WASHINGTON, Nov 20 (Reuters) - Leftist rebel inmates at a Peruvian
prison regard American fellow convict Lori Berenson as a "prisoner of conscience"
and not one of their own, a member of a human rights delegation who
recently visited the jail said on Friday.
The report could give new support to claims by Berenson's backers that
she was wrongly convicted of being a leader of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary
Movement (MRTA), a Cuban-inspired guerrilla group. MRTA
guerrillas told members of the delegation from the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights that Berenson was not a member of their group. "They told
us that she is a prisoner of conscience, that she is not one of them,"
said the member of the delegation, who asked not to be identified.
"They are, of course, very open about calling themselves prisoners of war
and all that, but they don't talk that way about her," the delegation
member told Reuters.
A 14-person delegation from the commission visited Peru last week at
the invitation of President Alberto Fujimori to investigate reports of
human rights violations in Peru. Berenson, a New Yorker convicted
by a military court in 1996 of belonging to MRTA, has been held along with
about 45 battle-hardened MRTA rebels in the notorious Yanamayo prison
at a head-spinning 12,700 feet (3,900 metres) above sea level in
the Andes mountains. She was moved from Yanamayo to Socabaya prison near
Arequipa in mid-October. A regional prison official has said she could
be moved "as soon as possible" back to Yanamayo but prison officials
confirmed on Friday she has not yet been moved.
Berenson had been living for more than a year in Peru when she was
arrested in late 1995 and charged with helping to plan a guerrilla attack
on Peru's Congress, which was later thwarted. Conditions at the jail where
she and some 380 other inmates have been held have been described
as subhuman by international rights groups. The delegation member said
the prison's conditions were so harsh that they suggested Fujimori's
government "was seeking to destroy the physical and mental well-being of
these people." "That's the only reason I can see for the rigorousness
of these conditions," he said.
Despite the tough conditions, he said most inmates looked "surprisingly
good" and seemed to be in generally good health. The delegation met Fujimori
and top Cabinet members and visited several
prisons, where it described conditions as "extremely harsh including
solitary confinements of 23 hours a day in very small spaces," the commission
said in a report issued last week.
But the commission also noted "important advances" in Peru's human
rights record since the commission's last visit in 1993, citing an end
to reports of summary executions and "disappearances" of people by security
forces, and said it was free to work and move within Peru.
Saturday, 21 November 1998
RTRS [nN20161038]