Peru (country), country in west central South
America, bordering the Pacific Ocean. Peru is a land of sharp contrasts, of
barren deserts and green oases, snowcapped mountains, high bleak plateaus, and
deep valleys. The Andes mountains cross the country from northwest to
southeast. Beyond the Andes, in the interior of the country, is a thinly
settled area covered with dense tropical forests. Lima, situated along the
Pacific coast, is the country’s capital and chief commercial center.
Peru was once the center of an extensive South
American empire ruled by the Inca. This empire fell to conquerors from Spain in
the 16th century. Attracted by the gold and silver mines of the Andes, the
Spaniards quickly converted Peru into the seat of their wealth and power in
South America. Peru remained a Spanish colony until the early 19th century.
Mining has remained the basis of Peru’s wealth,
although agriculture, fishing, and tourism also contribute. Many tourists visit
Peru to see the remains of the Inca empire, especially the Inca stronghold at
Machu Picchu high in the Andes.
Many of Peru’s people are descended from the Inca
or other Native American groups. Quechua, the language of the Inca, and Aymara,
a related Indian language, rank with Spanish as official languages of the
country. However, sharp class and ethnic divisions that developed during the
colonial period persist to this day. In this divided society a wealthy elite of
largely Spanish descent has long dominated Peru’s larger population of Native
Americans and mestizos—people of mixed European and Native American
ancestry.
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II
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LAND AND RESOURCES
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Peru is bounded on the north by Ecuador and
Colombia, on the east by Brazil and Bolivia, on the south by Chile, and on the
west by the Pacific Ocean. The area of Peru, including several offshore
islands, is 1,285,216 sq km (496,225 sq mi). It ranks third in size among South
American countries, after Brazil and Argentina, and is three times as large as
the state of California. Peru may be divided into three main topographical
regions: the coastal plain, the sierra, and the montaña.
The coastal plain is an arid, elongated
stretch of land extending the entire length of the country and varying in width
from about 65 to 160 km (about 40 to 100 mi). It is a northern extension of the
Atacama Desert of Chile. The plain has few adequate harbors. Most of the desert
is so dry that only 10 of the 52 rivers draining the Andean slopes to the
Pacific Ocean have sufficient volume to maintain their flow across the desert
and reach the coast. However, the coast is the economic center of Peru. Most of
the nation’s leading commercial and export crops grow in the 40 oases of the
region.
Parallel to and lying east of the coastal plain is
the sierra, an upland region with towering mountain ranges of the Andes, lofty
plateaus, and deep gorges and valleys. The main range is the Cordillera
Occidental; other ranges include the Cordillera Oriental, the Cordillera
Central, and a number of lesser chains. The sierra, which covers some 30
percent of the country’s land area, traverses the country from southeast to
northwest and varies in width from about 400 km (about 250 mi) in the south to
about 240 km (about 150 mi) in the north; the average height is some 3,660 m
(some 12,000 ft).
Several of the highest peaks in the world are
located in the various sierran cordilleras and plateaus, notably Huascarán
(6,768 m/22,205 ft), the highest in Peru. Lake Titicaca is in the southeast.
The rainy eastern slopes of the Andes are deeply carved by rivers into a
chaotic maze of sharp crests, canyons 3,000 m (10,000 ft) deep, and V-shaped
valleys through which emerge several major tributaries of the Amazon River.
This rugged border is the principal barrier to trans-Andean travel. Earthquakes
occur in the sierra.
In the northeast the sierra slopes downward to
a vast, flat tropical jungle, the selvas, extending to the Brazilian border and
forming part of the Amazon Basin. The forested sierran slopes and a somewhat
less elevated region are collectively designated the montaña. The montaña
attains a maximum width of about 965 km (about 600 mi) in the north and constitutes
some 60 percent of the Peruvian land area; it is covered with thick tropical
forests in the west and with dense tropical vegetation in the center and east.
As a result, the region remains largely unexplored and undeveloped.
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A
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Rivers and Lakes
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Peru has three main drainage systems. One
comprises about 50 torrential streams that rise in the sierra and descend
steeply to the coastal plain. The second comprises the tributaries of the
Amazon River in the montaña region. In the third the principal feature is Lake
Titicaca, which drains into Lake Poopó in Bolivia through the Desaguadero
River.
The Napo, Tigre, and Pastaza rivers rise in
Ecuador and flow into Peru. The latter two streams are tributaries of the
Marañón River, and the Napo empties into the Amazon River. The border between
Peru and Colombia is delineated by the Putumayo River.
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B
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Climate
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The climate of Peru varies widely, ranging
from tropical in the montaña to arctic in the highest mountains of the Andes. Average
temperatures decrease about 1.7 Celsius degrees (about 3 Fahrenheit degrees)
with every 450-m (1,500-ft) increase in elevation. Permanent snow and ice
fields cover peaks more than 5,000 m (16,500 ft) above sea level, and the
highest elevation at which the land is suitable for agriculture is about 4,400
m (14,500 ft).
In the coastal plain the temperature is
normally equable, averaging about 20°C (about 68°F) throughout the year. The
coastal climate is moderated by winds blowing from the cool offshore current
known as the Peru, or Humboldt, Current. The coast receives less than 50 mm (2
in) of precipitation each year, largely because the cordilleras receive most of
the rain carried by the trade winds from the east. Mist-laden clouds known as garúa
shroud many of the slopes of the sierra from June to October, providing enough
moisture to support grasslands.
In the sierra the temperature ranges
seasonally from about -7° to 21°C (about 20° to 70°F). Rainfall is usually
scanty, but in some localities heavy rains fall from October to April. In
Cuzco, in the southeastern sierra, annual rainfall averages some 815 mm (32
in). The exposed eastern slopes of the Andes receive more than 2,500 mm (100
in) of rain annually, but sheltered locations receive much less. Rainfall
amounts diminish rapidly southward, causing many changes in the vegetation.
The montaña region is extremely hot and humid,
although at higher elevations it is less so. The prevailing easterly winds
blowing across that region gather moisture that is later deposited on the
eastern Andean slopes. Annual rainfall in some districts averages as much as
3,810 mm (150 in). Most of this rain, which principally falls from November
through April, eventually drains back to the montaña.
Peru’s climate periodically experiences a weather
pattern known as El Niño. El Niño occurs every three to seven years when
unusually warm ocean conditions appear along the western coast. During El Niño
the wet weather conditions normally present in the western Pacific move to the east,
bringing heavy rains that can cause extensive flooding.
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C
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Natural Resources
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The primary resources of Peru are petroleum, found on
the northwestern coast and in the Amazon Basin, and the country’s many mineral
deposits. The minerals include copper, found in northwestern Peru, and
substantial deposits of silver, iron ore, gold, lead, and zinc found throughout
the cordilleras. Also important are the forests, especially the stands of
cedar, oak, and mahogany. Fish are plentiful in the waters off Peru’s coast.
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D
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Plants and Animals
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The plant life of the three main geographical
regions varies widely. The vast, fertile montaña contains a rich profusion of
trees, plants, and jungle vines, including mahogany, cedar, rubber, and
cinchona trees, sarsaparilla and vanilla plants, and a variety of exotic
tropical flowers. The rugged sierra supports a relatively sparse plant life.
Sierra vegetation is largely xerophytic—that is, adapted to survival on a
restricted supply of water. Such growths include mesquite, cactus, scrub and
fodder grasses, and eucalyptus plants. The dry, sandy reaches of the coastal
plain support mainly desert vegetation, such as shrubs, grasses, and tuberous
plants.
Peru has an enormous variety of wildlife. The
coastal waters and offshore islands support gulls, terns, albatrosses, petrels,
skuas, and pelicans. Sea lions and many kinds of birds, including Humboldt
penguins, can be seen on the Ballestas Islands off the southern coast.
Peruvian ocean waters abound in anchovy, pilchard,
haddock, sole, mackerel, smelt, flounder, lobster, shrimp, and other marine
species. The fish are preyed upon by millions of birds. The ecological balance
of life offshore is periodically upset when warm equatorial water displaces the
cooler waters of the Peru Current. When this phenomenon, known as El Niño,
occurs, the fish migrate and many birds perish. At the same time, tremendous
clouds build up over the ocean and bring torrential rains to the coastal
desert.
The coastal plain has little wildlife except for
lizards, insects, tarantulas, scorpions, and visiting seabirds. In the sierra
are found the llama, alpaca, vicuña, chinchilla, and guanaco. In addition to
being a beast of burden, the llama furnishes wool for clothing and blankets.
The alpaca and vicuña also provide wool. Birds of the sierra region include the
giant condor, phoebe, flycatcher, finch, partridge, duck, and goose. Lake
Titicaca and other sierran bodies of water teem with fish. Animals of the
tropical montaña include the jaguar, cougar (see puma), armadillo,
peccary, tapir, anteater, several dozen species of monkey, caiman, turtle, and
a variety of snakes and insects; among the birds are the parrot, the flamingo,
and other tropical species.
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E
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Environmental Issues
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Peru’s biodiversity is tremendous: The country contains
over three-quarters of all the types of life zones found on Earth. Human impact
on the environment is severe in places, however, and some key habitats are
endangered—particularly the tropical and temperate coastal deserts and the
puña, a type of high-elevation grassland. The spectacled bear, the giant otter,
and the jaguar are just three species of Peru’s vast animal life that are
considered threatened.
The rapidly growing population of Peru is unevenly
distributed, concentrated in the mountains and in coastal areas. Water
pollution and air pollution are problems in urban areas. Human health is a
major concern, and access to safe water and basic facilities is poor in rural
areas. Outbreaks of cholera occur periodically.
National parks and other reserves cover more than
10 percent of Peru’s land. UNESCO has designated three national parks in Peru
as World Heritage Sites and established three biosphere reserves under its Man
and the Biosphere Program. New environmental laws in Peru provide for limited
sustainable resource use in place of earlier policies that encouraged
aggressive industrial development in the Amazon Basin. The spread of
agriculture, especially the widespread cultivation of coca, is a major threat
to fragile protected environments. Coca plantations are frequently hacked out
of delicate vegetation and treated with fertilizers and pesticides that
ultimately contaminate streams. Soil erosion is also widespread due to
intensive cultivation and livestock overgrazing. Desertification is consuming
significant amounts of once-productive land.
Peru has ratified the Antarctic-Environmental
Protocol, the Antarctic Treaty, and international conservation agreements
concerning biodiversity, climate change, desertification, endangered species,
hazardous wastes, nuclear test ban, ozone layer, ship pollution, tropical timber,
and wetlands. Regionally, Peru participates in several international agreements
on conservation and sustainable land use in the Amazon Basin.
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III
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PEOPLE
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The majority of Peru’s people have Native American
ancestors. Native Americans make up 45 percent of the population, and mestizos,
people of mixed Native American and European ancestry, account for another 37
percent. About 15 percent of Peruvians are of European descent, and there are
small groups of African, Japanese, and Chinese background.
Many of Peru’s Native Americans are descended from
the Inca, who ruled a great civilization in South America from the Peruvian
highlands before their conquest by Spaniards in the 16th century. Some still
speak Quechua, the language of the Inca, or the related language of Aymara.
Some have moved to Lima and other coastal cities, especially since the outbreak
of guerrilla warfare in the highlands in the 1980s, but many continue to live
in the sierra where they farm and herd animals. About 100 other indigenous
groups live in the rain forest of eastern Peru. The Indians of eastern Peru
live in virtual isolation from the rest of Peru’s population, speaking
traditional languages and surviving by hunting, fishing, and agriculture.
Peru’s population was once largely rural. In 1960, 42
percent of the people lived in urban areas. Today, 75 percent of the people are
urban residents. The majority of city dwellers live along the Pacific coast,
territory that represents the heart of Peru’s political and economic life.
Peru’s cities grew rapidly in the last decades of the 20th century as people
migrated from the sierra and settled in shantytowns on the outskirts of Lima
and other urban areas. Migration to the cities had slowed by the late 1990s.
Politically and economically, Peru is a divided society.
At the top of the social structure is a minority of Spanish-speaking Europeans
living on the coast, especially in Lima. They control most of the country’s
wealth and political power. At the bottom are Quechua- and Aymara-speaking
Native Americans living in the highlands and in the shantytowns surrounding
Arequipa, Lima, and other coastal cities. In between is a largely mestizo
middle class of professionals, business people, army officers, and government
employees.
The military government that ruled from 1968 to 1980
carried out several reforms to curtail the power of wealthy Peruvians and
benefit people in the middle and lower-middle classes. These reforms redistributed
land to highland Native Americans, turned sugar plantations over to worker
cooperatives, and extended the government’s role in all sectors of the economy.
In the end, however, soaring inflation and unemployment left the mass of
Peruvians as poor as they were before the reforms, and the majority still have
a very low standard of living. Much of rural Peru lacks electricity, safe
drinking water, adequate sanitary facilities, and accessible health care, as do
most of the shantytowns to which former rural residents emigrated during the
later decades of the 20th century.
The population of Peru (2008 estimate) is
29,041,593, giving the country an estimated overall population density of 23
persons per sq km (59 per sq mi). The distribution of people across the country
is uneven, however. About 50 percent of the people inhabit the sierra region
and about 40 percent inhabit the coastal plain. The remainder live in the dense
forests of the east.
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A
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Principal Cities
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The largest city in Peru by far is Lima
(population, 2005 estimate, 8,153,618), the country’s capital and chief
commercial center. More than a quarter of Peru’s inhabitants live in the
capital. Other important cities include Arequipa (710,103), an industrial
center in the southern coastal plains; Trujillo (276,921), a commercial center
in the coastal plains of northwestern Peru; Callao (389,579), a major port
located near Lima; and Chiclayo (251,407), in the sugar-growing plains of
northwestern Peru. Iquitos (157,529), a port on the Amazon River, is the only
city in the tropical montaña region. The largest cities in the Andean sierra
are Huancayo (305,039), a commercial center, and Cuzco (103,836), famous for
its Inca ruins.
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B
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Language and Religion
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Spanish, spoken by some 70 percent of the people,
was the sole official language of Peru until 1975, when Quechua, one of the
principal languages of the Native Americans, also was made an official
language. Another Native American language, Aymara, was declared official in
1980. English is also spoken in Peru.
More than 90 percent of Peruvians are Roman
Catholic. In 1915 a law was passed that made Roman Catholicism the established
religion of the country. However, the constitution of 1979 ended Roman
Catholicism’s status as the established religion, although it recognized
Catholicism “as an important element in the historical, cultural, and moral
formation of Peru.” Other religions are permitted and tolerated, and small
numbers of Protestants, Jews, and Muslims live in Peru.
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C
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Education
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School enrollment and the literacy rate in Peru have
increased substantially as a result of greater emphasis on education. According
to estimates, the adult literate population rose from 42 percent in 1940 to 92
percent in 2005. Public basic education in Peru is free and compulsory for all
children between the ages of 6 and 16. Many children in rural areas do not
attend secondary school, however, because of a lack of facilities. In 1998–1999
some 4.3 million pupils attended elementary schools, and 2.4 million students
were enrolled in secondary and vocational schools.
Peru has more than 45 institutions of higher
education, including the National University of San Marcos, in Lima (1551); the
National University of Central Peru (1962), in Huancayo; the National
University of San AgustÃn (1828), in Arequipa; the National University of San
Antonio Abad (1962), in Cuzco; the National University of La Libertad (1824),
in Trujillo; the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (1917), and La Molina
National Agrarian University (1902), both in Lima. The National School of Music
(1908) is in Lima.
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D
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Culture
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The Native American heritage of Peru is one of the
richest in South America. Although Spain gave Peru its language, religion, and
rulers, the civilization of the Inca has left its traces throughout Peruvian
culture. Archaeological excavations have uncovered monumental remains of Native
American societies. The Inca in particular were skilled in stonework,
engineering, weaving, and gold and silver work. The Nazca and Moche people, who
inhabited Peru before the Inca, created textiles, pottery, and jewelry.
Examples of their art can be seen in the National Archaeological Museum in Lima.
Architecture of the Spanish colonial period, a fusion of Spanish and Native
American forms, is called Creole. In art, painters known as nativists pointedly
interpreted 20th-century Peru in a Native American mode. See also Latin
American Architecture; Latin American Literature; Latin American Music; Latin
American Painting; Latin American Sculpture.
The descendants of the Quechua and Aymara peoples
populate the Andean highlands of Peru. Many do not speak Spanish and have
preserved the customs and folklore of their ancestors. Along the coast and in
the highland cities, white, mestizo, and black Peruvians live in a modern
Western style. In contrast to these settlements are the jungles of eastern
Peru, where more isolated groups of Native Americans retain lifestyles similar
to those of their ancestors.
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D1
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Music
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The pentatonic scale used by the ancient peoples of
Peru still survives, and instruments whose origins date from the pre-Columbian
period (before the arrival of Europeans) are widely used today. They include
the reed quena or flute, the antara or panpipes, conch shells,
the ocarina, and various percussion devices. The Spaniards brought stringed
instruments to Peru. The violin, the harp, the guitar, and the charango,
a mandolin-like instrument, are very popular. Among the most popular folksongs
and dances are the yarivÃ, a love song; the huayno, a rapid dance
of the highlands; the cashua, a circle dance; and the marinera or
zamacueca, a handkerchief dance.
Lima has a national music conservatory and a
symphony orchestra, the latter organized in 1938 by Austrian-born Theo
Buchwald. The orchestra encourages Peruvian composers by performing their
compositions. The most distinguished 20th-century Peruvian composer was the
Paris-born André Sas, who founded a music school in Lima in 1929. His
compositions reflect the influence of native music. Sas was also an authority
on folk music.
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D2
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Literature and Drama
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Peruvian literature began during the 16th century when
Garcilaso de la Vega, son of a Spanish conqueror and an Inca princess, wrote
his Comentarios reales de los Incas (1609; Royal Commentaries
of the Incas, 1869), a vivid historical chronicle about the Inca
culture and empire. Another important writer of the colonial period was
17th-century satirist Juan del Valle y Caviedes. The foremost writers of the
19th century were Manuel González Prada, who wrote social criticism, and
Ricardo Palma, who composed a collection of historical and legendary tales
about Peru’s past.
In the 20th century there was an abundance of
poets and prose writers. Among them are Ventura GarcÃa Calderón, a diplomat who
was also an essayist; José Carlos Mariátegui, a Marxist political essayist; and
the poets José Santos Chocano, César Vallejo, and José MarÃa Eguren. Ciro
AlegrÃa, in his famous El Mundo es ancho y ajena (1941; Broad and
Alien is the World, 1973), has produced one of the finest novels treating
the plight of the indigenous peoples in Latin America. Novelist Mario Vargas
Llosa, one of the leading experimental writers in Latin America, has an
international reputation.
The theater has played an important role in the
cultural life of Peru since 1568, when the first play in the country was
presented in the plaza of San Pedro in Lima. During the colonial period, the
Jesuits promoted dramatic productions, and 18th-century viceroy
Manuel de Amat was a leading patron of the theater. The country’s leading
playhouse and concert hall is Lima’s Municipal Theater. Sebastián Salazar Bondy
and Enrique Solari Swayne were the most important 20th-century playwrights.
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D3
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Art and Architecture
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Native American themes are strong in painting. During
the colonial period the Cuzco school was famous throughout Spanish America for
its religious canvases. During the 19th century there were four major
artists—Francisco Lazo, forerunner of the indigenous school of painting and a
portrait painter; Luis Montero, known for his huge canvas Atahualpa’s
Funeral (1867); Pancho Fierro, a caricaturist of popular social types and
customs; and Carlos Becaflor, a portrait painter.
In the 1930s, following the lead of the great
Mexican muralists, a Peruvian movement—led by José Sabogal and Julia
Codesido—reflected deep sympathy for the indigenous Peruvian people. Later, a
reaction against the use of native themes took place. In the 1950s abstract
painting became dominant. The Institute of Contemporary Art encourages new
movements in art, while the long-established National School of Fine Arts is
more conservative. As the economy picked up in the late 20th century, more
money went into the arts.
In addition to the many monumental Inca ruins,
many examples of colonial architecture survive, particularly religious and
public buildings located mostly in Lima, Arequipa, Cuzco, and Trujillo. In the
Andean area the Spaniards often built on top of Inca remains, and in Cuzco one
can see both types of construction. In colonial buildings, Spanish and
indigenous modes often fuse, blending into what was called the Creole style.
Moorish influence, which traveled from Arab North Africa to Spain and then to
the Americas, is visible in what is known as the Mudejar style. Lima has many
fine examples of modern architecture.
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D4
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Libraries
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Some of the most important libraries in Peru
are located in the larger cities and are affiliated with the major universities.
Within the various libraries of the National University of San Marcos in Lima
are more than 450,000 volumes. The National Library (1821), in Lima, houses
more than 3.2 million books and other items.
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D5
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Museums
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Museums throughout the country display Peruvian art and
archaeological artifacts. Many of Peru’s colonial buildings, such as the Torre
Tagle Palace and the cathedral in Lima, contain valuable artifacts. Notable
museums in Lima include the Museum of Art (1961), the Rafael Larco Herrera
Archaeological Museum (1926), the Javier Prado Natural History Museum, and the
National Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology (1822), which displays
collections of pre-Columbian artifacts. Other important museums include the Military
History Museum of Peru (1946), in Callao; and archaeological museums in
Arequipa, Cuzco, Huancayo, and Trujillo.
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IV
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ECONOMY
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Peru’s estimated gross domestic product (GDP) in 2006
was $92.4 billion. GDP is a measure of the value of all the goods and services
a country produces. Although Peru’s economy remains primarily agricultural, the
mining and fishing industries have become increasingly important. Peru relies
primarily on the export of raw materials—chiefly minerals and petroleum, farm products,
and fish meal—to earn foreign exchange for importing machinery and manufactured
goods.
During the late 1980s, guerrilla violence, rampant
inflation, chronic budget deficits, and drought combined to drive the country
to the brink of fiscal insolvency. However, in 1990 the government imposed an
austerity program that removed price controls and ended subsidies on many basic
items and allowed the inti, the national currency at that time, to float
against the United States dollar. Although some prices rose rapidly, inflation
overall was brought down, and tax reforms helped reduce the national deficit.
By the mid-1990s foreign investment was fueling economic growth. The economy
again picked up steam after a period of stagnation around the turn of the 21st
century. Few of the benefits of economic growth reached poorer Peruvians,
however, and unemployment and underemployment remained high.
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A
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Agriculture
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Some 1 percent of Peru’s working population is
engaged in farming, forestry, or fishing. Most of the coastal area is devoted
to the raising of export crops; on the montaña and the sierra are mainly grown
crops for local consumption. Many farms in Peru are very small and are used to
produce subsistence crops; the country also has large cooperative farms. The
chief agricultural products, together with the yield (in metric tons) in 2006,
were sugarcane (7.6 million), root crops such as potatoes (4.7 million), rice
(2.2 million), corn (1,230,000), seed cotton (70,000), coffee (174,955), and
wheat (195,000). Peru is one of the world’s leading growers of coca, from which
the drug cocaine is refined. Coca leaves were used for years as a stimulant and
appetite-suppressant by Native Americans of the sierra.
The livestock population included 5.2 million cattle,
14.8 million sheep, 2 million goats, 3 million hogs, 730,000 horses, 290,000
mules, and 99.3 million poultry. Llamas, sheep, and vicuñas provide wool,
hides, and skins.
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B
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Forestry and Fishing
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Forests cover 53 percent of Peru’s land area.
Forest products include balsa lumber and balata gum, rubber, and a variety of
medicinal plants. Notable among the latter is the cinchona plant, from which
quinine is derived. The roundwood harvest in 2006 was 9.3 million cu m (327
million cu ft).
The fishing industry contributes to the country’s
economy and to its export revenues, although the government periodically
imposes limits on fishing to prevent overfishing. Investment in processing
plants during the 1960s turned Peru into a leading producer of fish products,
especially fish meal. The fish catch in 2005 was 9.4 million metric tons. More
than three-fifths of the catch is typically anchovies, used for making fish
meal, a product in which Peru leads the world. Fish meal is used in animal feed
and fertilizer.
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C
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Mining
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The extractive industries figure significantly in the
Peruvian economy. Peru ranks as one of the world’s leading producers of copper,
gold, silver, lead, and zinc. Petroleum, natural gas, and iron ore are also
extracted in significant quantities. Production in 2004 included 4.3 million
metric tons of iron ore; 1,035,574 metric tons of copper; 3,060 metric tons of
silver; 173,219 kg (381,900 lb) of gold; and 1,209,006 metric tons of zinc.
Some 31.9 million barrels of crude petroleum were produced, along with 560
million cu m (19.8 billion cu ft) of natural gas.
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D
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Manufacturing
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Much manufacturing in Peru is on a small scale, but a
number of modern industries have been established since the 1950s along the
Pacific coast. Traditional goods include textiles, clothing, food products, and
handicrafts. Items produced in large modern plants include steel, refined
petroleum, chemicals, processed minerals, motor vehicles, and fish meal.
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E
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Tourism
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Tourism has contributed significantly to Peru’s
revenues. However, political unrest, guerrilla activity in the sierra, and
cholera outbreaks slowed tourism during the 1980s and 1990s. It began to pick
up again in the early 2000s.
Many tourists come to see the remains of Peru’s
Inca and pre-Inca civilizations. The Inca stronghold at Machu Picchu high in
the Andes is a major attraction. Ruins of pre-Inca societies are found around
Lake Titicaca. Archaeological museums in Lima and other Peruvian cities display
pre-Columbian art—art objects from cultures that flourished before the arrival
of the Spanish conquerors. Scenic villages in the Andes provide opportunities
for visitors to observe Native American traditions and culture today.
Cuzco, a picturesque city in southern Peru,
reflects both the country’s Inca heritage and its Spanish colonial past and is
also popular with tourists. Francisco Pizarro built his palace at Cuzco, which
had been the capital of the Inca Empire. Despite many earthquakes, the historic
center of Lima still has buildings of interest from the period when Spain’s
empire in the Americas was ruled from Peru.
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F
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Energy
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In 2003 Peru produced 22.7 billion kilowatt-hours
of electricity. Some 81 percent of the total electricity produced was generated
in hydroelectric facilities.
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G
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Currency and Foreign Trade
|
The unit of currency in Peru is the nuevo
sol, divided into 100 céntimos (3.30 nuevo sols equal U.S.$1; 2006
average). The nuevo sol replaced the previous currency, the inti, in
1991 (1 nuevo sol equaled 1 million inti), as the government fought to tame
runaway inflation. The inti had replaced the sol in 1985 at a rate of 1,000 to
1. The Banco Central de Reserva del Perú (1922) is the central bank and bank of
issue. All private domestic banks were nationalized in 1987. The largest of
these, Interbanc, was reprivatized in 1994.
Exports are more diversified in Peru than in most
South American countries. The principal exports are petroleum, gold, copper,
fish meal, textiles, zinc, lead, coffee, and petroleum products. The chief
export markets are the United States, the United Kingdom, China, and Switzerland.
Exports earned $12.4 billion in 2004. The leading imports of Peru include
electrical and electronic items, foodstuffs, machinery and mining equipment,
chemicals, and transportation equipment. The principal sources of these goods
are the United States, Argentina, Brazil, China, and Colombia. Imports cost
$10.1 billion in 2004. Peru is a member of two international trade
organizations, the Latin American Integration Association (LAIA), which
replaced the former Latin American Free Trade Association in 1980; and the
Andean Community. The LAIA works to integrate the economies of all of Latin
South America while the Community does the same for its members, which also
include Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela.
|
H
|
Transportation
|
Peru’s system of railroads, highways, and airports
was expanded considerably in the second half of the 20th century. The country’s
mountains make surface transport difficult, however. In 2004 Peru had about
78,829 km (about 48,982 mi) of roads, of which 14 percent were paved. The main
artery is a section of the Pan-American Highway, which traverses Peru from
Ecuador to Chile, covering a distance of about 2,495 km (about 1,550 mi). The
Central Highway links Lima and Pucallpa. Peru also has about 2,177 km (about
1,353 mi) of railroads. One trans-Andean line, the Central Railroad, ascends to
some 4,815 m (15,800 ft) above sea level, the highest point reached by any
standard-gauge line in the world.
The most notable inland waterway is the Amazon
River, which is navigable by ship from the Atlantic Ocean to Iquitos in Peru.
Lake Titicaca also serves as a waterway. Leading Peruvian seaports include
Callao, Salaverry, Pacasmayo, Paita, and San Juan. Callao, the port for nearby
Lima, is the most important by far. The country’s main international airports
are situated near Lima, Cuzco, Iquitos, and Arequipa. Aeroperú, the national
airline, offers domestic and international service.
|
I
|
Communications
|
Peru’s telephone system, which was nationalized in 1970
and reprivatized in 1994, has 81 mainlines for every 1,000 of Peru’s residents.
The country is served by more than 300 radio stations and 8 television
stations. In 1997 there were 273 radios and 140 television sets in use for
every 1,000 people. In the same period the country had 73 daily newspapers.
Dailies with large circulations included El Comercio, Expreso, Ojo, and La
República, all published in Lima.
|
J
|
Labor
|
In 2006 Peru’s labor force was 13.4 million
people. The largest sectors are services and government, manufacturing,
commerce, and construction. However, many of those included in the services
sector barely eke out a living as street vendors or by driving taxis. The main
labor group is the Democratic Syndical Front, which includes the General
Confederation of Peruvian Workers.
|
V
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GOVERNMENT
|
Peru is a republic governed by a constitution
promulgated in 1993. This constitution replaced the 1980 constitution, which
was suspended in 1992. The new constitution increased the power of the
executive and allowed for the reelection of the president to a second term. It
also unified the formerly bicameral legislature.
|
A
|
Executive
|
Executive power is vested in a president elected by
universal suffrage to a five-year term. Presidents may serve no more than two
consecutive terms. Two vice presidents are also elected. The president is
assisted by an appointed Cabinet of Ministers.
|
B
|
Legislature
|
A single-chamber congress serves as Peru’s legislature.
It comprises 120 members elected to five-year terms.
|
C
|
Judiciary
|
The Peruvian Supreme Court, which sits in Lima,
consists of a president and 12 other judges. The judiciary also includes superior
courts as well as courts of first instance.
|
D
|
Political Parties
|
Presidential and legislative elections in the 1990s were
dominated by candidates of the center-right Change 90 movement, formed in 1989
to support the presidential candidacy of Alberto Fujimori; the Democratic
Front, known as Fredemo, established in 1988 as a center-right coalition; and
the leftist American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA), founded in 1924. In
1999 Change 90 allied with several other pro-Fujimori parties to form Peru
2000. Possible Peru, a center-left party led by Alejandro Toledo, emerged as an
important group in 2000.
|
E
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Local Government
|
Peru is divided for administrative purposes into
25 regional departments, each with a president who resides in the departmental
capital.
|
F
|
Health and Welfare
|
In 2008 the average life expectancy at birth
in Peru was 72 years for women and 69 years for men; the infant mortality rate
was 29 per 1,000 live births. Although the government has made some progress in
improving medical facilities, sanitation remains inadequate. Cholera outbreaks
occur periodically, and a cholera epidemic in 1991 killed more than 1,000
Peruvians and sickened another 150,000.
|
G
|
Defense
|
All males aged 20 to 25 years are liable
for two years’ service in the Peruvian military. The country’s armed forces in
2004 included an army of 40,000 members, a navy of 25,000, and an air force of
15,000.
|
VI
|
HISTORY
|
Evidence of settlement in Peru dates back thousands of
years. Recent archaeological findings in the Norte Chico region north of Lima
suggest that the earliest civilizations in the Americas developed in Peru as
early as 3000 bc. The Norte Chico
people built step pyramids of stone and irrigation systems and appear to have
grown cotton and traded with neighboring peoples. By around 1800 bc they abandoned Norte Chico but likely
influenced later cultures in Peru. In about 1250 bc groups such as the ChavÃn, Chimú, Nazca, and Tiwanaku
migrated into Peru from the north. The Chimú built the city of Chan Chan about ad 1000, ruins of which remain today.
|
A
|
Inca Empire
|
The Inca, sometimes called peoples of the sun, were
originally a warlike tribe living in a semiarid region of the southern sierra.
From 1100 to 1300 the Inca moved north into the fertile Cuzco Valley. From
there they overran the neighboring lands. By 1500 the Inca Empire stretched
from the Pacific Ocean east to the sources of the Paraguay and Amazon rivers
and from the region of modern Quito in Ecuador south to the Maule River in
Chile. This vast empire was a theocracy, organized along socialistic lines and
ruled by an Inca, or emperor, who was worshiped as a divinity. Because the Inca
realm contained extensive deposits of gold and silver, it became in the early
16th century a target of Spanish imperial ambitions in the Americas.
In November 1995 anthropologists announced the
discovery of the 500-year-old remains of two Inca women and one Inca man frozen
in the snow on a mountain peak in Peru. Scientists concluded that the trio were
part of a human sacrifice ritual on Ampato, a sacred peak in the Andes mountain
range. Artifacts from the find unveiled new information about the Inca and
indicated the use of poles and tents rather than traditional stone structures.
The arrangement of doll-size statuettes dressed in feathers and fine woolens
provided clues about Inca religious and sacrificial practices.
|
B
|
Spanish Rule
|
In 1532 Spanish soldier and adventurer Francisco
Pizarro landed in Peru with a force of about 180 men. Conditions were favorable
to conquest, for the empire was debilitated by a just-concluded civil war
between the heirs to the Inca throne, Atahualpa and Huascar, each of whom was
seeking to control the empire. This internal dissension, plus the terror
inspired by Spanish guns and horses—unknown to the indigenous peoples until
then—made it relatively easy for only a handful of Spaniards to conquer this
vast empire.
The Spaniards met Atahualpa, the victor in the
civil war, and his army at a prearranged conference at Cajamarca in 1532. When
Atahualpa arrived, the Spaniards ambushed and seized him, and killed thousands
of his followers. Although Atahualpa paid the most fabulous ransom known to
history—a room full of gold and another full of silver—for his freedom, the
Spaniards murdered him in 1533.
The Spanish destroyed many of the irrigation projects
and the north-south roads that had knit the empire together, speeding the
disintegration of the empire. By November 1533 Cuzco had fallen with little
resistance. In addition, the indigenous population declined rapidly as a result
of new diseases brought by the Spaniards, diseases to which the Inca had no
immunity. Members of the Inca dynasty took refuge in the mountains and were
able to resist the Spaniards for about four decades. However, by 1572 the
Spaniards had executed the last Inca ruler, Tupac Amarú, along with his
advisers and his family.
In 1535 Pizarro founded on the banks of the RÃmac
River the Peruvian capital city of Ciudad de los Reyes (Spanish for “City of
the Kings”; present-day Lima). Subsequently, disputes over jurisdictional
powers broke out among the Spanish conquerors, or conquistadors, and in 1541 a
member of one of the conflicting Spanish factions assassinated Pizarro in Lima.
The Inca civilization had unified what are now Peru,
Ecuador, and Bolivia and created an integrated society. The Spanish, whose main
aims were plunder and the conversion of native tribes to Christianity, stopped
the development of the indigenous civilization. The Spaniards treated the Inca
ruthlessly, using their labor to produce the minerals needed in Spain. The
result was the creation of a psychic chasm between the Inca and the
Europeanized population, a chasm that has endured for more than 400 years.
The Spanish introduced a system of land tenure
consisting of European landlords and indigenous workers. This system succeeded
in solidly establishing a privileged and wealthy landed aristocracy early in
the colonial period. Little was done to educate the rest of the people. As a
result, colonial Peru was a divided society, consisting of a small class that
owned the land and controlled education, political, military, and religious
power, and of a large, mostly indigenous class (about 90 percent of the total
population) that remained landless, illiterate, and exploited.
In 1542 a Spanish imperial council promulgated
statutes called New Laws for the Indies, which were designed to put a stop to
cruelties inflicted on the Native Americans. In the same year Spain created the
Viceroyalty of Peru, which comprised all Spanish South America and Panama, except
what is now Venezuela.
The first Spanish viceroy arrived in Peru in 1544
and attempted to enforce the New Laws, but the conquistadors rebelled and, in
1546, killed the viceroy. Although the Spanish government crushed the rebellion
in 1548, the New Laws were never put into effect.
In 1569 Spanish colonial administrator Francisco de
Toledo arrived in Peru. During the ensuing 14 years he established a highly
effective, although harshly repressive, system of government. Toledo’s method
of administration consisted of a government of Spanish officials ruling through
lower-level officials made up of Native Americans who dealt directly with the
indigenous population. This system lasted for almost 200 years. See also Spanish
Empire.
|
C
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Revolts for Independence
|
In 1780 a force of 60,000 Native
Americans revolted against Spanish rule under the leadership of Peruvian
patriot José Gabriel Condorcanqui, who adopted the name of an ancestor, the
Inca Tupac Amarú. Although initially successful, the uprising was crushed in
1781. The Spanish tortured and executed Condorcanqui and thousands of his
fellow revolutionaries. The Spanish suppressed another revolt in 1814.
Subsequently, however, opposition to imperial rule grew
throughout Spanish South America. The opposition was led largely by Creoles,
people of Spanish descent born in South America. Creoles grew to resent the
fact that the Spanish government awarded all important government positions in
the colonies to Spaniards born in Spain, who were called peninsulares.
Freedom from Spanish rule, however, was imported to
Peru by outsiders. In September 1820 Argentine soldier and patriot José de San
MartÃn, who had defeated the Spanish forces in Chile, landed an invasion army
at the seaport of Pisco, Peru. On July 12, 1821, San MartÃn’s forces entered
Lima, which had been abandoned by Spanish troops. Peruvian independence was
proclaimed formally on July 28, 1821. The struggle against the Spanish was
continued later by Venezuelan revolutionary hero Simón BolÃvar, who entered
Peru with his armies in 1822. In 1824, in the battles of JunÃn on August 6 and
of Ayacucho on December 9, BolÃvar’s forces routed the Spanish. See Ayacucho,
Battle of; JunÃn, Battle of; See Latin American Independence.
|
D
|
Succession of Rulers
|
Independence brought few institutional changes to Peru
aside from the transfer of power. Whereas before independence peninsulares held
the important government posts, after independence Creoles monopolized power.
The economic and social life of the country continued as before, with two
groups–Europeans and indigenous people–living side by side but strongly
divided. In 1822 leaders of the colony’s independence movement created a
centralized government consisting of a president and a single-chambered
legislature. However, Spain’s refusal to allow Peruvian-born citizens a voice
in the colonial administration had done little to prepare Peru for democracy.
The years following independence were extremely
chaotic. BolÃvar left Peru in 1826, and a series of military commanders who had
served under him ruled over the nation. Andrés Santa Cruz served until 1827,
when he was replaced by José de La Mar, who was in turn supplanted by AgustÃn
Gamarra in 1829. Gamarra ruled until 1833. In the meantime Santa Cruz had
become president of Bolivia, and in 1836 he invaded Peru, establishing a
confederation of the two countries that lasted three years. After that, Gamarra
took power again.
The country, however, enjoyed no peace until 1845, when
Ramón Castilla seized the presidency. Fortunately, he proved to be an able
ruler, who during his two terms in office (1845 to 1851 and 1855 to 1862)
initiated many important reforms, including the abolition of slavery, the construction
of railroads and telegraph facilities, and the adoption in 1860 of a liberal
constitution. Castilla also began exploitation of the country’s rich guano and
nitrate deposits, which were highly valued as an ingredient in fertilizer. In
1864 these deposits involved Peru in a war with Spain, which had seized the
guano-rich Chincha Islands. Ecuador, Bolivia, and Chile aided Peru, defeating
the Spanish forces in 1866. The resulting treaty of 1879 constituted the first
formal Spanish recognition of Peruvian sovereignty.
In 1873 Peru signed a secret defensive
alliance with Bolivia, the purpose of which was to defend Bolivia’s nitrate
interests against Chile. When a quarrel arose between Chile and Bolivia over
the Atacama nitrate fields along the disputed border of the two nations, Peru
was drawn into the War of the Pacific, fighting against Chile on the side of
its ally, Bolivia.
Chile defeated its opponents, occupied Lima, and,
under the Treaty of Ancón (1884), was awarded Peru’s nitrate province of
Tarapacá. Chile also occupied the provinces of Tacna and Arica. A plebiscite
was supposed to decide ten years later which country would get these provinces,
but the Tacna-Arica Dispute did not end until 1929, with Chile keeping Arica
and Peru regaining Tacna. The war severely depleted Peruvian financial reserves
and placed continuing strain on subsequent relations between the two countries.
For the next 25 years Peru was ruled by a succession of dictators.
|
E
|
Foundation of APRA
|
In 1908 a program of economic reform was
instituted by President Augusto LeguÃa y Salcedo. After his first term, from
1908 to 1912, LeguÃa traveled in the United Kingdom and the United States,
where he learned methods of banking and finance, which he later applied in
Peru, and made many friends in the business community. He regained the
presidency in 1919 by means of a military coup and thereafter ruled as virtual
dictator. LeguÃa preserved the country’s old class organization. However, he
brought material progress to Peru, broadened education, and improved labor
conditions.
In 1924, during LeguÃa’s rule, some exiled Peruvian
intellectuals founded the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA), which
VÃctor Raúl Haya de la Torre led for more than 40 years. APRA called for basic
reforms—especially in the conditions of the Native Americans. LeguÃa banned
APRA, but the alliance managed nevertheless to become the most influential of
Peru’s political parties.
LeguÃa stayed in power until 1930, when the world
depression ended the flow of foreign investments. He was deposed and jailed by
an army revolt. On April 9, 1933, a new constitution was adopted. Shortly
thereafter LeguÃa’s successor, Luis Sánchez Cerro, was assassinated. The next
chief executive, General Óscar Raimundo Benavides, followed the new pattern of
harsh political rule combined with marked economic advances. When the APRA won
the election of 1936, Benavides ignored the results and extended his own term
in office. In 1939, in controlled elections, he installed Manuel Prado as
president. Prado was forced, however, to make concessions to the powerful
reform sentiment fostered by APRA.
|
F
|
World War II and After
|
During World War II (1939-1945) Peru gave limited
support to the Allied cause. It broke off relations with the Axis powers in
January 1942, but declared war against Germany and Japan only in February 1945
in order to be accepted as a charter member of the United Nations.
In 1945 the National Democratic Front, a
coalition of liberal and leftist parties, including APRA, supported José Luis
Bustamante y Rivero, who won the presidential election. The National Democratic
Front also won a majority in both houses of the legislature. The new government
instituted numerous liberal reforms, strengthened civil rights and freedom of
the press, and passed a constitutional amendment abolishing certain dictatorial
powers formerly held by the president.
In 1948, however, rightist revolutionary leaders
unseated Bustamante, seized the government, and outlawed APRA. In 1950, Manuel
A. OdrÃa, the leader of the 1948 coup d’état, won the presidential election.
OdrÃa’s chief opponent was not placed on the ballot.
Along with Chile and Ecuador, Peru extended
the country’s territorial waters to 320 km (200 mi) off the mainland. This
action brought sharp protests from the United States, as many U.S. fishing
vessels operated in South American waters.
The OdrÃa administration disbanded Peru’s labor unions,
outlawed all opposition, and imposed tight censorship. It also strengthened
Peru’s defenses, initiated a large public-works program, and concluded a series
of economic and cultural pacts with Brazil that provided for closer cooperation
between the two countries. The demand for a return to civilian rule was so
great, however, that in 1956 free elections were held.
|
G
|
Liberal Period
|
In the elections of 1956, former president
Prado was again victorious. He immediately effected sweeping liberal reforms, but
was soon hampered by strikes and riots occasioned by economic instability and
runaway inflation. In 1959 the government introduced a program to restrict the
outflow of dollars and encourage domestic industries by various means,
including facilitating the import of capital goods. By May 1960 the economy had
improved markedly, and foreign capital flowed into Peru in the form of loans
and development contracts. In October of that year the government won approval
of its policy of gradual nationalization of most Peruvian oil-production
facilities.
In the presidential elections of 1962 none of the
three major candidates, Haya de la Torre of APRA, Fernando Belaúnde Terry of
the Popular Action Party, and Manuel OdrÃa, received the necessary one-third of
the votes to win the election. The task of choosing a president thus went to
the newly elected congress. The military, which favored Belaúnde, overthrew the
government to forestall an agreement between OdrÃstas and the APRA to elect
OdrÃa president with an APRA vice-president. A military junta took control. To
appease the Peruvian people and foreign governments, the junta promised new
elections. The junta installed General Ricardo PÃo Pérez Godoy as president in
July 1962, but deposed him in March 1963.
Elections in 1963 brought Belaúnde to the
presidency. President Belaúnde and the APRA, which dominated congress, competed
to introduce reforms. Progress was made in public works and social benefits.
However, the government’s programs resulted in budgetary deficits and a
spiraling inflation. Belaúnde was also unable to create a stable government
coalition.
|
H
|
Military Rule
|
A long dispute over the claims of the
International Petroleum Company (IPC), a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Company
(New Jersey), in the operation of the rich La Brea y Pariñas oil fields was
finally settled by the Belaúnde government in August 1968. Widespread
disapproval of this settlement, however, forced the resignation of the Cabinet
on October 1, and two days later the armed forces ousted Belaúnde and suspended
the constitution. A military junta formed, headed by General Juan Velasco
Alvarado. His government expropriated the IPC’s assets, seriously straining
relations with the United States. Relations deteriorated still further in
February 1969, when a Peruvian gunboat accosted two U.S. fishing vessels off
the Peruvian coast, claiming they were poaching in Peruvian waters. In 1970,
despite these differences, U.S. relief supplies were quickly sent to Peru
following an earthquake that killed about 67,000 people and left some 600,000
homeless.
In the early 1970s the Velasco government
began a radical reform of the social and economic system. Among the major
actions were seizure of foreign-owned ranchlands, the imposition of price
controls on basic goods and services, and a sweeping land-reform law. The
anchovy fishing industry, seriously hurt in 1972 by alteration of ocean
currents, was nationalized in 1973. The 1973-1974 budget provided a 35 percent
increase in spending to build up and diversify private industry. In 1973 the
World Bank extended credits of $470 million to Peru, and the Inter-American
Development Bank lent Peru $30 million. Relations with the United States and
with U.S. investors were largely normalized, but U.S. economic aid was sharply
reduced.
|
I
|
Return to Democracy
|
Another military coup toppled the Peruvian government in
1975, after a series of strikes and demonstrations expressed popular discontent
with the ailing President Velasco. General Francisco Morales Bermúdez, who had
been prime minister and minister of war under Velasco, was sworn in as
president. His government announced that the country would be returned to
democratic rule in 1980. Morales pledged to continue the “revolutionary
process” begun in 1968. However, the military government was unable to cope
with Peru’s deepening economic crisis, which was marked by an immense national
debt, rampant inflation, and massive unemployment. In 1978 it received a loan
from the International Monetary Fund to ease its debt burden, but only in
exchange for imposing economic austerity measures, which worsened the lot of
most Peruvians.
In 1980, as promised, presidential elections were
held. The winner, former president Belaúnde, took office in July, when a new
constitution came into effect. Belaúnde immediately adopted a conservative
program that aimed to reverse many of the reforms of the Velasco era, and he
began a series of extravagantly costly large-scale construction projects in the
rain forest region. Belaúnde was immediately overtaken by political crisis and
economic disaster. An extreme left-wing guerrilla movement, Shining Path (Sendero
Luminoso), began activity in the highlands and gained strength. At the
United States’ behest the government tried to suppress production of coca,
further alienating the Native Americans whose main source of income it was.
Output of the anchovy fisheries collapsed as a result of ecological devastation
from earlier overfishing. The country entered a deep depression accompanied by
runaway inflation, and it had to suspend payments on its enormous foreign debt.
By the time presidential elections were held in 1985, Belaúnde and his
government were completely discredited. His party got only 5 percent of the
vote.
In the 1985 presidential elections, voters chose
the APRA candidate, Alan GarcÃa Pérez. GarcÃa tried to reverse the economic
decline. He introduced policies that attempted to reduce imports and limit
annual payments on foreign debts. Despite some temporary success, by 1987 Peru
had been cut off from international financing, and inflation again began to
increase. In an attempt to limit inflation, GarcÃa nationalized private banks
and insurance companies and tightened government controls over the economy, but
by 1990 the annual rate of inflation was approaching 3,000 percent. Meanwhile,
despite unabated repression by the security forces, the Shining Path remained
powerful.
|
J
|
The Fujimori Years
|
In an upset in the 1990 presidential
election, Alberto Fujimori, an agricultural economist of Japanese descent,
defeated novelist Mario Vargas Llosa. Fujimori, who ran in the runoff with
left-wing support, imposed an austerity program to deal with hyperinflation and
to restore Peru’s ability to borrow money internationally. Economic hardship
led to an escalation of violence by the Shining Path.
In April 1992 Fujimori, alleging that congress and
the judiciary had blocked his efforts to suppress the drug trade and the
guerrillas, suspended parts of the constitution and took full control of the
government. In September several key Shining Path guerrillas were captured,
including Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán, and in November Fujimori’s
supporters won a solid majority in a legislative election. In 1993 the United
States and other creditor nations resumed loans to Peru. In October 1993
Peruvians voted to accept a new constitution, signed by Fujimori in December,
that increased presidential power, changed the legislature from a bicameral
body to a unicameral one, and allowed Fujimori to run for a second term.
By 1994 Peru’s economy had revived dramatically.
Fujimori’s effort to privatize the economy moved forward with the sale of
Interbanc, the largest national bank, and the national telephone service to
private interests. The country also rejoined the Andean Community just as that
group began negotiations to reduce tariffs among member nations. At the same
time, the Fujimori government upheld its promise to crush the Shining Path
movement, capturing several high-ranking members of the organization’s central
committee.
In June 1994 former UN Secretary General
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar announced that he would run for the presidency. As
presidential elections neared, Fujimori lost momentum after feuding publicly
with his wife, Susana Higuchi, a critic of his policies, and relieving her of
her duties as first lady. In response she formed an opposition party and
announced her intention to run for office in 1995. She was denied candidacy
when her party failed to assemble the necessary number of signatures.
In January 1995 a series of skirmishes erupted
along a contested section of the Ecuadorian border. Fujimori capitalized
politically on the situation, gaining wide approval for his refusal to
compromise with Ecuador. A cease-fire accord was signed in Montevideo, Uruguay,
in March 1995. Peru and Ecuador entered into negotiations in 1998 and, toward
the end of the year, signed a treaty settling the border dispute.
Prior to the 1995 elections Fujimori’s
opponents attempted to undercut his popularity by challenging his human rights
record. Despite those challenges, Fujimori’s accomplishments overwhelmed his
critics at the polls, where he won the presidential elections outright, gaining
more than 60 percent of the vote.
Fujimori declared a blanket amnesty in 1995 for all
human rights abuses that may have been committed by members of the Peruvian
military or police forces between 1980 and 1995. He pushed the measure through
the Peruvian congress without a debate, outraging human rights activists and
many Peruvian citizens, and provoking condemnation from governments around the
world. The law absolved military personnel or civilians who had already been
convicted, who were under investigation, or who were in the process of being
tried for alleged crimes.
In November 1995 Peruvian authorities arrested 23
people, including a U.S. citizen, and alleged that they were members of the
Tupac Amarú Revolutionary Movement and that they had been planning a terrorist
attack on the Peruvian Congress. Tupac Amarú was never as powerful as the
Shining Path, but it had been responsible for numerous guerrilla attacks in
Peru in the 1980s and 1990s. The trials were conducted in secret, and the
accused were unable to cross-examine witnesses, challenge government evidence,
or call witnesses on their behalf. All 23 defendants were convicted and many of
them were given life sentences. International human rights groups and the U.S.
government condemned the trials, saying that they illustrated a lack of justice
and due process in Peru’s legal system.
In December 1996 Tupac Amarú rebels seized the
residence of the Japanese ambassador in Lima, taking hundreds of hostages,
including foreign diplomats and Peruvian government officials. The rebels
demanded the release of imprisoned comrades, and freed all but 72 of their
hostages while negotiating with the government. After a four-month-long
standoff, Fujimori ordered a military raid on the mansion to free the hostages.
Commandos killed all of the rebels, and one hostage and two soldiers died in
the attack.
A series of government scandals damaged the
public’s perception of Fujimori’s government during mid-1997. In May Fujimori
replaced three Constitutional Court justices who ruled that the congress acted
unconstitutionally when it declared him eligible to run for a third consecutive
presidential term despite a constitutional prohibition. Evidence also emerged
that the government authorized telephone wire-tapping of prominent political
opponents and paid Fujimori’s unofficial head of the intelligence service a
salary of $600,000.
Fujimori’s public image was further damaged after a
television station released information showing that the intelligence service
had tortured two female intelligence agents who leaked information to the press
about a government campaign to harass journalists. Fujimori’s approval rating
dropped to 20 percent as a result of the scandals and the controversy
surrounding the replacement of the justices on the Constitutional Court.
A particularly fierce El Niño struck Peru in late 1997.
El Niño, which occurs periodically, caused severe rain and flooding that killed
more than 200 Peruvians and caused extensive damage in many regions of the
nation. Fujimori’s public image improved after he became personally involved in
the crisis, making whirlwind tours to areas of the country that had been
ravaged by storms and personally directing measures to control damage. The
conflict between the government and the Shining Path continued into 1998, with
Shining Path guerrillas engaging in sporadic acts of urban terrorism and
attempting to establish or strengthen their bases in rural areas. In March 1998
police in Lima arrested four important leaders in the Shining Path
organization.
In his bid for a third term in 2000,
Fujimori drew international criticism for alleged campaign abuses and faced a
surprisingly strong challenge from Alejandro Toledo, a business school professor.
In the April elections neither of the two front-running candidates won 50
percent of the vote, and a runoff was scheduled for May. However, Toledo
boycotted the race because of concerns about election fraud, and Fujimori was
reelected. In the legislative elections Fujimori’s coalition, Peru 2000, won
the most congressional seats but fell short of a majority.
Fujimori’s presidency began to unravel in September 2000
after his intelligence chief, Vladimiro Montesinos, was linked to a corruption
scandal. After firing Montesinos, Fujimori called an early presidential
election for April 2001 and promised not to run in it. By mid-November Fujimori
faced a groundswell of political opposition as new charges of corruption and
fraud continued to surface. While Fujimori was abroad for a trade summit of
Pacific Rim nations, opposition parties took control of congress and elected a
centrist legislator, ValentÃn Paniagua, as the leader of congress. Fujimori
announced from Japan that he would resign as president, and Paniagua was chosen
to lead an interim government pending new presidential and legislative
elections. In a public rebuke of Fujimori, the legislature rejected the former
president’s resignation and voted to remove him from office for being morally
unfit.
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Toledo’s Presidency
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Alejandro Toledo was elected president in June 2001
after a runoff with former president Alan GarcÃa Pérez. Toledo vowed to reform
Peru’s criminal justice system, promote foreign investment, and reduce unemployment.
In legislative elections, held alongside the presidential election, Toledo’s
Possible Peru Party emerged as the largest party in the congress, although it
did not attain a majority. The American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA),
led by GarcÃa, became the second largest party.
In 2003 a government-appointed Truth and
Reconciliation Commission issued the results of a two-year investigation into
human rights abuses committed during Peru’s 20-year struggle with the Shining
Path guerrillas. The commission found that nearly 70,000 people were killed or
had disappeared from 1980 to 2000, twice as many as previously believed. Nearly
75 percent of those killed were Quechua-speaking Indians. Shining Path
guerrillas caused most of the deaths by massacring villagers who refused to
support them. However, Peru’s military, which attacked Indian villages in
counterinsurgency operations, was found responsible for about 30 percent of the
deaths and disappearances.
Unrest continued during Toledo’s presidency as he failed
to deliver on an election promise to create jobs, and strikes and
demonstrations against government policies became frequent. Corruption scandals
undermined his administration, and he shuffled his cabinet several times in
efforts to reclaim public support.
The June 2006 presidential elections required a
runoff between APRA candidate Alan GarcÃa Pérez and populist candidate Ollanta
Humala, a former army officer. Regional politics played a significant role in
the runoff as GarcÃa used an endorsement of Humala by Venezuelan president Hugo
Chávez to discredit Humala. Chávez was reportedly unpopular with most
Peruvians, and GarcÃa was said to have made gains by linking Humala to Chávez.
GarcÃa also sought to portray himself as a moderate and promised that he had
learned the lessons of his first administration, which was economically
disastrous for Peru.
The 2006 elections were also notable for the
attempted political comeback of Alberto Fujimori, Peru’s president from 1990 to
2000 when he went into exile in disgrace. Fujimori’s supporters sought to place
his name on the presidential ballot, but he was ruled ineligible. After
Fujimori was extradited from Chile, where he had been placed under arrest, a
Peruvian court found him guilty in December 2007 of ordering an illegal search
and sentenced him to six years in prison. The same month he went on trial again
on more serious charges of murder and forced disappearance, stemming from his
alleged use of a secretive death squad that targeted leftists.



