By Peter Koenig for the Saker Blog
On 28 July 2021, Peru, with her 33 million inhabitants, celebrates 200 years of Independence. The People of Peru may have chosen this Bicentennial celebration, to bring about a drastic change to their foreign and national oligarchy-run country. In a neck-on-neck national election run-off on 6 June 2021, the socialist Pedro Castillo, a humble primary school professor from rural Cajamarca, a Northern Peruvian Province, rich in mining resources, but also in agricultural land, seems to be winning by a razor-thin margin of fewer than 100,000 votes against the oligarch-supported Keiko Fujimori, daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, currently in prison – or rather house arrest for “ill-health” – for corruption and crimes against humanity during his presidency 1990-2000.
Election results have been considered as fair by the pro-US, pro-capitalist Organization of American States (OAS). The same organization that supported the post-election US-instigated coup against Evo Morales in November 2019. Either they have learned a lesson of ethics, or there were too many international observers watching over OAS’s election observations. Or, as a third option, Washington may have yet a different agenda for this part of their “backyard”.
Keiko Fujimori, before becoming a Presidential candidate she was in prison under preventive arrest, while under investigation into corruption and human rights abuse. She is currently collecting millions from her ruling-class elite supporters and spending her own ill-begotten money to turn the election result around. Ten days after the elections, there has no definite result been published yet. For Keiko becoming President is not only a question of power, it is also a question of freedom under government immunity, or back to prison, at least until the investigation into her alleged crimes is completed.
All is possible in a country where money buys everything and may convert clearly and visibly intended cast votes either as invalid or as a vote for the opponent. This is Peru, but to be sure, election fraud happens even in the most sophisticated countries, including in Peru’s North American neighbor, which pretends to run the world.
However, should this turn-around happen, Keiko Fujimori and her capitalist supporters are working so hard to achieve, the country risks civil war. Because this is the moment for the vast majority of Peruvians that they have been waiting for; those Peruvians that have always been considered as “non-people” by the oligarchy. They should now finally get their justice, get their piece of the very rich pie that is Peru. After two hundred years of an oligarchy-ruled nation, this mostly silent majority truly deserves a break. They were good enough to work, to rake in the millions from low-paid, health-risky mining jobs, from low-paid agriculture work, from living lives at the margin by discrimination from their white capitalist rulers. No more. “Pedro Castillo is one of us.”
Looking back in history just blending in a few landmark moments. The 1989 Washington Consensus that not only “coincidentally” preceded the collapse of the Soviet Union, but more importantly perhaps for the Global South, it meant the rolling out in “warp speed” of neoliberal politics and economics, the enslavement of the Global South into poverty – many of them into extreme poverty. There was no escaping. The IMF, World Bank FED, and all related so-called regional development banks played along.
Why is it that Peru is so different in how they treat their natives, the so-called indigenous people, the original landowners of their country if you will, so different from, for example, neighboring Bolivia, Ecuador, and even Colombia? And why do these discriminated “lesser” people react so differently in Peru than they do in neighboring countries?
It is my guess that it has a lot to do with the Kingdom of Spain officially creating on 18 August 1521 (500 years ago – by coincidence?) the Kingdom of “New Spain” in what today is Peru. It later became the first one of four Viceroyalties Spain created in the Americas. Ever since Peru became the first Spanish Viceroyalty, the white descendants of Spain, later extended to the immigrants from the “Old Continent”, had the audacity to oppress and discriminate against the natives.
As of this day, this is the impression I get as a foreigner having been partially working and living in Peru for almost the last four decades. Especially the Lima elite they treat the indigenous as lesser people, even though they invaded their territory, but they feel and many of them still pretend to be descendants of the Royal Court of Spain. That gives them a superiority that is hard to ignore. It is also reflected in the still largely centralized education system, where Lima decides what the pluri- and multi-ethnicities cultural nation of Peru should be taught in uniformity.
Aside from the different ethnicities, Peru is divided economically and culturally into three distinct geographic areas: The Coastal Region, mostly desertic, but very fertile when irrigated, where 70% of Peru’s agricultural produce is grown; the Highlands of the Andes, also called the Sierra, where people survive on patch-work agriculture on small pieces of land; and then there is the Amazon area that covers about 70% of Peru’s landmass, with only about 5% of the country’s population. They are the most independent people, with a culture close to Mother Earth. Their lives are still largely tied to traditional shamanism, starkly different from western values.
Education, basic infrastructure but foremost exploitation of Peru’s enormously rich natural resources is all decided by Lima, by the oligarchs, the self-styled descendant of the Spanish Royals – not in spoken words, of course, but in deeds and behavior. Lima has a population of 11 million, i.e., a third of the country’s populations, of which about two-thirds live at the edge of poverty or below. This situation may have become worse during covid-times. The lack of proper and appropriately decentralized education has left the original owners of Peru, the indigenous people, including a high proportion of ethnic mixtures, at a stark and decisive disadvantage.
This is the ethnic composition of Peru: Amerindians (or purely indigenous people) account for 45 % of the population; 37 % is mestizo (mixed Amerindian and white), 15 percent is white, and 3 percent is black, Japanese, Chinese and other. See this:
In other words, 85% of the population is ruled by a white immigrant minority. It is high time that Peru gets an indigenous president who pays attention to the real needs and interests of the majority of the Peruvian population. This time, it seems, after more than 500 hundred years of a lopsided rule, this 85% of the population will demand a government of more equilibrium. Pedro Castillo may be their man.
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Here some history to connect the dots up to June 2021and to help understand what is happening now in Peru. Extreme social injustice and differences between the majority peasant society and a small ruling elite, brought about the revolutionary ”Shining Path” in 1980, led by Abimael Guzmán, or by his “nom de guerre”, Chairman Gonzalo. He was a professor of philosophy strongly influenced by the teachings of Marxism and Maoism. He developed an armed struggle, what became to be known as the “Shining Path” – Spanish, “Sendero Luminoso” – for the empowerment of the neglected and disadvantaged indigenous people. Acts of terrorism abounded throughout the 1980s, also and largely to the detriment of the peasant population.
The Shining Path emerged as the country had just held its first free elections after a 12-year military dictatorship, first by Juan Francisco Velasco Alvarado (1968 – 1975), pursuing what the Peruvians called Maoist socialism. Velasco organized a disastrous totally unprepared land reform, and nationalized most foreign investments, creating massive unemployment and perpetuating poverty. Towards the mid-1970s, Velasco was very sick with cancer and appointed on 29 August 1975 his Prime Minister, Francisco Morales Bermúdez, as his successor. Bermúdez began the second phase of the Peruvian armed Revolution, promising a transit to a civilian government.
However, Bermudez soon became an extreme right-wing military dictator, pursuing a policy of leftist cleansing. He kept his promise, though, and led Peru to democratic elections in 1980, when Fernando Belaúnde Terry was elected, the very Belaúnde, who was deposed as president in the 1968 Velasco military coup.
There was no doubt, that a clear pattern of US-influenced brutal right-wing military dictatorships became omnipresent throughout Latin America, with General Jorge Rafael Videla in Argentina (1976-1981); General Augusto Pinochet in Chile (1973 to 1981); Alfredo Stroessner of Paraguay (1954 – 1989); General Juan María Bordaberry of Uruguay (1973 – 1985); the Brazilian military dictatorship of various successive military leaders (1964 – 1985). The Bolivian history of successive military dictatorships (1964 – 1982), also fits the pattern of the epoch.
The South American US-supported military dictatorships, prompted the creation of the Shining Path in Peru, loosely following the objectives of the Uruguayan Tupamaro guerilla organization, named for Túpac Amaru II, the leader of an 18th-century revolt against Spanish rule in Peru.
The Shining Path was open and transparent about its willingness to inflict death and the most extreme forms of cruelty as tools to achieve its goal, the total annihilation of existing political structures.
“We are a rising torrent at which they will launch fire, stones and mud; but our power is great. We turn everything into our fire, the black fire will become red, and red is the light.” Abimael Guzmán |
Guzman was caught in 1992 and convicted to life imprisonment.
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In 1990, Alberto Fujimori, a little-known Rector of and professor at the Agrarian State University of Lima, with the support of Washington, became President, defeating Nobel Prize-winner adversary Mario Vargas Llosa, in a landslide victory of 62.4% against 37.6%. Fujimori imposed neoliberalism in Peru from the get-go of his presidency in 1990. He followed closely the mandates of the IMF and the World Bank. His other main objective was to finish with the Shining Path.
Other than stopping terrorism for humanitarian reasons, there was a myriad of commercial and economic interests at stake. For example, the entire mining industry was largely in control of foreign corporations. As soon as elected, Fujimori was “given” a top CIA „advisor“, Vladimiro Lenin Ilich Montesinos. The CIA agent soon called the shots for all affairs of international importance. There was little left for Fujimori to decide, let alone for the Peruvian Parliament.
In 1992 Fujimori instigated an auto-coup, with Washington’s tacit consent, dissolving Parliament and becoming the sole ruler, who also changed the Constitution allowing him to be “reelected” for another 5 years, until 2000, when he fled the country returning to his “native” Japan. Many analysts say he was actually born in Japan and was lying having been born in Peru, so he could ascend to the presidency. Just for the record, his registered birthday 28 July – Peru’s Independent Day – is kind of suspicious. Fujimori was accused of corruption, abuse of power, and human rights violations.
During a visit to Chile in 2005, Fujimori was arrested and eventually extradited to Peru where he was convicted in 2009 to 25 years in prison for corruption, human right abuses and for his role in killings and kidnappings by the Grupo Colian Death Squad during his government’s battle against the Senderos Lumiosos in the 1990s.
During the two decades of Shining Path, some 69,000 people, mostly Peruvian peasants died or disappeared. According to the Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission (PTRC), at least as many people died at the hands of the Fujimori military commandos, as were killed by the Shining Path. The PTRC is also called Hatun Willakuy, a Quechuan expression meaning the great story, signifying the enormity of the events recounted. Before the commission, Peru had never conducted such a comprehensive examination of violence, abuse of power, or injustice. See this https://www.ictj.org/sites/default/files/subsites/peru-hatun-willakuy-en/
To this day father Fujimori is in prison – or under house arrest for his alleged ill-health – while his daughter Keiko Fujimori was largely running Congress with a majority of her Party “Popular Force” – Fuerza Popular. It is not exaggerated to claim that during the past three decades Fujimorismo and the APRA (American Popular Revolutionary Alliance – a left-turned-right party) largely ran the country with crime and corruption, selling off the country’s riches to international corporatism, mainly in the US – and for the benefit of Peruvian oligarchs, but leaving the large majority of Peruvians behind.
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Peru has a wealth of mineral resources. Copper, iron, lead, zinc, bismuth, phosphates, and manganese exist in great quantities of high-yield ores. Gold and silver are found extensively, as are other rare metals, and petroleum fields are located along the far north coast and the northeastern part of Amazonia.
Peru’s GDP of US$ 270 billion (World Bank – 2019) is misleading, as a great proportion is generated by mostly foreign majority holding extractive industries, manufacturing and ever-increasingly also agriculture, leaving little in the country which is why the poverty level has hardly changed over the last 30 years. While in the first decade of 2000 Peru had a phenomenal GDP growth, between 5% and 7% annually – about two-thirds went to 20% of the population and the rest was trickling down to the other 80%, with the bottom 10% to 20% getting next to nothing.
The poverty rate after covid encompasses at least two-thirds of the Peruvian population, with up to 50% under extreme poverty. Exact figures are not available. Those listed by the World Bank indicating a 27% poverty rate are simply fake. In addition, the informal sector in Peru amounts to at least 70%. While it is informality that keeps Peru somewhat going, it is also the informal sector that has plunged masses of people into poverty.
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Candidate Pedro Castillo, if finally declared the winner, has a challenging job ahead. He is aligned with a seasoned and well-experienced and nationally respected politician, socialist Veronica Mendoza from Cusco. She also identified the current economic advisor for Mr. Castillo, Pedro Francke, who has a center-left reputation.
Mr. Francke served as director of the Cooperation Fund for Social Development (FONCODES), a Peruvian government-controlled social services and small investments institution, promoting small and medium-size enterprises and creating jobs. He also had several roles at the Peruvian Central Bank and worked as an economist at the World Bank.
In a political statement, Francke separated a potential Castillo presidency from what he called Chavez socialism of currency control, nationalizations, and price controls. In fact, this is an easy and purely partisan statement, because the two economies are so fundamentally different that there is simply no comparison. But the intent is to tranquilize a worried and right-wing media indoctrinated populace. The right-wing, mostly El Comercio and affiliated media-dominated news outlets, control about 90% of Peruvian media.
Mr. Francke told Reuters, “Our idea is not to have massive interventionism in the economy”, indicating that Castillo would respect market economy. Francke also said that a Castillo Government would not proceed with nationalization and expropriation at all. They may, however, renegotiate some of the corporate profit-sharing. Having experienced the Velasco Government in the 1970s, this is one of the major worries of more senior Peruvians, who lived through the Velasco years.
Pedro Francke also repeated what Castillo said in his campaign speeches, that he would encourage local over foreign investments, a valid assertion, because at present the Peruvian economy is about 70% dollarized, meaning that local banks finance themselves largely by Wall Street, while locally earned money is invested abroad rather than at home. Hopefully Castillo will be able to muster the necessary trust to bring about local investments with local money. If so, this would be among the healthiest economic moves for Peru – moves towards fiscal autonomy and monetary sovereignty.
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At the time of this writing, 10 days after the ballot, the vote recounts and quarrels over voter fraud are growing, creating a chaotic ambiance, one that becomes increasingly volatile. We can just hope that the Peruvian Election Commission applies fair rules and is able to avoid civil unrest.
Peter Koenig is a geopolitical analyst and a former Senior Economist at the World Bank and the World Health Organization (WHO), where he has worked for over 30 years on water and environment around the world. He lectures at universities in the US, Europe and South America. He writes regularly for online journals and is the author of Implosion – An Economic Thriller about War, Environmental Destruction and Corporate Greed; and co-author of Cynthia McKinney’s book “When China Sneezes: From the Coronavirus Lockdown to the Global Politico-Economic Crisis” (Clarity Press – November 1, 2020).
Peter Koenig is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
Good read and good article for reference!
One interesting thing about Latin America, or at least Spanish America, is how the natives in fact support Hispanic legacy (for instance, popular Catholicism), while the very descendants of the Spaniards support the West.
Ever hear of the Marranos from Spain? Catholicism is only a public facing mask.
Most of Latin America is run by their descendants for the benefit of Banks and Corporations.
Dear Eyegore, we at “América Hispana” are descendants from both spaniards and natives or indians. We were truly catholics, the great heritage from Spain. Catholicism was not a facing mask. Now it is diluted by “western culture” i mean, protesntant way of life, holywood and CNN influence. We are fat, illiterates and mostrly without god other than money.
Mr. Castillo seems to be a marxist but he refuses to accept LGBT+ wich is good.
Presidente Fujimory is a HERO. He defeated terrorism. He applied strong military measures against “Sendero Luminoso” and others like it. The same way Mr. Putin in Chechenia.
Knowing little about Peru, I must accept what Mr. Koenig says about the stakes in the past election. He seems certainly to be on the side of the people versus the imperialists and their comprador class Peruvians.
But he may be mistaken about the Shining Path. He says, that social injustice and peasantry vs. the ruling elite “brought about the revolutionary ‘Shining path’ in 1980.” The Shining Path was a narco-terrorist movement that was know for its extreme brutality, killing tens of thousands, mostly peasants. I know nothing else about Fujimoro other than he eliminated the Shining Path, which I would judge praiseworthy.
The economic advisor under the future Castillo government will be Pedro Franke, formerly in the Peruvian Central Bank and an economist at the World Bank. He says he will “respect the market economy”, and conduct no nationalization or expropriation.
It sounds like business as usual, and that, as you eloquently document, would doom millions of Peruvians to utter destitution.
Te escribe un peruano que vivió la dictadura de Fujimori, esta documentado que la dictadura fujimontesinista robaron 6,000 millones de dolares rematando a su antojo las empresas y recursos naturales del Perú, que traficaron armas a la guerrillas de las FARC, que controlaron y se beneficiaron del narcotráfico, que usaron la cortina de humo del terrorismo para perseguir y destruir todo movimiento popular o protesta por derechos sindicales o populares, terruqueando, encarcelando o asesinando a dirigentes populares, que sus familiares y colaboradores están presos, fugados o denunciados por muchos delitos. Incluso la captura de Abimael Guzmán fue hecha a sus espaldas, porque no querían ni quieren derrotar al terrorismo (que ya no existe) porque es su arma para mantener sometido al país y mantener sus dictadura y saqueo de nuestros recursos naturales. Yo creí en sus mentiras cuando postulo por primera vez
Yandex translation. Mod:
Write a peruvian who lived through the dictatorship of Fujimori, it is documented that the dictatorship fujimontesinista stole 6,000 million dollars ending your craving companies and natural resources of Peru, which trafficked weapons to the guerrillas of the FARC, who controlled and benefited from the drug trade, who used the smoke screen of terrorism to pursue, and destroy all popular movement or protest by union rights, or popular, terruqueando, imprisoning or assassinating popular leaders, family members and co-workers are prisoners, escaped or reported for many crimes. Even the capture of Abimael Guzmán was made behind their backs, because they did not want to defeat terrorism (which no longer exists) because it is their weapon to keep the country under control and maintain its dictatorship and plunder of our natural resources. I believed his lies when I first applied
Far-right presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori has reiterated that she will not concede defeat, even after the electoral authorities announced that 100% had been counted, granting victory to leftist candidate Pedro Castillo.
https://kawsachunnews.com/fujimori-rejects-peru-election-result
Very interesting article,I hope Castillo does come out the winner.But let me correct one historical point. Mexico was the Kingdom of New Spain,not Peru.And was the first Viceroyalty,established in 1521. Peru was the second Viceroyalty,established in 1542.At first the Viceroyalty of Peru ruled all Spanish South America,but then in the 18th Century 2 others were created out of that territory as well. New Granada (Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama) and Rio De La Plata (Argentina,Bolivia,Paraguay,and Uruguay).Leaving the Viceroyalty of Peru,with only Peru and Chile left.Also,the Spanish colonialists have been there for 500 years now,I think by now they are also “native” to the land.And since the mestizo are part Spanish as well,without their Spanish blood they wouldn’t exit.So in actuality they haven’t existed in Peru any longer than the Spanish population there.Their Native half has,but not their Spanish half.
Pedro Francke also repeated what Castillo said in his campaign speeches, that he would encourage local over foreign investments, a valid assertion, because at present the Peruvian economy is about 70% dollarized, meaning that local banks finance themselves largely by Wall Street, while locally earned money is invested abroad rather than at home. Hopefully Castillo will be able to muster the necessary trust to bring about local investments with local money.
Good luck with that. The cabal has a rich history of dealing with renegade third world reformers who assert national sovereignty and retaining wealth at home. Their wealth of mineral resources paint a very lucrative target on their backs, especially with opportunities for globalist theft beginning to dwindle a bit these days.
Dear disaffected,
I think you needn’t worry that “renegade third world reformers” being co-opted by “the cabal”. The author, Mr. Koenig has already told you who will be the chief economic advisor, namely, Pedro Franke who was an employee of the Peruvian Central Bank and later, an economist with the World Bank. It like appointing someone from Goldman Sachs to be Treasury Secretary. You know which side he will be on.
The people that came on the boats are the scourge of America.
The irony of your blog name making such a comment should not be lost on any reader.
Very good article.
I thought that you used to run the Inkacolanews site, but I may be wrong.
Some comments and observations:
1) You are right on the spot when mentioning that “It is my guess that it has a lot to do with the Kingdom of Spain officially creating on 18 August 1521 (500 years ago – by coincidence?) the Kingdom of “New Spain” in what today is Peru.”.
Peru was probably the sole Spanish conquered region where a local nobility was established (perhaps Santo Domingo and Cartagena also). No other viceroyalties had a noble, aristocratic base. In fact, I remember that the quinine drug was named as such because the extract of the bark of a type of Peruvian tree helped the Countess of Quina to relieve headaches.
Also, it took several years to stabilize the Lima region in the 1820s even after San Martin, Bolivan and Sucre ousted the Royal Spaniard armies. The resistance to independence there was probably the hardest in all of South America.
2) Risk of civil war is enhanced by the fact that the current political system is totally disfunctional.
– All presidents from Fujimori up to now (and I mean ALL OF THEM) had been either arrested, convicted, ousted or run away. Thus, most ordinary people distrust politicians.
– The political landscape is extremely fragmented. In fact, no candidate got more than 20% of the votes. Political parties names being fantasy names and mostly just hollow shelfs of personal cancidacies.
– The balance that the press should provide is clearly not providing this role, being an almost monotonous pro-neoliberal voice financed by and concentrated around the interests of big financial institutions.
3) I read that 2/3 of working peruvians (2 out of 3) are deprived of formal employment. They work in an informal setting, no social security, no health coverage, suffering severe security situations on top of that. With a social fabric in such a critical state, it’s not a wonder that extreme right, individualist policies (fujimorism) get adopted by a significant part of the middle class and urban population: Personal salvation above all.
4) Unlike other countries that suffered neoliberal policies for very long (such as Venezuela) Peruvians didn’t revolt despite severe inequalities. My guess is that the uprising of the Pacific basin coupled with high demand of minerals and other exportable croops convinced the populatio to play by the book of the Washington Consensus.
5) As minor corrections, I guess that you meant Grupo Colina (Comandos de Liberación Nacional) instead of Grupo Colian. Also, the Uruguayan dictatorship started with civilian Bordaberry (from Colorado Party) doing an auto-coup in 1973 and replaced in 1976 by military rulers such as Gral. Álvarez.
A question also: Would the new congress have enough votes from the right-wing parties to oust Castillo based on “Moral Unfitness Grounds”? Do they need 2/3 of the votes or a simple majority would suffice? If the latter, his time in office won’t be very long.
Castillo must be the next President of Peru. He has got 100000 more votes than his Rival. Very good analysis about Peru, According to your article I think that it is under the shadows of the USA and Spain Now. thanks.