[Ppnews] Peru: Interview with Political Prisoner Lori Berenson
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Fri Sep 26 12:45:54 EDT 2008
Peru: Interview with Political Prisoner Lori Berenson
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/1497/1/
Written by Emma Shaw Crane
Thursday, 25 September 2008
American activist Lori Berenson was pulled off a
bus in Peru in November of 1995, detained by
anti-terrorist police, and tried for treason
against the Peruvian state by a hooded military
tribunal. A gun was held to her head as she
received her sentence: life in prison. Accused of
being a leader of the MRTA (Tupac Amaru
Revolutionary Movement), Lori was one of
thousands of people kidnapped, tortured,
disappeared, and/or imprisoned during
then-president Alberto Fujimoris campaign to defeat rebel groups.
At the time of Loris first "trial," Peru was
emerging from over a decade of bloody civil war,
fought between leftist guerillas and the Peruvian
military. Two major armed movements fought the
Peruvian government, the MRTA and Sendero
Luminoso, the Maoist Shining Path. Perus Truth
and Reconciliation Commission has estimated that
approximately 70,000 people were killed between
1980 and 2000. Seventyfive percent of the
victims were indigenous people, mostly Quechua, a
number vastly out of proportion to their 16%
share of the national population. The Peruvian
Truth and Reconciliation Commission holds the
government (through its military, police and
intelligence apparatus along with paramilitary
units) responsible for at least 45% of those
deathscompared to the MRTA who caused less than
2% of mortalities during the civil war. The
Shining Path was deemed responsible for the majority 53%.
This interview with Lori Berenson took place
shortly before the first of a series of trials of
Alberto Fujimori began in Lima. Last December,
the former president was sentenced to six years
in prison for abuse of authority, the first of
three charges. His second trial, for human rights
abuses including homicide and kidnapping, resumed
July 14th, 2008. Ironically, if he is found
guilty on all counts, Fujimori could serve up to
30 years in prisonjust ten years more than Lori
Berenson is currently serving. However, since
Fujimori turns seventy this year, he is eligible
under Peruvian law for a reduced sentence served under house arrest.
In this interview, Lori discusses how she
maintains her hope while in prison, what she
believes it takes to effect real and lasting
social change, the emerging New Left in Latin
America, and why women political prisoners are
perceived as a threat to social stability.
Whats the hardest thing for you about being in prison?
Frustration! You dont have control of your own
life. People dont treat you like an adult.
People are afraid to tell you that someones
sick. You are unable to deal with your own
problems, either economic or otherwise. You feel
sort of in Spanish it would be impotencia you
cant do anything. The prison authorities beat
someone up, you cant do anything. Someones
sick, you cant do anything. You need to write a
letter to someone and you cant mail it. Frustration.
How do you maintain your hope and political
conviction in a place as oppressive and confining
and limiting as prison? What can you say about the prison system?
Each of the prisons Ive lived in has provided a
direct experience of why I think this prison
system needs to change. Certainly, the first
years I was in jail were very repressive years.
Even in the last few years, you can still see the
mistreatment of poor people. You can see it when
they are presented before the judges, and you can
see it in daily treatment. Its money: those who
dont have money are not equal citizens. Its a
very defined class differentiation.
What advice do you have for young people who want real and lasting change?
I think that todays young people have a really
strong responsibility upon them. Im no expert in
any topic, but what Ive heard about the
environment is that there wont be much water in
Peru in 20 years. Unless people start changing
the way they live day to day, and unless people
dedicate themselves to making superpowers change
their environmentally destructive habits, then
things will be hell on earth in 5 to 10 years.
And thats just about the environment! Every war
that superpowers like the U.S. wage mainly for
economic interest is harmful on many levels
including mass killing of people. Were seeing a drastic situation, basically,
What do you think are the major components of a successful political movement?
At this point, I think there are two things. One
is that you have to decide what "star" you are
looking to follow. I think most of the left
(i.e., "progressive people") have a lot of
confusion as to where they are going right now.
And that is not helpful. What I find very
negative, and what Ive certainly seen here and
in El Salvador, is that when you have a very
divided left and progressive circle you go
nowhere. You just wind up with everyone in their
own little cube doing nothing. At least for me,
if you want to be in your little cube, just fight
your own struggle, dont fight your struggle on
the basis of saying, "Oh, so and so is worse." In
the presidential campaign here in Peru, the most
pathetic thing Ive seen was one segment of the
left criticizing other segments.
Youve been outlining your first point about a
successful social movement. What is your second point about?
On certain issues, it is important that there be
unity among progressives and leftists. For
example, in the U.S., what might be a principal
point is to stop the war in Iraq immediately and
not permit that there be another war like that.
From what I hear on the radio, thats something
that the left has in common with many from the
Democratic Party. Thats the kind of thing Im
talking about. What issues are big enough?
Protecting the environment! These are things that
a lot of sectors can unite to do.
The other thing is that the left needs to look
for where to go. I dont think we need to look
for a guide, someone who is going to say, "Do
this." We need to sit down and think: What was
good about what used to be regarded as the
standards of the left before the falling of the
Soviet block? What things were good, what things
were not? What things need to be changed, what
things shouldnt exist? That kind of thing. We
must learn from what was good and what was bad.
But its time to do it, because I think were
sitting around too long myself included, by the way.
What lesson would you want to pass on to other
activists, particularly young activists?
Go ahead with whatever youre doing. I admire and
Im proud of the fact that there are still people
who think that there are streets in which other
people roam, and that things are not really what
the press says, and that it is necessary to look
out farther than what you can see from the
windowsill. This is in spite of the fact that I
think there is a proliferating move throughout
the world to create individuals that live in
their own little cubes. You go, and you see, that
the world isnt really what you think it is, and
that it is that way maybe not for the reasons
that the mainstream press says. It is necessary
to think and to do and not to sit and wait.
What is your hope for the future? Your future,
and the future of movements youve been involved in?
I dont think the future is going to be better in
the short term. Im not that hopeful about the
governments in power. Even the trend in this
region doesnt give me much hope for solid
structural change. You can have certain reforms
that could be helpful, you can give spaces to the
political or popular movement, allow them to do
things they havent been able to under very
repressive regimes, but it doesnt mean there is
a substantial change. The rules of the game
havent changed. And unless those change, nothing
will. Its time to get back to discovering where
we want to go, and while were discovering that, just start walking.
Do you have hope for the Chavez/Morales movement
in Latin America, the threat of having a unified
Latin American bloc that could potentially create
solidarity among Latin American countries? What do you think about that?
I think its important that there be solidarity.
But I dont have enough information to know what
they are really doing or not. What is clear to me
is that it is still not possible to change the
rules of the game. Thats the issue. You have to
get to that place. Its good that they feel this
way. Certainly here in Peru the leaders seem to
be afraid of something about the Chavez movement.
What are they so afraid of? And the Peruvians are
very afraid. And much of the U.S. is too.
Actually, I think that they are giving us a hand
on that. By making bigger deals out of things,
they are actually unifying the left on certain things. Well, thank you!
What is your opinion of the war on Iraq, and do
you see that fitting into the history of imperialism in Latin America?
I dont know enough about history to give a
historical background, but I think its more
complicated in the sense that the economic
interests are very big. Its not only the
interest in petroleumits the interest in making
a war and making peace-so that a lot of money is
invested in destruction and the rest invested in
reconstruction, which is disgusting. But then on
social terms, I would say that they saw fighting
as a way of uniting the U.S. after September 11th
and making it feel strong. The heroes and
RambosIm not sure if thats the correct name in
todays moviesbut that kind of figure thats
going to go in there and kill all the bad guys. I
also think the whole "hyping up" on nationalism
is the other thing they intended to do.
You saw, because of your involvement with
struggles in El Salvador, what happens when
damaging policy is directed at a specific group
of people. Im curious if you see the war on Iraq
as a parallel to that, as part of U.S. expansion and hegemony?
I think it is, but I wouldnt make a parallel
with Central America. I think Iraq is a much more
powerful country, and I think there are other
issues involved, like pride of the nations that
are situated close to Iraq. I think its a much
more complicated issue. And I dont think the
United States really took that into account.
Vietnam, for example, was more isolated, whereas
Iraq is not. And Vietnam didnt have petroleum.
What is horrifying as well in Iraq is that so
many historical relics and architecture have been
destroyedand no one seems to care. Thats never
mentioned, ever, just as all the civilians killed
are never mentioned. I think the U.S. has opened
a big can of worms and they dont know how to
close it; at this point, they dont know how to pull out.
Do you expect to be paroled in 2010, and what is your hope for your future?
I should be paroled but Im not sure. I think
many things can happen. The only thing thats
been constant over the last sixteen to twenty
years is that the terrorists are the bad people.
During the ten-year regime of Fujimori, Alan
García was in exile for corruption and now he
is president again. Who knows how Fujimoris
trial will be, and how he will be regarded in
about five years. But what has been a constant is
that terrorists are terrorists, at least in the
media. If it is really perceived as a danger,
then political prisoners who are higher profile
wont be released, and I wont be released on parole when I become eligible.
What tactics do you use to stay sane?
I was once asked a similar question: "How do
people cope with prisons?" There are a variety of
tactics. One is escaping from it in your mind -
people get high, people do a whole bunch of
things. In the case of myself, and most political
prisoners I have known, the thing would be the
confidence that whatever you believed in was
right. So I think that has not changed. And you
might have a good day or a bad day, I mean, when
it rains everyone gets sort of gloomy, but even
so, you dont forget that you have that.
What messages do you have for Mumia?
My greatest respect to him and to all the
political prisoners Ive read so much about over
these last several years. Keep struggling,
because youre right! This isnt just a message
for him, but to those who need to move on such
issues so that his situation, and the situation
of others like him, can change. There needs to be
knowledge and consciousness of the need for these
things to change. These are people who are
victims of a states oppressive ways.
Do you think labeling people terrorists will
get old, like labeling people as Communists did?
I still have the pieces that we wrote on this
three or four years ago, saying No, were
subversives, were political prisoners, we are
not terrorists. Terrorism means actions that
cause terror, that try to create terror. I think
I spent so much time trying to explain it to
people, where it got to the point, after years of
that, that I realized people still use the word
terrorist and it doesnt really change anything.
Those who will feel deterred by the word might
feel deterred by it anyway, and those who can see
through the paint will do so as well. So this is
a point on which Ive definitely changed over the
last three or four years, in the sense that it
really doesnt matter. You want to call me a
terrorist? Call me a terrorist! It really doesnt
change anything. I know I am not a terrorist.
Yes! I remember growing up in a peak period of
the Cold War, in an era when they would say the
Russians are going to invade and whatnot, and all
these communists, they are doing this and that.
And you know? People became immune to that.
How do you see consumer culture affecting the
types of crimes that are committed, and the aspirations that young people have?
Cajamarca, where this prison is located, used to
be a small town, but since 94 became a
tremendous mining center. So it has grown but has
not developed. All of the wonders of capitalist
society have come here: the people now have giant
shopping centers, filled with all sorts of junk
that no one really needs, but they dont have the
education, the other side of development here.
And that creates created needs. I would say, in
general, in all of the societies that follow the
model of the U.S. there are consumer cultures.
Many people rob because they want whats in
style. They are taught since they are kids they
need to consume; they need to be stylish; that
these objects are a necessity. So what is a
necessity is no longer food and water, but a
whole bunch of junk. And those created needs are
what drive people to different kinds of crimes,
combined with the fact that there is no way of
making enough money legally to get those kinds of things.
In that same vein, what has the mine brought here
or not brought here? Has the promise of having
industry in the town delivered or not delivered?
What do people think of the mines?
Very mixed. Cajamarca doesnt have industry
related to the mine. What they have is a lot of
services. The whole service sector in Cajamarca
is related to the mine. Which means that most
people, indirectly, might be providing for
someone who works at the mine, or whatever. Its
very hard to do anything that is totally isolated
from the mine. Its everywhere. You hear it on
the radio: they have paid ads talking about the
environment. Thats what they do.
A woman in the line outside said that the only
crime people in prison here have committed is de
ser pobre, to be poor. What do you think of that?
I think thats true on different levels. There
are actually cases of police picking people up
for stealing pañales [diapers]. In order for
someone to give birth in a hospital they need to
have their diapers, they need to have syringes,
and surgical gloves. There have been people
caught stealing diapers so that their wives can
give birth. So that is an example of people
stealing to meet their needs in a crude sense.
People are in here because of poverty on many
levels: they dont have enough money to buy off a
judge, or enough money for a decent defense,
though a decent defense is almost irrelevant with
this legal system. In a good number of cases
people without knowledge poor in the sense that
they dont have a good education because wherever
they are from doesnt have a good enough
education system, or because theyve worked since
they were kids say things wrong when they talk
to the police. They dont answer the questions
right because they were never educated to answer
those kinds of questions. They get surprised by
the authorities, or physically brutalized by
them, which is always helpful in having them sign
whatever they [the police] want. And this happens because people dont know.
Its poverty in the sense that you cant do
anything with your case, you cant help out in
the moving of papers from one desk to the next.
This is often the case in the judicial system and
the prison system in terms of benefits, like
parole. They can take forever if you dont have money.
How does the prison climate shift and change as
there are fewer political prisoners in here with you?
Its interesting because the last year that there
were a fair amount of political prisoners in here
was probably 2004. There have been other types of
changes. For example, in 2003 the government
replaced the police in internal control of the
prison system. At the end of 2003 other types of
prisoners started to be brought here from coast
jails. In the last two or three years, however,
prisoners brought here are often people being
caught in Cajamarca who are not from Cajamarca.
This has to do with the accelerated growth in
Cajamarca, unrelated to development; so the city
doesnt develop its own criminals, it imports
people to rob! Im totally serious! People plan
to come and rob here because they know so few
people are doing this here. And so there have
been a whole lot of people detained here who are
not from this region in the last two or three
years. Its a very new experience.
The Cajamarca mines have created new needs, like
drugs and prostitution. They always mix
prostitution in there. These things create other
kinds of violence. Now there are people here for
drugs because Cajamarca is part of a drug route.
The other point to make is that there have been
some crime categories for which prison benefits
such as parole and work equivalence have been
removed. In the case of rape, the sentences have
been made much more drastic, and prison benefits
have been removed from most if not all cases. The
same has occurred in the cases of kidnapping and
extortion. So now there is a greater number of
crime categories that dont have the right to
benefits. The prison population is growing just
on the fact that there are people who would have
gotten out in the past but are not anymore.
I assume that women are in the minority here.
What is it like being one of the only women in this prison?
Here I would say its actually a privilege. In
this prison, the women have been treated well.
Generally, treatment of women is much harsher.
But the difference here is that there are so few
of us. For instance, we have a sewing workshop
that none of us can use because we dont know how
to work the machines, but it was donated to the
women because there are few of us, so we could
benefit from it. So in that sense we actually
benefit because we are only a few. Sometimes the
doctor wont attend the men because there are 500
of them, but they will attend the women because
there are approximately thirty women here.
Why is treatment generally harsher in womens
wings, and how has that been your experience?
I am sure that if you speak to other women
prisoners they will say the same things. I think
it has to do with a lot of idiosyncrasies. One is
the way the authorities see women: once you leave
the roles that were given to you by society, then
you have to accept what you get. With women, the
treatment usually is very demeaning. I remember
when I was in Arequipa they called us hijas
(daughters). "I look at you as if you are my
daughters." That is very offensive! Its very
demeaning. The worst thing in the treatment of
women is that they dont treat you like adults.
Men can be roughened up a lot, mistreated, spoken
too grotesquely, but they are never treated like
children. And women always are. Thats the biggest difference.
The other thing is, in terms of political
prisoners, I definitely think that female
political prisoners are seen as a greater threat.
Why do you think that is?
One of the things they always say, and you can
read this in cases, particularly in the case of
the Shining Path, they always say, "Oh, the ones
from the assassination squadrons are cold
blooded, and they are always women." I remember
hearing something similar when I lived in El
Salvador. I think its this fear that a woman,
when she is politically clear on things, is
supposedly firmer in her beliefs. The torture of
women has been horrendous- how many women have
had kids in jail because of rape? It has to do
with revenge. They committed the crime of leaving
the roles that were given to them, and then on
top of that being subversives, and on top of
that, being firm in their beliefs.
I remember a woman who was recently sentenced to
thirty years for something she didnt do. I think
it was largely because of the fact that when she
was detained by the police she refused to speak,
she refused to selfincriminate, and they said,
"Shes too strong, shes got to be a leader." She
withstood the torture, withstood everything. And
that was probably the reason she got a thirty-year sentence.
For more information, visit the Committee to Free
Lori Berenson: <http://www.freelori.org/>http://www.freelori.org/
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415 863-9977
www.Freedomarchives.org
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