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DESCRIPTION:1/13/23 SF Rally-Smash US Military Supported Coup In Peru, US Gov & Biden 
 Get Your Bloody Hands Off Peru!\nFor US Labor Solidarity With Peruvian 
 Workers & People\n\nSolidarity Action\nFriday January 13, 2023 12:00 PM 
 Noon\nPeru Consulate\n870 Market St.\nSan Francisco\n\nOn December 7, a US 
 supported coup took place in Peru that the US was intimately involved in.  
 The right and the media attacked Castillo’s government and were building 
 day by day the viability of the parliamentary coup d’état that ended up 
 \ntaking place on December 7.\n\nAlso, on the eve of the coup, U.S. 
 Ambassador Lisa Kenna met with Defense Minister Gustavo Bobbio, who, like 
 Córdova, resigned on December 7. According to the Lima newspaper, the last 
 phone call Castillo took before leaving the presidential palace came from 
 the  U.S. embassy. The Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, had blessed the 
 coup and recognized Boluarte.\n\nIt was also the United States who was 
 behind the appointment of the new head of the National Intelligence 
 Directorate, retired Colonel Juan Carlos Liendo O’Connor, former liaison 
 officer in the Pentagon’s Southern Command, closely linked to the 
 dictatorship of Alberto \n\nFujimori and his alter ego, Vladimiro 
 Montesinos, both imprisoned for crimes against humanity” . Liendo 
 guarantees the ongoing repression  and militarization in Peru.\n\n\nA large 
 part of Peru is now militarized and in a state of emergency to crush the 
 working people and poor. Tanks, together with groups of soldiers and 
 assault police,  patrol the streets daily, seeking to intimidate the 
 protesters and the people who come out to join them. The regime has even  
 started labeling protesters “terrorists,”.\n\nThe newly US supported 
 puppet President Dina Boluarte has been responsible for murder of youth, 
 workers and indiginous people. She has also jailed the real former 
 president  Pedro Castillo\n\nWe demand an end to US intervention and the 
 removal of the coupsters and their prosecution for the coup and the murders 
 of more than 20 youth and people of Peru in their illegal seizure of 
 power.\n\nThe people and workers of Peru have a right to their own self 
 government without US imperialist intervention. This also follows the US 
 supported coup in Bolivia on November 19,  2019. That  coup was also 
 supported by Trump and  Tesla Twitter billionaire Elon Musk who wanted the 
 lithium which is an important resouce  of Boliva. Peru as well has 
 important deposits of copper, iron, lead, zinc, bismuth, phosphates, 
 manganese and lithium.\n\nThe role of both the Democrats and Republicans is 
 to continue the coups and looting of Latin America. This is also the 50th 
 anniversary of the US supported coup in Chile in 1973. This coup was also 
 supported by the AFL-CIO bureaucrats and the AIFLD. Today the AFL-CIO 
 through the NED funded “Solidarity Center” with $75 milllion is still 
 supporting coups in\nVenezuela and around the world.\n\nNo More US 
 Supported Coups in Chile, Latin America and the World.\nUS Workers Support 
 The Workers and Unions In Peru\nAn Injury To One Is An Injury To 
 All!\n\nInitiated by\nUnited Front Committee For A Labor Party 
 UFCLP.org\nTo endorse or get more info:\ninfo@ufclp.org\n\nAdditional 
 info:\n\nhttps://mronline.org/2022/12/18/peru-coup/\nCounterinsurgency War; 
 US Bases and Troops in Peru prt. 1 
 \n\nhttps://resumen-english.org/2022/12/counterinsurgency-war-us-bases-and-troops-in-peru-prt-1/\n\nThe 
 Roots and Results of the Parliamentary Coup and the People’s Uprising in 
 Peru\n\nhttps://www.leftvoice.org/the-roots-and-results-of-the-parliamentary-coup-and-the-peoples-uprising-in-peru/\n\n‘They 
 Shot Them Down Like Animals’: Massacre at Peru’s 
 Ayacucho\n\nhttps://www.counterpunch.org/2023/01/05/they-shot-them-down-like-animals-massacre-at-perus-ayacucho/\n\nJANUARY 
 5, 2023\nBY ZOE 
 ALEXANDRA\nFacebookTwitterRedditEmailatoa-print-icon.png\n\nOn December 15, 
 2022, while helicopters flew overhead, members of Peru’s national army 
 shot down civilians with live bullets in the outskirts of the city of 
 Ayacucho. This action was in response to a national strike and mobilization 
 to protest the coup d’état that deposed President Pedro Castillo on 
 December 7.\nOn December 15, hundreds of university students, shopkeepers, 
 street vendors, agricultural workers, and activists gathered at the center 
 of Ayacucho to express their discontent over the removal of Castillo and 
 continued their mobilization toward the airport. Similar action was 
 witnessed in several other cities across the southern Andean region of the 
 country.\nAs protesters approached the airport, members of the armed forces 
 opened fire and shot tear gas canisters directly at them. The firing by the 
 army from the helicopters proved to be the most lethal. As the hundreds of 
 unarmed people ran for their lives, the shooting continued.\nTen people 
 were killed as a result of this violence inflicted by the army, and dozens 
 more were injured, according to official numbers provided by the 
 ombudsman’s office. At least six people are still fighting for their 
 lives in hospitals in Peru’s capital Lima and in Ayacucho. Autopsies of 
 10 of those who died in Ayacucho show that six of the victims died from 
 gunshot wounds to the chest. The youngest was just 15 years old.\nOn 
 December 27, Reuters reported how one of these fatal victims in Ayacucho, 
 51-year-old Edgar Prado, was shot and killed while attempting to help 
 someone else who had been shot down during the protests.\nThe exceedingly 
 violent response of the security forces to the anti-coup protests across 
 Peru was widely condemned. A delegation of the Inter-American Commission on 
 Human Rights (IACHR) visited the country from December 20 to 22 to receive 
 testimonies from local human rights organizations and victims about the 
 violent repression suffered by protesters and also spoke to families of the 
 28 fatal victims. The delegation traveled to Ayacucho on December 22.\nMore 
 than a dozen other family members, Ayacucho inhabitants, organizers, and a 
 couple of independent journalists, including myself, waited on the sidewalk 
 of one of the city’s narrow and colorful streets as the meeting was 
 underway. As people came and went, much of the events and tragedies of 
 December 15 were recounted.\nThe Massacre\n“They won’t show you this on 
 the news here,” Carmen (name changed) told me as she showed me a video on 
 her phone of a young boy with blood all over his shirt being dragged to 
 safety by fellow protesters. “That’s her nephew,” she said, pointing 
 to a woman sitting on the ground.\nPedro Huamani, a 70-year-old man who is 
 a member of the Front in Defense of the People of Ayacucho (FREDEPA), was 
 accompanying the victims waiting outside the IACHR meeting. “We have 
 suffered a terrible loss,” he told me, “I was present that day in a 
 peaceful march toward the airport.”\n“When they began to shoot tear gas 
 grenades and bullets at us, I started to choke, I almost died there,” 
 Huamani said. “I escaped and went down to the cemetery, but it was the 
 same, we were trying to enter and they started to shoot at us from behind. 
 Helicopters were flying overhead and from there they shot tear gas grenades 
 at us, trying to kill us.”\nCarmen brought over some of her friends and 
 one of them, who was wearing a gray sweatsuit, told me, “We all live near 
 the airport, and saw everything happen. You should’ve seen how they shot 
 them down like animals. We tried to help some of the injured, but it was 
 hard.”\nThe massacre in Ayacucho, as well as the violent repression 
 across the country, has only intensified people’s demand that Dina 
 Boluarte step down. Boluarte was sworn in on December 7 immediately 
 following the coup against Castillo. In interviews and public addresses, 
 she has justified the use of force by police against protesters calling 
 their actions as acts of “terrorism” and “vandalism.”\nHuamani, 
 while shaking and holding back tears, said: “She is a murderous president 
 and in Huamanga, we do not want her, nor do we recognize her as president 
 because this woman ordered the police and the army to shoot at us 
 Peruvians. And these bullets, these weapons, are really bought by us, not 
 by the army, nor the soldiers, but by the people. And for them to kill us 
 is really horrible.”\nThe anger felt by Ayacucho residents is also linked 
 to the historical undermining of Peruvian democracy and the economic 
 exclusion suffered by the regions outside of Lima. Huamani explained: 
 “They took out our president [Castillo] so this is not a democracy. We 
 are not a democracy, we are in [state of] war, but not just in Ayacucho and 
 Huamanga, but also in Arequipa, Apurímac, Cusco. In these regions, we are 
 suffering from poverty, we can no longer survive, we are dying of hunger… 
 and these right wingers want to make us their slaves, but we won’t permit 
 this because we are responding and resisting.”\nOld Wounds Ripped 
 Open\nDecember 15 was not the first time civilians in Ayacucho were 
 massacred by the Peruvian armed forces. Many who were present on December 
 15 said that the warlike treatment received by the peaceful protesters was 
 reminiscent of the days of the two-decades-long internal armed conflict 
 that Peruvians suffered through more than 20 years ago.\n“They still 
 treat us as if we were all terrorists,” a family member of one of the 
 victims of the protests pointed out.\nAs part of the state’s campaign 
 against the guerrilla insurgency, it tortured, detained, disappeared, and 
 murdered tens of thousands of innocent peasants and Indigenous people, 
 accusing them of supporting or being part of the insurgency.\nThe 
 population of Ayacucho was one of the hardest hit. According to reportsby 
 the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which was set up to look into the 
 human rights violations, of the estimated 69,280 fatal victims of the 
 internal armed conflict in Peru from 1980-2000, 26,000 were killed or 
 disappeared by state actors or insurgent groups in Ayacucho. Thousands of 
 people that fled their towns for the city of Ayacucho during the conflict 
 continue to search for their loved ones and demand justice.\nOne of them is 
 Paula Aguilar Yucra, who I met outside the IACHR meeting. Like more than 60 
 percent of people in Ayacucho, Indigenous Quechua is her first language. 
 The 63-year-old is a member of the Ayacucho-based National Association of 
 Relatives of Kidnapped, Detained and Disappeared of Peru (ANFASEP). She 
 fled her rural community in Usmay for Ayacucho in 1984 after her mother was 
 killed and her brother was taken by soldiers and never seen again.\nNearly 
 40 years later, she mourns again. Her grandson, 20-year-old José Luis 
 Aguilar Yucra, father of a two-year-old boy, was killed on December 15 by a 
 bullet to the head as he attempted to make his way home from work.\nIn a 
 vigil held on the afternoon of December 22, Paula stood tall with the other 
 members of ANFASEP and held a sign reading: “Fighting today does not mean 
 dying tomorrow.”\nThis article was produced by Globetrotter\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2023/01/06/18853712.php
SUMMARY:SF Rally-Smash US Supported Coup In Peru, US Gov & Biden Get Bloody Hands Off Peru
LOCATION:Peru Consulate\n790 Market St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2023/01/06/18853712.php
DTSTART:20230113T190000Z
DTEND:20230113T203000Z
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