Ccano massacre explained

Ccano massacre
Partof:Shining Path insurgency
Location:Ccano, La Mar, Peru
Target:Members of the
Fatalities:32
Injuries:7
Victim:-->
Perpetrators:Shining Path
Assailant:-->
Numpart:-->
Dfen:-->

The Ccano massacre was a mass attack on members of the (see Pentecostal revival movement in Chile) perpetrated by members of the Shining Path in the village of Ccano in La Mar Province, Peru, killing 32 people. The attack was part of the then-ongoing main phase of the Shining Path insurgency.

On February 23, 1991, Maoist forces attacked various members of the church active in prayer, killing 32 people, and injuring 7 more.[1] 4 of the attackers were killed by local civil defense forces before they entered the village.[2] The church was targeted because some of its members had cooperated with Peruvian military forces to counter the Shining Path.[3] [4] It was recorded that 63 children had lost one or both of their parents in the attack.[5]

Following an exhumation from a mass grave, the bodies of the victims were returned to the village in 2016.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1991-04-29 . Guerrillas Attack Church . 2023-11-25 . ChristianityToday.com . en.
  2. https://lum.cultura.pe/cdi/video/caso-pobladores-de-la-comunidad-de-ccano Caso: Pobladores de la comunidad de Ccano
  3. Web site: 2016-04-06 . In Peru highlands, support for Fujimori's daughter runs deep . 2023-11-25 . The Seattle Times . en-US.
  4. Web site: 2016-12-05 . Shining Path Leaders Designated Terrorists . 2023-11-25 . Voice of America . en.
  5. Book: Monroe, Kelly K. . Finding God at Harvard: Spiritual Journeys of Thinking Christians . 1997-09-18 . Zondervan . 978-0-310-21922-4 . 249 . en.
  6. Web site: 2016-04-08 . Shining Path Violence Haunts Peru Election Decades Later . 2023-11-25 . NBC News . en.