Document #1141406
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Please find attached a few documents that
provide information on the requested subject.
Please note that these documents refer to
the organization of armed civilian groups in areas affected by the
Sendero Luminoso insurgency. The term rondas or rondas
campesinas originally referred only to the self-defense groups
formed by rural communities, mostly in Cajamarca and neighbouring
areas, before the 1980s to stop cattle-rustling and banditry and
provide the police protection the communities lacked. A 1987
Americas Watch report points this out, describing the rondas
campesinas organized in the 1980s as civil defense patrols and
indicating the following:
These civil defense patrols have often been referred to as
rondas campesinas, which has caused them to be confused with
the autonomous, grass roots organizations formed by peasants mostly
in northern Peru which are known by the same name (Americas Watch
1987, 8).
Sendero Luminoso has recently increased its
attacks against the rondas campesinas and the villages that
organize them, while the current government of Peru has recently
began issuing firearms to some rondas in order to upgrade
their fighting capability (see attached documents). Please refer in
your Regional Documentation Centre to the IRBDC's Weekly Media
Review and the more recent Indexed Media Review for recent articles
on this subject.
Information on the subject can also be
found in the attached pages of the book Sendero Luminoso and the
Threat of Narcoterrorism by Gabriela Tarazona-Sevillano
(Praeger 1990), pages 94-98. The book describes the rondas
campesinas as follows:
Peasant patrols (rondas campesinas) are an indigenous method
of self-defense used by rural communities in the Andean highlands.
During the late 1970s, the system was revived in the northern
Andean department of Cajamarca. Residents of the town of Cuyumalco
spontaneously organized a team of local men to protect their
livestock and property against thieves because the area's police
were notoriously ineffective. This problem was not unique to
Cuyumalco, and the idea soon spread to other regions of the
department. Small towns banded together and formed common peasant
patrols to police their territories (Tarazona-Sevillano 1990,
94).
The report adds that the idea of peasant
patrols then spread to the neighbouring department of Piura and,
during the counter-insurgency campaign in the South-Central Andes
of Peru, the political-military command of the emergency zones
decided to establish a similar system of peasant patrols to stem
Sendero Luminoso attacks. The command proceeded to move and place
together entire villages, in the idea that this would provide them
with stronger patrols and make them easier to protect
(Ibid., 95). In practice, however, the system joined some
communities that had long-standing rivalries and had their members
fighting amongst themselves (Ibid., 95-96). Some of the
participating communities have endured psychological and economic
stress, violent attacks by Sendero Luminoso and, with the male
population reportedly dwindling, women and children have been
required to serve in the peasant patrols (Ibid., 96-97).
One of the attached documents, a report by
the Andean
Commission of Jurists, describes the peasant patrols as a complex
phenomenon, providing examples of failures and successes of the
system (Andean Newsletter Jan. 1992, 5). In some cases the
patrols have successfully resisted attacks by Sendero Luminoso,
while in others they have committed serious abuses themselves.
Discussing the case of patrols in the Mantaro region, the report
adds the following:
[T]he patrols have not been formed solely because of pressures
placed on them by the armed forces. In some cases, they have even
had to fight to win the army's trust and to convince the government
to give them shotguns. A patrol leader from Tulumayo, Junin,
explained, for example, that after his community decided to rise up
against Sendero, 530 peasants died in combat because they did not
have weapons. They now have been given 450 rifles and 12 trucks
(Ibid.).
Finally, the Andean Commission of Jurists
report of January 1992 states that the peasant patrols are, or had
been until then, legally under the supervision of the armed forces
while the government made a decision on proposed bills intended to
regulate their supervision (Ibid., 6).
Americas Watch. 1987. A Certain
Passivity: Failing to Curb Human Rights Abuses in Peru.
Washington, D.C./New York: Americas Watch.
Andean Newsletter [Lima]. January
1992. "Risks of Arming Peasant Patrols."
Tarazona-Sevillano, Gabriela. 1990.
Sendero Luminoso and the Threat of Narcoterrorism. New
York/London/Washington, D.C.: Praeger and The Center for Strategic
and International Studies.
Americas Watch. 1990. In Desperate
Straits: Human Rights in Peruvian After a Decade of Democracy and
Insurgency. Washington, D.C./New York: Americas Watch, pp.
83-89.
_____. 1986. Human Rights in Peru
After President Garcia's First Year. Washington, D.C./New York:
Americas Watch, pp. 23-30.
Andean Newsletter [Lima]. January
1992. "Risks of Arming Peasant Patrols."
Tarazona-Sevillano, Gabriela. 1990.
Sendero Luminoso and the Threat of Narcoterrorism. New
York/London/Washington, D.C.: Praeger and The Center for Strategic
and International Studies, pp. 94-98.