Accomarca massacre

Coordinates: 13°09′37″S 74°12′54″W / 13.1602°S 74.2151°W / -13.1602; -74.2151
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Accomarca massacre
Part of Internal conflict in Peru
Official ceremony on May 20th 2022, prior to the burial of Accomarca massacre victims, perpetrated by the Peruvian Army in August 1985, in Ayacucho region against disarmed civilians, Quechua-speaking peasants.
LocationAccomarca, Peru
Coordinates13°09′37″S 74°12′54″W / 13.1602°S 74.2151°W / -13.1602; -74.2151
Date14 August 1985; 38 years ago (1985-08-14)
TargetPeasants
Attack type
Massacre
Deaths47–74
PerpetratorsPeruvian Army

The Accomarca massacre occurred on 14 August 1985, in the peasant village of Accomarca, now a neighbourhood of Ayacucho, Peru.[1] There the Peruvian military massacred unarmed men, women and children. The official number of villagers killed is 69,[1] but it has been variously reported as 47[2][failed verification] or 74.[3] It became known nationally as one of the most infamous examples of human rights violations by the Peruvian state during the country's 20 years of terrorism insurgency (1980–2000).

According to the Center for Justice and Accountability, the massacre occurred as follows: "In August 1985, the Army’s Chief of the Political-Military Command for the “emergency zone” ordered one of his officers to devise an operational plan to “capture and/or destroy terrorist elements” in an area of Accomarca known as Quebrada de Huancayoc. A meeting was convened to discuss the plan that was attended by, among others, Second Lieutenant Telmo Hurtado Hurtado, Lieutenant Rivera Rondón and the commander of Lince Company, Major José Daniel Williams Zapata. At the meeting, the plans of the operation were laid out. Two units from Lince Company would be employed. Williams Zapata chose the Lince 6 patrol unit, commanded by Rivera Rondón, and Lince 7 unit, commanded by Hurtado, to carry out the operation. The attendees were told that any villager appearing in Quebrada de Huancayoc should be considered a communist terrorist.Then, on 14 August 1985, Lince 6 and Lince 7 entered Quebrada de Huancayoc. With Rivera Rondón’s troops blocking a nearby escape route, Hurtado and his soldiers went house to house forcibly removing villagers from their homes. The villagers were beaten with the butts of weapons and kicked with the heels of soldiers’ boots. They were lined-up single file and herded into houses of death, where Hurtado and his soldiers repeatedly shot ...family members, and then burned them alive amidst desperate screams for mercy. These acts were personally seen and heard by two 12-year old girls, Teófila Ochoa Lizarbe and Cirila Pulido Baldeón. In all, approximately 100[failed verification] unarmed civilians were killed by the Army during the operation."[4]

Investigation

Telmo Hurtado Hurtado and Juan Rivera Rondón commanded the patrol units that executed the massacre. In 1993, Peruvian Army officer Telmo Ricardo Hurtado was convicted by the military justice system for abusing his authority and giving false statements in connection with his involvement in the massacre.[1] However Hurtado was granted amnesty by the Peruvian government and never criminally convicted of the killings.[2] When the amnesty was repealed in 2002 he fled to the United States. Whilst he was in custody for an immigration violation, two survivors brought a lawsuit against him for his role in the massacre. Their lawsuit accused the Peruvian military, who had been searching for members of the Shining Path rebel group, of carrying out extrajudicial killings, torture, war crimes and crimes against humanity.[3][permanent dead link] In 2008, a judge in Miami ruled that Hurtado was responsible for the massacre and ordered him to pay $37 million to the victims.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Notorious Peruvian School of the Americas Graduates". Derechos.org.
  2. ^ "mundoandino". Archived from the original on 23 September 2013.
  3. ^ "IPS News". Archived from the original on 12 February 2012.
  4. ^ "CJA : Case Summary". www.cja.org. Retrieved 14 January 2016.

External links