Blogs

Peru Sparks Outrage with Amnesty Law for Conflict-Era Abuses

Aug 25, 2025 | World

August 25, 2025

Peru’s political landscape is once again under fire after President Dina Boluarte signed into law a controversial amnesty for soldiers, police, and civilian militias accused of atrocities during the country’s brutal armed conflict (1980–2000) against Maoist insurgents.

The law, passed by Congress in July, grants pardons to hundreds of individuals on trial for crimes including massacres, torture, sexual violence, and enforced disappearances. It also mandates the release of those over 70 already serving sentences. This comes despite an order from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights to halt the measure until its impact on victims could be reviewed.

Human rights groups have condemned the move as a major setback for justice. Human Rights Watch’s Americas director, Juanita Goebertus, called it “a betrayal of Peruvian victims”, while Amnesty International and UN experts warned that the law could derail more than 600 pending trials and undo 156 convictions. Peru’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission previously found that state agents were responsible for the vast majority of sexual violence cases documented during the conflict.

Boluarte, who became Peru’s first female president in 2022, defended the law as a tribute to security forces who fought “in defense of democracy.” Critics, however, say it undermines decades of fragile progress in holding perpetrators accountable for crimes that left around 70,000 dead and more than 20,000 disappeared.

The controversy comes as Peru faces another political scandal: former president Martín Vizcarra has been ordered into preventative detention on corruption charges, joining a long list of ex-leaders entangled in graft cases.

With memory of the Shining Path insurgency still raw, Peru now finds itself caught between competing narratives of justice, security, and impunity—raising questions about whether its democracy can reconcile with the ghosts of its past.

Did you like this article?

Did you like this article?

0 Comments

Latest Posts

Two Arrested in Killing of Ecuadorian Footballer Mario Pineida

Ecuadorian authorities have arrested two suspects in connection with the killing of footballer Mario Pineida, a case that has shaken the country’s sports community and highlighted the country’s growing security crisis. Pineida, a defender for Barcelona SC and former...

Drone Attack Kills Soldiers Near Colombia–Venezuela Border

Colombia’s long-running conflict with armed groups escalated again after the National Liberation Army (ELN) carried out a deadly drone and explosives attack on a military base near the Venezuelan border. The strike, which took place Thursday night in Aguachica, killed...

Violence Erupts After Colombia Cup Final in Medellín, Dozens Injured

A heated Colombia Cup final in Medellín ended in chaos on Wednesday night after rival fans clashed following Atlético Nacional’s 1–0 win over city rivals Deportivo Independiente Medellín. The violence broke out at Estadio Atanasio Girardot, which both clubs share, as...

Events

Related articles