Written by Pepe
Mejia and published at Socialist
Resurgence
Socialist
Resurgence urges our readers to sign the statement in defense of Hugo Blanco,
an historic activist in the Trotskyist movement in Peru and a longstanding
peasant and environmental leader. Sign the statement here.
Intellectuals,
social activists, and public officials in Europe and Latin America have
expressed their support for Hugo Blanco in the face of attacks by the extreme
right in Peru. In less than 48 hours [by June 25], more than 2000 people have
signed a manifesto in support of one of the historical leaders of the peasant,
Indigenous, and environmental movement in Peru and Latin America, the legendary
left-wing political activist Hugo Blanco, who has been vilified, defamed, and
reviled by sectors of the far right in the Peruvian army, police force, press
and politicians.
Among the
signatories are the renowned and prestigious Argentine anthropologist and
feminist, Rita Segato; the technical secretary of the Autonomous Territorial
Government of the Wampis People, Shapiom Noningo; MEP Miguel Urbán; Uruguayan
intellectual Raúl Zibechi; Alberto Acosta, President of the 2007 Ecuador
Constituent Assembly; Bo Lindblom, ex-president of the Swedish section of
Amnesty International; the current Mayor of Cádiz, José María González Santos;
the Asháninca leader, Ketty Marcelo López; and the full Council of the Maya
People (Guatemala).
Other
signatories included the intellectual, Boaventura de Sousa Santos (Portugal),
Maristella Svampa (Argentina), Edgardo Lander (Venezuela), Joan Martinez-Alier
(Catalonia, Spain), Alberto Chirif (Peru), Jaime Pastor, political scientist
and editor of Viento Sur (Spain), Peruvian congress members
Rocío Silva Santisteban, Mirtha Vásquez, Lenin Checco Chauca, former congress
members Indira Huilca, María Elena Foronda, Marisa Glave, Rodrigo Arce and
Marco Arana, Spanish deputies Gerardo Pisarello and Maria Dantas, deputy Mireia
Vehi of the CUP, the former deputies of the Madrid Assembly, Raúl Camargo,
Carmen San José and David Llorente from Castilla La Mancha among others, as
well as journalist Pepe Mejía, economist and ecosocialist Manuel Garí, Swiss
economist Charles-André Udry and writer and UAM lecturer Jorge Riechman.
The manifesto
responds to a statement issued by the Association of General Officers and
Admirals of Peru (ADOGEN-PERU), an association aligned with the Fujimori coup
that dissolved Congress on 5 April 1992. When many high-ranking officers from
the Peruvian Armed Forces were accused of corruption, the aforementioned ADOGEN
did not issue any condemnation. It also spoke out against the final Report of
the Truth Commission, where the involvement of the military in the violation of
human rights, disappearances, torture, and extrajudicial executions is
verified. Later, when the involvement of high-ranking military officers with
drug trafficking was denounced, information endorsed by the United States
embassy in Lima, ADOGEN did not issue any press release.
The ADOGEN
statement, signed by its president, the Brigadier General, Raúl O’Connor, says:
“We express our total indignation and rejection of the documentary sponsored
and broadcast by the Ministry of Culture, in which the figure of the guerrilla
Hugo Blanco, an individual who murdered and tortured members of the Peruvian
National Police and Peruvian peasants, in a clear uprising against the Nation
and the rule of law, blatantly violating the Constitution and the laws of the
Republic …”
Later, several
politicians located on the Peruvian far right, such as Ántero Flores-Aráoz and
Javier Villa Stein, expressed their rejection of the documentary and the
legendary peasant leader Hugo Blanco. Another far rightist, Luis Giampietri,
also condemned “in a categorical way the publication of the propaganda: ‘Hugo
Blanco Río Profundo’, a film that under the mask of a documentary apologizes
for terrorism and praises the murderous and criminal terrorist Hugo Blanco, who
executed and murdered in cold blood courageous members of the police who were
fulfilling their constitutional work.”
Luis Alejandro
Giampietri Rojas, as vice-admiral and specialist in naval intelligence,
demolitions and special operations, participated, on 18 June 1986, in the
deaths of more than 300 prisoners. On the island of Fronton, off the coast of
Callao, the Blue Pavilion, where the inmates had taken cover, was shot down.
Many were crushed to death by the collapse of the building’s heavy walls, but
many others were killed by bullets fired by the Marine Corps. In 2006
Giampietri occupied the first vice-presidency with the social democrat Alan
García.
In addition to
retired military and politicians, far-right journalists have spread defamation
against the former senator, deputy, and member of the 1979 Constituent
Assembly, Hugo Blanco Galdós, in relation to the documentary “Hubo Blanco: Río
Profundo”, directed by Malena Martínez. The documentary, which has won
international awards, shows in its official trailer a few words from the
Cusco-based leader, where he remarks that “I am completely against terrorism, I
believe that people must be convinced with words … now, when a people decides
to arm itself to defend itself, it is self-defence.”
The first 2000
signatories in support of Hugo Blanco maintain that: “The undersigned, citizens
of Latin America and other continents, repudiate the accusation that,
fifty-seven years after the events that raised up the impoverished peasants of
the Valle de La Convention and Lares, intends to criminalize and discredit the
politician, former deputy, former senator and longstanding activist for the
rights of nature. Today, at 86 years old, Hugo Blanco Galdós is considered one
of the pioneering leaders of the struggles of agrarian reform, and against the
extractivism that pierces the entrails of our territories. ”
“Hugo is an
example for his tireless commitment to justice and to the people, be it in
Pucallpa, Cajamarca, La Convencion, or Cauca. Also because he is one of the few
left-wing leaders who today has been able to take a significant turn, without
losing his convictions, towards another struggle: for the environment. Blanco
summarizes it relentlessly: before he fought for socialism, today it is about
the fight for the survival of the species.”
June 21,
2020: Translated by International Viewpoint from Poder
Popular.
An English
translation of the statement appears below. Sign the statement here.
In
vindication of Hugo Blanco
Concerning the
exhibition of the award-winning documentary “Hubo Blanco Río Profundo,” a group
of military colluded with a series of former right-wing politicians, together
with journalists from virtual publications, have issued some pronouncements
naming the former member of the Assembly 1978 constituent, democratically
elected by the sovereign people, Hugo Blanco Galdós, as a terrorist and
murderer.
The
undersigned, citizens of Latin America and other continents, repudiate that
accusation that, fifty-seven years after the events that raised the
impoverished peasants of the La Convencion Valley and Lares, seek to
criminalize and discredit the politician, former deputy, former Senator and
persevering activist for the rights of nature. Today, at 86 years old, Hugo
Blanco Galdós is considered one of the pioneering leaders for the struggles of
agrarian reform, and against extractivism that pierces the bowels of our
territories.
Hugo is an
example for his tireless commitment to justice and to the people, be it in
Pucallpa, Cajamarca, La Convencion, Chiapas or Cauca. Also because he is one of
the few leftist leaders who today has been able to take a significant turn,
without losing his convictions, towards another fight for protest: for the
environment. Blanco summarizes it relentlessly: “Before it was fighting for
socialism, today it is about the fight for the survival of the species.”
This life dedicated to the fight for justice, democracy and the defense of Mother Earth has been represented by Malena Martínez in “Hugo Blanco: Rio Profundo.” The award-winning documentary has provoked the unacceptable reaction of certain emblematic characters of the cave-dwelling right, who consolidate in their ranks the harshest of Peruvian authoritarianism, and who fear the example of this son of the Cusco hills, where even today the scream resounds, “Earth or death: we will win.”
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