Gas, marbles and lead pellets: Peru protest deaths turn spotlight on
police violence
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[December 18, 2020]
By Marcelo Rochabrun
LIMA (Reuters) - Ruben Guevara was marching
in teargas-filled streets in Lima in November when he was hit in the
face by what felt like a gas canister, severely damaging his right
retina.
"We were protecting people who had already fallen to the ground and
police kept moving forward and shooting straight at us," said Guevara,
32, a father of two.
Guevara was one of millions of Peruvians who marched against interim
President Manuel Merino last month. After just five days in power, and
faced by intense protests in Lima that led to the deaths of two
demonstrators and some 200 injuries, Merino resigned.
The reaction by police to the protests in the capital has ignited a
debate about police brutality, which human rights advocates say has
historically been more common in the country's interior, where
low-income Peruvians have a harder time demanding accountability.
At least 20 demonstrators were shot with lead pellets or glass marbles
during the Lima protests, according to medical records, interviews and
information compiled by the local Human Rights Coordinator. On Thursday,
Human Rights Watch said there was "credible and solid" evidence that
such ammunition had been used by the police.
At least half a dozen of those injured were hospitalized for over three
weeks. A third person died in protests in northern Peru earlier this
month.
Peru's police declined to comment for this story. They have previously
said they only used rubber bullets in counteracting protesters, and that
any pellets or marbles must have been shot by the protesters instead.
Jorge Vasquez, a pathologist in Lima who examined the body of one of
those killed in the protests, as well as victims of a deadly nightclub
stampede in August that was sparked by a police raid, said the number of
deaths he was seeing as a result of police actions had increased this
year.
Police in Lima had caused "deaths that didn't need to happen," he said,
adding that in his opinion police were "getting out of control."
In the wake of U.S. demonstrations against racial injustice and police
brutality this year, Latin America has also seen a wave of anger over
perceived police impunity, with protests in Chile, Colombia, Mexico and
Brazil.
In Peru, human rights advocates say police forces have been emboldened
in part by a new 'Police Protection Law' passed in the early days of the
coronavirus pandemic that backs officers who shoot on duty.
Peru's new interim president Francisco Sagasti, a centrist who replaced
Merino, has vowed there will be "no impunity" for violent officers, and
removed 18 senior police chiefs from duty in the wake of the protests,
citing the need to "strengthen" the police.
No police officer has been charged or named as a potential suspect for
actions relating to the protests.
'POLICE KILLED HIM'
Reuters TV footage filmed at the height of the protests in Lima showed
how police fired tear gas without verbal warnings, aiming canisters
either at body-height or at the sky, raising risk of injury.
It showed police opening fire on demonstrators who had previously thrown
rocks and other implements. None of the demonstrators appeared to be
armed with firing weapons.
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Demonstrators clash with police during protests that led to the
resignation of Peru's interim President Manuel Merino, in Lima, Peru
November 12, 2020. Picture taken November 12, 2020.
REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda/File Photo
Protester Jack Pintado died in Lima on Nov. 14, with 10 lead pellets
lodged in his upper body, legal records show. Three weeks later,
Jorge Munoz died on a sidewalk in Peru's north after being hit by a
"lead projectile."
"Police killed him!," bystanders shouted as they desperately poured
water on Munoz's injured skull, videos show. A row of riot police
stood meters away.
Others survived, their bodies heavily maimed.
Lucio Suarez was hit in the head by three lead pellets which
penetrated his skull and lodged into his brain, medical records
show.
Andres Rivero was also hit in the head, fracturing his skull. He was
hospitalized for weeks and needs another surgery in January.
"Police reform?," asked his father Mario Rivero, outside the
hospital where Andres spent more than three weeks. "Sure, but first
I want to see the officer who did this to my son punished."
In an interview with Reuters, Jose Luis Perez Guadalupe, who served
as interior minister between 2015 and 2016, said he believed it was
"highly likely" that the pellets that caused the injuries were shot
by police.
Others protesters, like Guevara, suffered injuries from teargassing.
Reuters footage shows that at one point police shot a dozen
canisters in the span of 10 seconds, forcing protesters to turn
political cardboard signs into makeshift shields.
"A lot of unprotected people coupled with police who appear to not
be particularly good at this: it's kind of a recipe for disaster,"
said Ed Maguire, a criminology professor at Arizona State
University.
Several protesters recounted how police threw gas canisters at
panicked crowds.
"When we tried to get through the gas, the police shot at us again,"
said Cesar Lecarnaque, a medical student who said he tended to three
pellet victims on Nov. 14. "I thought I was going to die."
Alonso Chero, a photographer for daily El Comercio, was covering the
protests in Lima when officers began firing, he said.
As he crouched and ran toward the protesters for safety he felt the
impact of a shot in his back.
A doctor later filmed how he extracted a glass marble from Chero's
body that barely missed his spine.
"To me the decision to use a glass marble is no different than the
decision to fire a regular gun," said Maguire.
(Reporting by Marcelo Rochabrun; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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