President of Peru, Dina Baluarte, displays her and government-signed amnesty law on August 13, 2025. Ernesto Benavides/AFP The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, condemned on Thursday (14) the Anesty Law promulgated in Peru, which granted settlers to military and police processed by the armed conflict that affected the country between 1980 and 2000, and called the text a “setback”. “I am dismayed by the promulgation of this Amnesty Law, which is an affront to the thousands of victims who deserve truth, justice, reparation and guarantees of non -repetition, not impunity. This setback in the search for justice and reconciliation in Peru must be reversed immediately,” said the High Commissioner. ✅ Click here to follow the G1 international news channel on WhatsApp Peru President Dina Boluarte promulgated the law on Wednesday, which is criticized by human rights organizations. The text was approved by the Conservative Peruvian Congress on July 9. “With the promulgation of this Amnesty Law, the government recognizes the sacrifice of the members of the Armed Forces, the police and the self -defense committees (civilians) in the fight against terrorism and in the defense of democracy,” the president said during the promulgation ceremony. The internal conflict in Peru, in which the state forces faced the guerrillas of the Luminous Severus and the Revolutionary Movement Túpac Amaru (MTA), left about 70,000 dead, most civilians, according to the report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. “International law, to which Peru is obliged, clearly prohibits the amnesties and prescription of serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law,” Turk warned in his statement. The law could be applied to 156 cases with a definitive sentence and more than 600 lawsuits underway for crimes committed during the period, according to experts designated by the UN Human Rights Council, but not pronounced in the name of the organization. Prior to this amnesty, Peru had passed, in August 2024, a law that declared the crimes against humanity committed before 2002 in the fight against the guerrillas. The initiative, which human rights advocates call the “law of impunity,” benefited the late former president Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000), convicted of sorting two army massacres in 1991 and 1992, as well as 600 processed military. High g1 videos
Source link
UN condemns amnesty law in Peru: ‘setback in the search for justice’
8