This was the first massacre committed by the Shining Path against members of a peasant community. At the party's Third National Conference in July 1983,
Abimael Guzmán (Shining Path's leader) criticized the massacre as a strategic mistake: “What happened in Lucanamarca should never happen again...That is an expression of bad politics — that’s not how to behave...It’s erroneous to apply this line of attack because it can generate grave political consequences...Excesses can be accepted, but extremism never." Publicly, Guzmán later justified the massacre, telling
El Diario (a pro-Shining Path newspaper based in Lima) in 1988 that it had shown Shining Path would be "a tough bone to gnaw." Ultimately, the Shining Path's war against the Peruvian state faltered, and Guzmán and several other high-ranking Shining Path members were captured in Lima in 1992. On 10 September 2002, Guzmán told the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission "We, doctors, reiterate that we will not avoid our responsibility [for the Lucanamarca massacre]. I have mine, I'm the first one responsible, and I will never renounce my responsibility, that wouldn't make any sense." ==See also==