Pubdate: Tue, 19 Aug 2003
Source: Miami Herald (FL)
Copyright: 2003 The Miami Herald
Contact:  http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262
Author: Tyler Bridges, of the Herald
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

GUERRILLAS RETURN AS THREAT IN A DEAL WITH COCA TRADERS

SAN FRANCISCO, Peru -- Darkness had descended outside, and a bare light 
bulb illuminated Mayor Teofilo Torres in his office here as he explained 
the danger posed by the reemergence of the Shining Path guerrillas deep in 
the Peruvian jungle.

"Shining Path could enter San Francisco at any time and shoot me," Torres 
said. "They look for the mayors first."

A decade after the Shining Path was believed to have been vanquished, the 
guerrillas -- known in Peru by their Spanish name, Sendero Luminoso -- are 
making a comeback in a potentially dangerous alliance with traffickers of 
coca paste, the basic ingredient of cocaine, in a remote mountainous region 
with little civil authority.

The guerrillas help drug traffickers ship coca paste out of the region and 
in exchange are paid dollars that they use to obtain weapons, buy supplies 
and pay recruits, analysts say.

Raul Gonzalez, who analyzes the Shining Path as a consultant for private 
companies, said he fears that the Shining Path and the drug traffickers 
could grow in strength and carve out a "liberated" zone in Peru, much as 
the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, and drug traffickers 
have done in Colombia.

"We're following the same path as Colombia," Gonzalez said.

The guerrillas' forces remain small, numbering several hundred men and 
women, Peru's army says. But with deep-rooted memories of the Shining 
Path's murderous rampage during the 1980s and 1990s, local mayors like 
Torres are afraid, farm laborers are reorganizing themselves in self- 
defense groups, and the military is beefing up its presence in the region.

"They're starting over again," Torres said. "The violence could begin anew."

Extent Of Threat

However, few think that the guerrillas threaten the stability of Peru's 
government, and no tourist areas have been targeted. But the Shining Path 
was so violent, killing mayors and farm laborers alike, that it doesn't 
take much to sow fear.

A July 10 guerrilla ambush killed five soldiers and two farm-worker guides 
near this jungle outpost 230 miles southeast of Lima. In June, the Shining 
Path held 71 oil pipeline workers hostage for a day before releasing them 
unharmed.

The guerrillas' reemergence does not alarm all Peruvians.

Juan Camborda, a spokesman for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, 
which is documenting the human rights abuses by both the guerrillas and 
government troops, said he believes that the farm workers are playing on 
public fears by exaggerating the threat of the Shining Path to get more 
government assistance.

"There is still so much fear that it doesn't take much to ignite it," 
Camborda said.

Isabel Coral, who heads a state agency that assists farm laborers where the 
Shining Path was active, said she believes the guerrillas deliberately lay 
low in recent years to reconstitute themselves.

Coral said they have attracted recruits among teenagers who were lured by 
the promise of pay and adventure and who are too young to remember the 
suffering inflicted by the guerrillas.

The guerrillas operate in a jungle known as the Valley of the Rivers 
Apurimac and Ene, home to about 100,000 people.

They are assisted by the region's isolation and poverty. San Francisco is a 
seven-hour drive from Ayacucho on a rutted dirt road that follows a 
mountain precipice. About 30 crosses along the route serve as reminders 
that not all of the travelers arrived safely.

Peru's government has responded both forcefully and cautiously to the 
recent developments here.

On Aug. 5, Defense Minister Aurelio Loret de Mola announced on a visit to 
the town of Sivia -- an hour deeper into the jungle from San Francisco -- 
that the government would rebuild military bases that were abandoned after 
the Shining Path's apparent defeat a decade ago.

Loret de Mola also said the government would not implement, at least for 
now, a U.S.-backed program to eradicate hundreds of acres of coca plants.

This decision will likely displease U.S. policymakers who have been 
insisting that Peru destroy coca plants to help discourage cocaine 
consumption in the United States. Officials at the U.S. Embassy did not 
respond to interview requests.

Peruvian government officials recognize that since prices for coffee and 
cacao are low, farm laborers depend on the region's other major crop -- 
coca -- for what little income they receive.

"We're not going to accept the eradication of coca," said Alberto Coronado, 
a 41-year-old farm laborer in Sivia. "If they try to eradicate coca, the 
people will move toward Sendero."

Coronado had just returned from an eight-day jungle patrol with 60 other 
farm laborers in a newly reactivated self-defense group known as a rondero.

With their knowledge of the jungle terrain, the ronderos had played a key 
role in defeating the Shining Path during the 1980s and 1990s. Afterward, 
the farm workers went on with their lives in a region with no paved roads 
and no industry.

The farm workers began growing nervous recently upon hearing reports that 
the guerrillas had been passing through nearby hamlets. The Shining Path 
professed to have peaceful intentions now and seemed to be making some 
inroads among the farm workers who had previously rejected them.

The July 10 ambush sent shock waves through the region.

"They are saying now that they don't kill anymore, that they don't rob, 
that they want to protect coca," said Lizardo Barbosa, another farm laborer 
back from the patrol. "But they killed two of our people. The loss of our 
friends has motivated us to reorganize."

The ronderos want weapons, vehicles and pay -- $4 a day -- to combat the 
guerrillas.

Like the others, Coronado and Barbosa had shotguns slung over their 
shoulders and carried their meager belongings in a small backpack. After 
eight days of braving the elements, their clothes were dirty and they were 
hungry.

"We haven't eaten since breakfast yesterday," Coronado said, reaching into 
a pocket and pulling out green coca leaves that he chewed on to stave off 
the hunger.

Problem Of Coca

Coca complicates the government's plans, since nearly all of the members of 
the self-defense groups grow the crop.

Raul Gonzalez said that arming the ronderos could prove disastrous if the 
government eventually decided to begin destroying their coca plants, as the 
ronderos would then turn their weapons against the government.

Coronado, Barbosa and the other ronderos had returned from their patrol for 
a special ceremony that day in Sivia with Defense Minister Loret de Mola, 
who arrived by helicopter and acknowledged that it would take improved 
roads, new bridges and better prices for noncoca crops to defeat the 
Shining Path.

"Their principal advantage is that they know the difficult geography," 
Loret de Mola told The Herald afterward. "But I am absolutely convinced 
that we will defeat Sendero Luminoso."
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