and his brother, a former army major, who led the uprising. Soldiers, general rescued The army said it rescued an unspecified number of the soldiers who had been forced to take part in the rebellion and captured those who did not come willingly. Peruvian forces also rescued a brigadier general held hostage by the group. While military experts and political leaders agree there is little chance the uprising will spark a larger military rebellion, many say they share the rebel soldiers' disgust with Fujimori's government. ``This can be seen as a message that the president and the government cannot ignore,'' retired Army Gen. Daniel Mora said. ``The political crisis we have seen for weeks is not over yet.'' Expressing disgust with Fujimori and Montesinos, the rebel soldiers seized, then abandoned, a copper mine before dawn Sunday, took the brigadier general and four workers hostage and then fled north into the frigid, high Andes. The exact location of the rogue soldiers remained unclear, but radio reports said the group had changed course and was heading west Monday afternoon. The Southern Peru Copper Corp. said Monday that the four company employees were released near Suches lake, 25 miles northeast of where the rebellion started. One of the ringleaders, Lt. Col. Ollanta Humala, 38, is a highly decorated officer who established his credentials in heavy jungle combat with Maoist Shining Path guerrillas in the early 1990s. His brother Antauro Humala earned similar accolades. After his promotion to major in 1997, he was accepted to the prestigious Superior War Academy, once considered a fast track to the army's upper echelons, entering as one of the academy's top 10 applicants. But just one month after he began his studies, he was forced into early retirement -- a fate suffered by dozens of midlevel officers who were unwilling to toe a political line dictated by Montesinos over the past decade. Ollanta Humala said in a statement that the military high command handpicked by Montesinos was ``a cancer to the nation'' that had tarnished Peru's proud military with corruption, narcotics trafficking and arms dealing. Promotion changes During the 1990s, Fujimori eliminated a time-honored promotion system based on seniority and merit, and handed control of Peru's armed forces to Montesinos, who installed loyalists in most key posts. Eduardo Toche, an analyst for the Lima-based think tank Desco, said the rebellion ``is an example of the frustrations'' felt by low- and middle-level army officers who for years were passed over for promotion or forced to retire in Montesinos' military. Congress President Martha Hildebrandt, a staunch supporter of Fujimori, said the uprising was ``a sincere reaction from officers with clean careers,'' but that their methods could not be tolerated. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake