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Tupamaros

 

A Uruguayan urban guerrilla group of the 1960s and 1970s. Tupamaros is the abbreviated form of Movimiento de Liberación Nacional Tupac Amaru (National Liberation Movement) named after the leader of an 18th-century Inca revolt against Spanish rule. It was formed in 1963 by Raúl Sendic, a law school drop-out, Socialist party activist, and labour agitator, inspired to armed action by the Cuban Revolution.

Uruguay was an early welfare state, with a bloated public sector and broad social services financed by the profitable beef trade with Europe. The result was a static society offering declining prospects for a burgeoning population. After a boom during WW II, Europe's agricultural protectionism eroded the economic underpinnings of ‘the Switzerland of Latin America’, a changed reality that the corrupt, power-alternating Blancos and Colorados parties were unwilling to address.

For five years the Tupamaros devoted themselves to stealing from the rich and distributing to the poor. Starting in 1967-8, as part of a continent-wide escalation orchestrated by Havana whose centrepiece was the doomed Guevara expedition to Bolivia, they shed their Robin Hood image and embarked on a campaign of assaults on police and government officials, kidnappings, and other forms of extortion. They achieved international notoriety with the kidnapping of British ambassador Jackson in 1969 and the 1970 kidnap-murder of Dan Mitrione, a US police adviser believed to be an expert in interrogation techniques. The latter episode was fictionalized in the 1972 movie State of Siege and led to a US government decision to end all overseas police advisory missions.

In 1971 Sendic and more than 100 others escaped by tunnelling out of Punta Carretas prison. In the face of growing military participation in police activities, the Tupamaros made the fateful decision to attack military installations and ‘expropriate’ arms, something they had previously been careful to avoid. Exasperated by the lack of civilian political will and facing revolt from below, the generals increased pressure on the president until in 1973 he dismissed Congress to rule as a military puppet.

Uruguay pioneered the successful and much-emulated ‘dirty war’ counter-insurgency techniques of ‘disappearing’ suspects, ruthless interrogation (they broke the recaptured Sendic by threatening to execute his mother), and a purge of leftists from the university system. In 1985, as a condition for restoring civilian government, the military obtained a general amnesty for all political crimes. In consequence Sendic and other Tupamaros survivors were released and formed a legal political party, which did not prosper.

— Hugh Bicheno

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Tupamaros
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Tupamaros (tūpämä'rōs), urban guerrilla organization and political party in Uruguay, also known as the National Liberation Army. Named for the Inca revolutionist, Tupac Amaru, it became active as a guerrilla force in the early 1960s, distributing stolen food and money among the poor in Montevideo. By the late 1960s, it was engaged in urban terrorism, political kidnappings, and murder. The military unleashed a bloody campaign of mass arrests and selected disappearances in the early 1970s, virtually defeating the guerrillas. Despite the diminished threat, the civilian government of Juan María Bordaberry Arocena ceded government authority to the military (1973), a bloodless coup which led to further repression against the population. Democracy was restored in 1985, and the Tupamaros were reorganized as a legal political party. Becoming part of the Broad Front leftist coalition, they helped it win power in 2004.


Wikipedia: Tupamaros
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Tupamaros National Liberation Movement

Tupamaros, also known as the MLN (Movimiento de Liberación Nacional or National Liberation Movement), was an urban guerrilla organization in Uruguay in the 1960s and 1970s. The MLN is inextricably linked to its most important leader, Raúl Sendic, and his brand of social politics.

Contents

Creation

The Tupamaro movement was named after the Inca revolutionary Túpac Amaru II. Its origins lie in the union between the Movimiento de Apoyo al Campesino (Peasant Support Movement) and the members of trade unions funded by Sendic in poverty-stricken rural zones. It grew in proportion[citation needed] to the ascending powers of Uruguay's military, which culminated in a notoriously oppressive dictatorship between 1973 and 1984.

The movement began by staging the robbing of banks, gun clubs and other businesses in the early 1960s, then distributing stolen food and money among the poor in Montevideo. It took as slogan "Words divide us; action unites us" [1].

At the beginning, it abstained from armed actions and violence; they have always made clear about not being a guerrilla group but a political movement; the eventual use of violent means would be made according to strategy and possibilities[citation needed]. In June 1968, President Jorge Pacheco, trying to suppress labour unrest, enforced a state of emergency and repealed all constitutional safeguards. The government imprisoned political dissidents, used torture during interrogations and brutally repressed demonstrations[citation needed]. The Tupamaro movement engaged then in political kidnappings, "armed propaganda" and assassinations. Of particular note are the kidnapping of powerful bank manager Pereyra Rebervel and of the British ambassador to Uruguay, Geoffrey Jackson, as well as the assassination of Dan Mitrione, the FBI agent documented to have taught techniques of torture to police forces in various Latin American countries. A very close friend to President Jorge Pacheco, the banker Pereyra Rebervel was highly unpopular, having "once killed a newsboy for selling a paper attacking him." He was released four days later, unharmed but a bit fatter. According to Langguth, the "poor in Montevideo were quoted as joking, 'Attention, Tupamaros! Kidnap me!'" [1].

The peak of the Tupamaros was in 1970 and 1971. During this period they made liberal use of their Cárcel del Pueblo (or People's Prison) where they held those that they kidnapped and interrogated them, without using torture[citation needed], before making the results of these interviews public. In 1971 over 100 imprisoned Tupamaros escaped the Punta Carretas prison. In the same year, in an uncleared episode, Pascasio Báez, a rural laborer that accidentally discovered one of their hideouts was killed.

Nonetheless, the movement was hampered by a series of events including important strategic gaffes and the betrayal of high-ranking Tupamaro Héctor Amodio Pérez, and the army's counteroffensive, which included the Escuadrón de la Muerte (Death squad), police officers who were granted repressive powers to deal with Tupamaros.[citation needed]

Along with police forces trained by the US Office of Public Safety (OPS), the Uruguayan military unleashed a bloody campaign of mass arrests and selected disappearances, dispersing those guerrillas who were not killed or arrested. Their usage of torture was particularly effective, and by 1972 the MLN had been severely weakened. Its principal leaders were imprisoned under terrible conditions for the next 12 years.

Despite the diminished threat, the civilian government of Juan María Bordaberry ceded government authority to the military in July, 1973 in a bloodless coup that led to further repression against the population and the suppression of all parties. The following month, the Tupamaros formed the Revolutionary Coordinating Junta with other leftwing groups pursuing urban guerrilla warfare in the Southern Cone. The following year, various South American regimes responded with the collaborative, international counterinsurgency campaign known as Operation Condor.

List of attacks

  • 31 July 1970 - Unsuccessful kidnap attempt on U.S. Foreign Service detail Michael Gordon Jones.
  • 31 July 1970 - Kidnapping of Dan Mitrione, executed on 10 August 1970.
  • 31 July 1970 - Kidnapping of the Brazilian consul Aloysio Mares Dias Gomides, released on 21 February 1971 for ransom ($250,000).
  • 7 August 1970 - Kidnapping of agronomist Dr. Claude Fly, released on 21 March 1971.
  • 29 September 1970 - Bombing of the Carrasco Bowling, killing the elderly caretaker Hilaria Ibarra
  • 8 January 1971 - Kidnapping of the British ambassador Geoffrey Jackson, released after 8 months for ransom (₤42,000).
  • 21 December 1971 - Killing of rural laborer Pascasio Báez by Sodium pentothal injection
  • 18 April 1972 - Four soldiers killed by machine gun fire while watching over the house of the commander in chief of the Army, General Florencio Gravina.[2]

Transition to democracy

After democracy was restored to Uruguay in 1985, the Tupamaros returned to public life as part of a political party, the Movimiento de Participación Popular (Movement of Popular Participation). Today the party comprises the largest single group within the ruling left-wing Frente Amplio coalition.

Raúl Sendic died in 1989 of Charcot disease.

After the Frente Amplio's electoral victory of 31 October 2004, two old-time Tupamaros, José Mujica and Nora Castro, became presidents of the two Chambers of the Congress.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b A. J. Langguth's Hidden Terrors (Pantheon Books, 1978 Chapter 4)
  2. ^ Heinz, Wolfgang & Frühling, Hugo: Determinants of gross human rights violations by state and state-sponsored actors in Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, and Argentina, 1960-1990. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1999, page 255. ISBN 9041112022

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Military History Companion. The Oxford Companion to Military History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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