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Peru

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Peru

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Cuzco, Peru, is a busy city situated at the head of a valley in the Andes, 3,400 m/ 11,000 ft above sea level. It has many fine colonial churches, monasteries, and convents, and extensive Inca ruins. The city is still laid out roughly in the shape of a puma, as originally conceived by the Incas.
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The highest mountain in Peru (6,768 m/22,205ft), situated in the snow-capped peaks of the Cordillera Blanca, north of Lima. This picture was taken during an ascent of the neighbouring peak of Chopicalqui.
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Members of the ancient Uru people, living on Lake Titicaca, make boats using the tortora reeds that grow in the shallows along the shores of the lake. Titicaca is divided between Peru and Bolivia. This photograph was taken near the Uros islands, close to the Peruvian lake port of Puno.
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South of Nazca in Peru, thousands of skeletons and mummies, many still possessing the remains of hair and skin, have been preserved in desert burial grounds which date from around 800 AD. Remnants of Nazca civilisation pottery and textiles have also been found with the bodies.
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Boats made of reedlike papyrus are used by the Uru Indians living on the floating Uros Islands of Lake Titicaca. The lake, which is divided between Peru and Bolivia, is the largest in South America.
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Mount Rinrijirca (5,810 m/19,060 ft) seen from the Pass of Punta Union in the Cordillera Blanca of northern Peru. Rinrijirca is part of the Andes, a long chain of mineral-rich volcanic mountains stretching the length of South America from Columbia to Cape Horn.
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Remains of the Inca city of Machu Picchu, set on terraces high above the Urubamba river in southern Peru. The prominent peak of Huayna Picchu dominates the city's towers, temples, and stepped streets (the Incas had not invented the wheel). Since Spanish conquerors never found the city, it was not destroyed like many other contemporary sites. After centuries lost in the jungle, Machu Picchu was rediscovered in 1911 by the American archaeologist Hiram Bingham.
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Lake Titicaca in the Andes, between Peru and Bolivia, is the world's highest navigable waterway.

Country in South America, on the Pacific, bounded north by Ecuador and Colombia, east by Brazil and Bolivia, and south by Chile.

Government

Peru is a multiparty democracy, with a presidential executive. The 1993 constitution provides for a president, as head of state and head of government, elected by universal suffrage for a five-year term, renewable only once, and a single-chamber, 120-member national congress (Congreso), similarly elected by proportional representation from a single national list of candidates for the same length of term. The president appoints a council of ministers, or cabinet, and a prime minister, and has the power to veto legislation. Voting is compulsory for citizens aged 18 to 70 years old.

History

The Chimu culture flourished from about 1200 and was gradually superseded by the Inca empire, building on 800 years of Andean civilization and covering a large part of South America. Civil war had weakened the Incas when the conquistador Pizarro arrived from Spain 1531 and began raiding, looting, and enslaving the people. He executed the last of the Inca emperors, Atahualpa, 1533. Before Pizarro's assassination 1541, Spanish rule was firmly established.

Independence

A native revolt by Túpac Amarú 1780 failed, and during the successful rebellions by the European settlers in other Spanish possessions in South America 1810-22, Peru remained the Spanish government's headquarters; it was the last to achieve independence 1824. It attempted union with Bolivia 1836-39. It fought a naval war against Spain 1864-66, and in the Pacific War against Chile 1879-83 over the nitrate fields of the Atacama Desert, Peru was defeated and lost three provinces (one, Tacna, was returned 1929). Other boundary disputes were settled by arbitration 1902 with Bolivia, 1927 with Colombia, and 1942 with Ecuador. Peru declared war on Germany and Japan February 1945.

Dictatorships

Peru was ruled by right-wing dictatorships from the mid 1920s until 1945, when free elections returned. Although Peru's oldest political organization, (the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA)), was the largest party in Congress, it was constantly thwarted by smaller conservative groups, anxious to protect their business interests and who allied themselves with the military. APRA was founded in the 1920s to fight imperialism throughout South America, but Peru was the only country where it became established.

Military rule

In 1948 a group of army officers led by General Manuel Odría ousted the elected government, temporarily banned APRA, and installed a military junta. Odría became president 1950 and remained in power until 1956. In 1963 military rule ended, and Fernando Belaúnde Terry, the joint candidate of the Popular Action (AP) and Christian Democrats (PDC) parties, won the presidency, while APRA took the largest share of the chamber of deputies seats.

After economic problems and industrial unrest, Belaúnde was deposed in a bloodless coup 1968, and the army returned to power led by General Velasco Alvarado, forming a Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces. Velasco introduced land reform, with private estates being turned into cooperative farms, but he failed to return any land to Indian peasant communities, and the Maoist guerrillas of Sendero Luminoso (‘Shining Path’) became increasingly active in the Indian region of southern Peru.

Economic and social crisis

Another bloodless coup, 1975, brought in General Morales Bermúdez. A new constitution was adopted 1979. Elections were held for the presidency and both chambers of Congress 1980 and Belaúnde was re-elected. Belaúnde embarked on a programme of agrarian and industrial reform.

However, in the 1980s, Peru faced a worsening economy, with rising inflation and external debt, and mounting political violence. Sendero Luminoso became more active, along with another rural insurgency group, the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA). Also, illicit coca drug cultivation spread in the eastern Andes.

Hyperinflation under García

In 1985, in the midst of this economic and social crisis, the young Social Democrat, Alan García Pérez, leader of the APRA, was elected president in what was Peru's first exchange of power between democratically elected leaders in 40 years. The APRA also won a majority in parliament.

President García stood out against the USA by declaring his support for the Sandinista government in Nicaragua and criticizing US policy in Latin America. He cleansed the army and police of some of its old guard, persuading 1,400 to retire by 1986. He also introduced price and exchange controls and considered nationalizing banks and insurance companies, but relented in the face of opposition.

However, the economic situation worsened, with the level of foreign debt and inflation rising sharply. In 1989 the International Development Bank suspended credit to Peru because it was six months behind in debt payments and the annual inflation rate exceeded 7,000% in 2000. There were frequent changes to the currency and during the García presidency 1985-90 Peru's GDP fell by 20%.

Fujimori in power

Concerned about the increasing terrorist threat from Sendero Luminoso, the dire economic situation, and government corruption, voters turned in the April 1990 presidential election to a little known mathematician-turned-politician, Alberto Fujimori, the son of Japanese immigrants and leader of a new right-of-centre party, Change 90. He defeated the novelist Mario Vargas Llosa, candidate of the centre-right Democratic Front coalition, in a run-off race.

President Fujimori instituted a drastic economic adjustment and privatization programme in an attempt to halt Peru's inflation and to pay foreign debt. These measures brought down inflation to 139% in 1991, but generated opposition. In August 1990 there was a failed attempt to assassinate Fujimori. In April 1992, fearing a military coup, Fujimori allied himself with the army, suspended the constitution, and sacked half of the country's top judges, declaring them to be corrupt. He justified these actions as needed for a crackdown against rebel leaders and drug traffickers, but they brought international criticism (including a suspension of US humanitarian aid) and a challenge from his deputy, Maximo San Roman, who branded him a dictator. Fujimori said he would return to democratic rule within a year.

Rebel leader arrested

Fujimori's crackdown on terrorism in the countryside had success in 1992, when the Sendero Luminoso leader, Abimael Guzman Reynoso, and other high-ranking members were arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment, In July 1994 Fujimori issued an ultimatum to the guerrillas to surrender within four months under a so-called ‘repentance law’. By the late 1990s the crackdown had greatly reduced the amount of guerrilla activity, but there were a number of atrocities by security forces and government paramilitary groups, and human-rights violations.

Constitutional reform

In November 1992, the governing coalition won most seats in elections to a new unicameral congress, and in January 1993 the constitution was restored. A new constitution, allowing President Fujimori to seek re-election, was approved by referendum and adopted in December 1993.

Re-election of Fujimori

In April 1995, with the economy improving, Fujimori was re-elected, easily defeating his main challenger, former United Nations secretary general Javier Pérez de Cuéllar. The controversial granting of an amnesty to those previously convicted of human-rights abuses, June 1995, was seen by some as an attempt by the president to win favour with the military. In March 1996 Dante Cordova resigned as prime minister in opposition to the rapid pace of free-market reforms being introduced by President Fujimori.

Hostage crisis

In December 1996, Marxist MRTA guerrillas besieged the Japanese embassy in Lima and took hostage around 500 diplomats, politicians, and business leaders. They demanded the release from prison of a similar number of their supporters, including their leader Victor Polay, and for President Fujimori to reverse his free-market economic policies. Over the ensuing weeks, several groups of hostages were released, leaving 72 still captive by January 1997, but Fujimori refused to bow to the rebels' demands and in April 1997 the siege was dramatically ended and all the 15 hostage takers were killed by specially trained government forces. Although one hostage died in the rescue, the decisive actions enhanced Fujimori's reputation.

In October 1998 Peru signed a deal with Ecuador to end a 157-year long frontier dispute.

Disputed presidential elections 2000

In early 2000, President Fujimori sought an unprecedented and constitutionally unsound third term in office, and in May, was re-elected for a third term amid claims from the opposition candidate, his supporters, and from election monitors from the Organization of American States (OAS), that the counting system had been fraudulent. The US State Department branded the victory invalid, saying democracy was under serious threat.

Fujimori pledged democratic and economic reforms and appointed an opposition leader, Federico Salas, as his new prime minister. However, soon Fujimori was engulfed by a bribery scandal involving Vladimiro Montesinos, chief of the national intelligence service, who was shown in a video broadcast on television bribing a member of congress to change sides. Montesinos fled the country to escape an arrest warrant and, faced with calls for him to resign, in September 2000 Fujimori agreed to hold new presidential elections in April 2001, in which he would not stand.

In October 2000 the vice-president resigned in opposition to Fujimori's plan to tie the election to an amnesty for human-rights abuses. In order to prevent a coup, Fujimori dismissed the armed forces chief and three top generals. However, Congress voted to oust Fujimori on grounds on ‘moral incapacity’ and its president, Valentin Paniagua, became acting president in November 2000, while Fujimori fled to Japan.

Paniagua moved quickly, appointing Pérez de Cuéllar as prime minister, purging the military of generals linked to Montesinos, and establishing, in January 2001, a Truth Council to investigate the disappearance of 4,000 people during the 1980s and 1990s ‘dirty war’ between security forces and leftist guerrillas.

In June 2001, Vladimiro Montesinos was arrested in Venezuela and extradited to Peru to face trial on charges of arms- and drug-dealing, embezzlement, directing death squads, and money-laundering. However, efforts to extradite Fujimori were frustrated by his claims to have Japanese (as well as Peruvian) citizenship.

Toledo wins the presidency

The June 2001 presidential elections brought to power Alejandro Toledo, an economist of Andean-Indian descent, who narrowly defeated ex-president, Alan García Pérez in a fair contest. After the turmoil of the Fujimori years, Toledo provided stability which enabled Peru to rebuilt its democracy, with Congress becoming more assertive. He launched a drive against government and judicial corruption and continued with economic liberalization. However, the economy remained depressed, leading to protests and strikes, most seriously in May 2003, which forced Toledo to impose temporarily a state of emergency. Sendero Luminoso also became more active and, in March 2002, was responsible for a car-bombing near the US embassy in Lima, which claimed nine lives.

In August 2003, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission reported to Congress on the violence of the period 1980-2000. It reported that over 69,000 people were killed in the violence and 43,000 orphaned, and blamed Sendero Luminoso as the main perpetrator of human-rights violations (assassinations, kidnapping, and torture), followed by the armed forces and then the MRTA. It recommended that human-rights violators be tried and those that suffered, chiefly rural Peruvians of Indian descent, receive compensation.

2006 elections

The June 2006 presidential election was won, in a run-off, by the populist former president and APRA leader, Alan García Pérez. He captured 53% of the vote to 47% for the nationalist, and former military commander, Ollanta Humala, of the Union for Peru, which polled strongly in the congressional elections.

Peru

Town in La Salle County, northern-central Illinois, USA, on the Illinois River, 3 km/2 mi west of La Salle; population (1990) 9,300. Products manufactured in the town have included clocks and watches, and various metal goods.

Peru

Seat of Miami County, northern-central Indiana, USA, on the Wabash River, 29 km/18 mi north of Kokomo; population (1990) 12,800. It is a market, processing, and distribution centre for local farm produce, with railway workshops and diverse light industries. Manufactured products include automobile parts; wood, metal, and plastic goods, fertilizer, furniture, and electrical and heating equipment. For many years Peru's economy revolved around the travelling circuses who maintained their headquarters in the town. An annual circus festival and the Circus City Festival Museum commemorate the era.

Peru was founded in the early 19th century on a site previously occupied by the American Indian Miami people. The town is the birth and burial place of the composer and lyricist Cole Porter.

Peru

Town in Nemaha County, southeastern Nebraska, USA, on the Missouri River and the Missouri border, 24 km/15 mi southeast of Nebraska City; population (1990) 1,100. It is a distribution point for fruit, grain, livestock, and dairy produce. Educational foundations include Peru State College (1867).


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He would tell the history of the mighty river so rapidly explored (for some of the first conquerors of Peru actually crossed the entire continent upon its waters), and yet so unknown in regard to all that lay behind its ever-changing banks.
When South America, that is to say, Peru, Chili, Brazil, the provinces of La Plata and Columbia, had poured forth their quota into their hands, the sum of $300,000, it found itself in possession of a considerable capital, of which the following is a statement:
If he had all Peru in his pocket, he would certainly have given it to the dancer; but Gringoire had not Peru, and, moreover, America had not yet been discovered.
 
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