
The
status of human rights in Peru has become a touchy topic in recent weeks following the issuance of decrees allowing a series of presidential decrees that allow greater leeway to arrest protesters.
President Alan Garcia’s approval rating has shrunk in recent months as inflation has eaten away at Peruvian buying power.
Costs for staples such as chicken and bread have surged despite efforts to cut taxes on food imports. It’s a touchy topic for the president given
the state he left he country in at the end of his first administration.
The unrest has led to some protesting but there are fears wider disruptions may occur during two major summits being held in Peru this year - one of
European and Latin American leaders in May, and the other in November for
Pacific Rim countries.
Critics of the president have insisted the decree make it easier for the military to arrest protesters is just a way to clamp down on unrest for the sake of the summits. Yet there are growing concerns in Peru that Venezuela’s leftist leader, Hugo Chavez, is working to bolster the disturbances.
Over the past few months, there have been numerous reports that
Chavez is continuing to work behind the scenes in Peru to foment unrest by supporting protests, financing left-wing groups and using Bolivia as a training camp for radical leftists.
Peruvians are still living with the legacy of a two-decade-long Maoist insurgency that
caused the death of nearly 70,000 people, and lead to atrocities on the part of both the leftists and the government. The latter including Garcia’s first administration.
It’s a complicated situation that has been muddied further by clumsy coverage on the part of the most vaunted of US newspapers – the Wall Street Journal – whose reporter, Mary Anastasia O’Grady has
penned several articles from Lima.
Rick Vecchio, editor of
The Peruvian Times and longtime reporter for the AP in Peru,
blasted the article as, at the very least, ‘misinformed’ and pointed out it hinged solely on an interview with a congressman who is part of ex-President
Alberto Fujimori’s congressional bloc... the ex-president
currently on trial for, you guessed it, human rights abuses.
The lawmaker – and the newspaper – essentially accused one of the major human rights NGO’s in Peru of fostering terrorism, a NGO that pushed vehemently for the extradition of Fujimori in recent years.
Much of the US-based media has been overly infatuated with the Venezuelan leader’s doings on the continent and consistently insist that every liberal candidate that wins an election is part of a “pink shift” on the continent.
Which isn’t to say Chavez hasn’t been active in various roles. In 2006, he
openly backed the ultra-nationalist candidate in Peru’s presidential election, Ollanta Humalla, and is believed to have offered financial backing to him. Many in Peru cited that as one of the many reasons for Garcia’s eventual election.
Labels: Alan Garcia, apec, EU-LAC, human rights, peru, peruvian times, protests, wall street journal