Autopsies show 30 people died from gunfire in Peru protests

FILE - Demonstrators march against Peruvian President Dina Boluarte in Lima, Peru, Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023. Human rights groups, including the United Nations, have called on the Peruvian government to investigate claims of excessive force used by police and soldiers during recent protests that have left 49 civilians dead, and the autopsies provide some evidence of the alleged use of lethal ammunition. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia, File)

LIMA, Peru (AP) 鈥 In autopsy after autopsy, Peruvian anti-government protesters share the same cause of death: 鈥渇irearm projectile.鈥

Crhistian Armando Mamani, a 22-year-old musician, was protesting in a southern city when a bullet entered the left side of his torso and pierced both of his lungs.

The same January day, Roger Rolando Cayo, a 25-year-old protester, died when a shot ripped through his eye and destroyed his brain.

Human rights groups 鈥 including the United Nations 鈥 have called on the Peruvian government to investigate claims of excessive force used by police and soldiers during recent protests that have left 49 civilians dead, and the autopsies provide some evidence of the alleged use of lethal ammunition.

Thirty of the 32 forensic reports obtained by The Associated Press list gunfire as the cause of death. Some of the reports detail bullet calibers similar to those used by security forces in Peru, which experts believe indicates that police and soldiers violated their own operations manuals prohibiting shooting directly toward protesters unless there鈥檚 a serious risk to their life.

The findings come as Peru struggles to recover from the political crisis that hit the country late last year. In December, then-President Pedro Castillo, who was facing several corruption investigations, attempted to dissolve Congress but was instead by the vice president. Demonstrations stretched out to February, mostly in southern Peru where the former leader has had more support, triggering the worst political violence the country has seen in more than two decades.

In the southern city of Juliaca, protesters clashed with police outside the airport on Jan. 9 in what would be the deadliest demonstration. Autopsies confirmed that 18 people died from gunfire that day. Among the dead were a 16-year-old student whose left lung was perforated by a 7.62 mm bullet that lodged in his abdomen and a 17-year-old university student who died from a 9 mm bullet wound.

The AP obtained a copy of a document from the federal prosecutor's office that listed the weapons used by police in Juliaca in December, including 7.62 mm AKM assault rifles and 9 mm Beretta and Sauer handguns.

In Peru, civilians are only permitted to own guns with low calibers. High-caliber guns 鈥 including the 7.62 and 5.56 mm types mentioned in the forensic reports 鈥 are exclusively for the use of security forces.

Carmen Rosa Cardoza, a Peruvian forensic anthropologist, told the AP that the autopsies show a pattern of a 鈥渄isproportionate use of force.鈥

鈥淚n the injuries by the firearm projectiles, there鈥檚 a pattern linked to human rights violations,鈥 she said, noting that most of the fatal wounds are on the head, neck, thorax and abdomen. The shooters, she said, 鈥渁re targeting those regions.鈥

Protesters are still staging roadblocks in some parts of the country and calling for the resignation of the new president, Dina Boluarte, whom they blame for the deaths of dozens of demonstrators in areas inhabited largely by Indigenous people.

The attorney general鈥檚 office has launched an investigation 鈥 including Boluarte 鈥 that hasn鈥檛 led to any arrests.

鈥淭hese numbers turn Peru into a champion of repression, when compared to other democracies in Latin America鈥 said Jo-Marie Burt, a Peru expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, a human rights group. 鈥淥nly openly authoritarian nations like Venezuela and Nicaragua鈥 have had more deaths during recent protests, she said.

Peruvian government officials have not responded AP's request on whether they gave police orders to shoot at protesters after massive demonstrations broke out in the south, where Castillo鈥檚 removal angered people frustrated with the nation鈥檚 Congress, which has contributed to the political instability by having had six presidents in the past six years and has become one of the nation鈥檚 least trusted institutions.

Boluarte has blamed 鈥渞adicals鈥 linked to illegal mining and the drug trade for the chaotic protests, which have included the occupation of airports and attacks against police bases. But the autopsies, videos and witness testimonies paint a different picture of the violence, in which the nation鈥檚 security forces also appear to have had a significant role.

On Dec. 15, demonstrators gathered outside the Ayacucho airport, where security camera videos show soldiers firing Galil rifles horizontally instead of pointing the weapons upward, away from protesters. Forensic reports show 10 protesters died from gunfire in Ayacucho that day, although none of the corpses contained bullets.

Three days later, an AP reporter walked through the area where the shots were fired and found several cases for the 5.56 mm ammunition used with Galil rifles on the floor.

In Andahuaylas, another southern city, 18-year-old protester Wilfredo Lizarme was killed by a bullet to his back on Dec. 11, according to forensic reports. His sister, Carla, found a shell casing close to his body with the legend 鈥淧NP 7,62x39,鈥 the initials of Peru鈥檚 national police and the same caliber as the bullets used by police in other parts of the country.

The AP has repeatedly sought a response from Peru鈥檚 government about the allegations of police violence against protesters but has yet to receive one.

In a January news conference, Boluarte evaded questions about whether she ordered the police to use firearms to break up protests and said that police officers had conducted themselves in an 鈥渋mmaculate鈥 manner.

Police say officers have been trying to defend themselves from violent protesters who have attacked them with improvised weapons, including slingshots and fireworks launched from metal tubes. According to Peru鈥檚 春色直播 Police, 43 police stations were attacked over the past three months and more than 850 officers sustained injuries during the protests, while one officer was burned alive inside his patrol car in Juliaca.

However, human rights group contend that police haven't followed all regulations.

Mar P茅rez, a researcher for the Peruvian 春色直播 Coordinator for Human Rights group, said that the manual for use of force stipulates that officers can only use firearms and shoot to kill when their lives are at risk.

The fact that there are violent people in a protest doesn鈥檛 justify the use of firearms or authorize police to dissolve the entire protest, said Paulo Abrao, a former executive secretary of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

The Interamerican Commission on Human Rights requested in January that Peru鈥檚 government launch an inquiry into the use of weapons by police during the protests. Then, in the last week of February, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights sent a document to Peru鈥檚 government that expressed the organization鈥檚 concern with the deaths of protesters and gave the government 60 days to provide more information on what it is doing to investigate the killings and implement policies that prevent the excessive use of force in protests.

The 春色直播 Coordinator for Human Rights says that since 2003, it has documented 160 deaths during protests in Peru. P茅rez said that 鈥渘ot a single police officer鈥 has been convicted in these killings.

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