RIGHTS-PERU: Alleged Letter-Bomb Killer Faces Justice
By Ángel Páez
http://www.ipsnews.net.nyud.net:8090/fotos/50831-20100329.jpgCaptain Víctor Penas Sandoval
LIMA, Mar 29, 2010 (IPS) - The arrest in Peru of a former Army Intelligence Service (SIE) agent, retired Captain Víctor Penas, may clear up the murder of journalist Melissa Alfaro, and the mutilation of human rights defender Augusto Zúñiga, both victims of letter-bombs in 1991.
According to the case file, Penas, a sabotage expert who graduated in 1980 from the notorious School of the Americas (SOA), made the letter-bombs as part of a covert operation to eliminate suspected collaborators of the leftwing guerrilla movements Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA).
One other person lost his life and another lost a limb due to plastic explosives allegedly sent by Penas to different addresses in Lima, including Congress.
The operation had the approval of Vladimiro Montesinos, de facto chief of the National Intelligence Service (SIN) and security adviser to then president Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000). Both men are currently serving long sentences on human rights and corruption charges.
"It has taken nearly two decades for Penas and his accomplices to be brought to answer for the murder of Melissa, a journalist who was just doing her job," Alaín Alfaro, her brother, told IPS.
The prosecution file opened against Penas by judge Magalli Báscones, to which IPS had access, states that the accused sent the first letter-bomb to Augusto Zúñiga, a lawyer with the non-governmental Human Rights Commission (COMISEDH), on Mar. 15, 1991. Zúñiga lost his left forearm in the explosion.
On Jun. 21 that year, Penas is alleged to have sent another bomb to the head of Cambio magazine, Carlos Arroyo, suspected of links with the MRTA. But the letter was wrongly addressed and was delivered to a neighbour, who was killed on opening the envelope.
Seven days later, Penas sent another letter-bomb to the head of the El Diario newspaper, a mouthpiece for Sendero Luminoso. But it was the building's caretaker who lost an arm, when it exploded as he checked the contents.
These collateral victims did not stop Penas' efforts to kill Arroyo, following orders from his superiors. On Oct. 10 he sent another letter-bomb, correctly addressed this time. But the letter was opened by Melissa Alfaro, Arroyo's assistant, killing her instantly.
Penas sent a fifth letter-bomb to leftwing lawmaker Ricardo Letts, which arrived at his congressional office on Oct. 16. But Letts' suspicions were aroused and he called the police, who disarmed the device just in time.
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