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Thursday, November 22, 2012

"Anti-terrorism march in Peru"

The march of university students "Terrorism never again" to generat awareness among young university students and politics at colleges in Peru to generate a common goal towards a sociological ideological war against the regroup of terrorism in Peru Students of state universities in Peru on Tuesday conducted a march through the streets of Lima under the motto "never terrorism", in opposition to a movement considered legal arm of the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla disabled, Contato AFP.
Students of state universities in Peru on Tuesday conducted a march through the streets of Lima under the motto "never terrorism", in opposition to a movement considered legal arm of the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla disabled, Contato AFP. Students of state universities in Peru on Tuesday conducted a march through the streets of Lima under the motto "never terrorism", in opposition to a movement considered legal arm of the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla disabled, Contato AFP. The so-called Peace March was organized by the University of San Marcos, the oldest in America, and brought together civil society organizations and political parties youths who reject the presence of the Movement for Amnesty universities and Rights (Movadef).
Dressed in white T-shirts that read "No to terrorism and violence," young students expressed their repudiation of the central order Movadef for granting amnesty to Abimael Guzman, founder of Shining Path, who is serving a life sentence for crimes terrorism. Demonstrators hurled slogans like "No to terrorism", "Down with Movadef", "Yes to Peace, No to Violence" during his shift, which ran for several miles from the university town of San Marcos and ended in Plaza San Martin in downtown Lima. The march, attended by students and teachers from various state universities, was led by Pedro Cotillo, rector of San Marcos, who stressed that the Movadef is an organization "that seeks to infiltrate to attract followers to impose their ideology violentista" . The Movadef was created by lawyers for Abimael Guzman and proposes an amnesty to prisoners walkers, as well as police and military involved in human rights violations in the past decades as steps towards a "national reconciliation". Shining Path, defeated in the mid-90s, armed conflict began in 1980 after twenty years left a balance of 69,000 dead and missing, according to figures from local human rights organizations.

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