Peru's dilemma over body of Maoist guerrilla group founder

Abimael Guzman was serving a life sentence in a maximum security jail near Lima when he died. PHOTO: PERUVIAN JUDICIARY/AFP

LIMA (AFP) - Peruvian officials faced a dilemma Sunday (Sept 12) over what to do with the body of Abimael Guzman, the late founder of the brutal Shining Path guerrilla group, amid concerns his remains could be a rallying point for supporters.

Guzman, leader of the group that spread terror across Peru in the 1980s and 1990s, died on Saturday in a military prison, aged 86.

By law, a prisoner's remains should be turned over to a direct relative, but Guzman had none except his wife Elena Iparraguirre, the Shining Path's former second-in-command, who is also serving a life sentence for terrorism.

Iparraguirre has given power of attorney to former prison mate Iris Quinonez to retrieve the body for burial.

The public prosecutor's office in the city of Callao said Sunday afternoon the petition to release the body "will be evaluated in the next hours". It said Guzman died of pneumonia and his body is being held in the city morgue under police guard awaiting a legal ruling.

There is widespread support for Guzman's body to be cremated and the ashes spread in the Pacific Ocean, lest a gravesite serve as a rallying point for supporters.

"The remains of this genocidal killer should not be delivered to relatives, and since his wife can't receive them because she's imprisoned, the logical and reasonable step would be to cremate the body and throw the ashes in the sea," political analyst Fernando Rospigliosi told AFP. "No place of worship should be created for his followers."

Justice Minister Anibal Torres also favours cremation "so there can be no place for certain Peruvians who want to pay tribute to this character to go", he said on Saturday.

Paying tribute to Guzman and holding demonstrations in his memory is considered apologism for terrorism, which is punishable by law, he added.

Guzman was serving a life sentence in the maximum security jail at the Callao naval base near Lima.

He and Iparraguirre were captured together in September 1992 and married in 2010, even though they are being held in different prisons.

Guzman, a former philosophy professor, was the intellectual architect behind the Maoist guerilla group's brutal, 20-year attempt to overthrow the Peruvian government from 1980 to 2000.

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