Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05LIMA3798
2005-09-01 22:11:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Lima
Cable title:  

UPDATE ON ANTI-TERRORISM TRIALS IN PERU

Tags:  PTER KJUS PREL ASEC PE 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L LIMA 003798 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/31/2015
TAGS: PTER KJUS PREL ASEC PE
SUBJECT: UPDATE ON ANTI-TERRORISM TRIALS IN PERU

REF: A. 04 LIMA 5721


B. 04 LIMA 5406

Classified By: D/Polcouns Art Muirhead for Reason 1.4 (B, D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L LIMA 003798

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/31/2015
TAGS: PTER KJUS PREL ASEC PE
SUBJECT: UPDATE ON ANTI-TERRORISM TRIALS IN PERU

REF: A. 04 LIMA 5721


B. 04 LIMA 5406

Classified By: D/Polcouns Art Muirhead for Reason 1.4 (B, D)


1. (C) SUMMARY: According to Anti-Terrorism judges,
convictions are expected in the "megatrials" of the
Movimiento Revolucionario Tupac Amaru (MRTA) and Sendero
Luminoso (SL) leaders. The defendants in the El Polo bombing
case may be acquitted, however, but should remain in jail on
other charges. END SUMMARY.


2. (C) MRTA: Associate Judge Enma Benavides, who is a member
of the panel hearing the MRTA case, told D/Polcouns on 8/29
that the trial was moving ahead as expected, and should be
wrapping up soon. Even though the MRTA case is more complex
than that of SL, because it relies more on testimony of
witnesses rather than documentary evidence, Benavides was
convinced that the major MRTA figures (founder Victor Polay
and 12 other leaders) would be convicted. She was more
concerned about what would happen in subsequent trials
involving hundreds of less important members of MRTA, who
must also be retried in accord with the 2003 Constitutional
Tribunal decision overturning convictions given out during
the Fujimori regime (Ref A). In many cases, the three-year
limit by which a case must come to trial in Peru will soon
expire, and barring a new judicial finding, many defendants
would have to be released.


3. (C) Sendero Luminoso: Anti-Terrorism Court Chief Judge
Pablo Talavera and Associate Judge Jimena Cayo met with
Econcouns and D/Polcouns on 8/31 to discuss a number of
judicial matters, including the status of the megatrial of SL
founder Abimael Guzman and 20 co-defendants. Talavera has
worked very carefully to put this case back on track after
the chaotic first attempt last November that ended in a
mistrial (Ref B). He said sessions would begin on 9/26, and
that the trial would finish no later than March.


4. (C) Talavera said that despite the difficulties in
locating and bringing to Lima witnesses to events that took
place years ago, some in remote areas of the country, guilty
verdicts for the principal SL figures were a foregone
conclusion. Police raids of SL hideouts, culminating with
the capture of Guzman in 1992, produced a wealth of
meticulous SL records which documented the planning of
specific terrorist attacks. The prosecutor has asked for
life sentences for Guzman and five other high-ranking
Senderistas, as well as 3 billion soles (almost a billion
dollars) in reparations to the State. Talavera confided that
although it was somewhat irregular, he planned to meet with
Guzman before the beginning of the trial to make it clear
that he would not permit the kind of outbursts by defendants
in the courtroom that contributed to the November mistrial.


5. (C) El Polo Bombing: The justices were less sanguine about
the chances of a guilty verdict for the SL members accused of
setting off a car bomb in March 2002 at the El Polo shopping
center across from the U.S. Embassy. Talavera said there was
a lack of evidence directly linking the accused to this
particular attack, and Cayo noted that some of the evidence
presented by the police was inadmissible, as it was obtained
in an illegal search. The judges noted, however, that at
least some of the SL members accused in this case would
remain in jail, as they were already serving time for other
crimes. Lima media reported on 8/31 that a decision in the
El Polo case might be announced as early as 9/1.


6. (U) In a sidelight to the SL trial, the mother of Guzman's
paramour Elena Iparraguirre announced last week that the
couple, who have been separated for several months after
spending years in adjacent cells at the Callao Naval Base,
would seek permission to marry. The head of the National
Penal Institute, Wilfredo Pedraza, said there was no
impediment under Peruvian law to a marriage between
prisoners. He noted, however, that if the two were to marry,
they would continue to be housed in separate prisons.
STRUBLE

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