occupies La Brea y Pariñas The first phase of the dictatorship, calling itself the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces, began with the
de facto presidency of the Army Commander General, Major General
Juan Velasco Alvarado, who overthrew President
Fernando Belaúnde, after the Talara Act and the Page 11 scandals, through a
coup d'état, on October 3, 1968. The coup was soon followed by the
military takeover of
La Brea y Pariñas oil complex on October 9, which helped the new government in its consolidation of power in the country. Velasco's administration articulated a desire to give justice to the poor through a regime of nationalization and
corporatism known as
Peruanismo. Velasco's rule was characterized by left-leaning policies, which aimed to create a strong national industry to increase the international independence of Peru. To that end, he nationalised entire industries, expropriated companies in a wide range of activities from fisheries to mining to telecommunications to power production and consolidated them into single industry-centric government-run entities and increased government control over economic activity by enforcing those entities as monopolies and disincentivized private activity in those sectors. Most reforms were planned by left-leaning intellectuals of the time, and some of them successfully improved the Peruvian quality of life. Among the state-owned companies created by the government were: •
PescaPeru: dedicated to the
fishing industry. •
MineroPeru: dedicated to the
mineral industry. •
PetroPerú: dedicated to the
petroleum industry. •
SiderPerú: dedicated to the steel and iron industry. •
Centromin Perú: dedicated to the
mining industry. •
ElectroPerú: dedicated to the
electric power industry. •
Enapu: dedicated to the country's
ports. •
EnatruPerú: dedicated to
urban transport. •
Enafer: dedicated to
rail transport. •
Compañía Peruana de Teléfonos: dedicated to
telecommunications. •
EntelPerú: dedicated to telecommunications. •
Correos del Perú: dedicated to
mail. A root and branch education reform was in march looking to include all Peruvians and move them towards to a new national thinking and feeling; the poor and the most excluded were prioritized in this system and the name of the
Peruvian Indian Day (), celebrated every June 24, was changed to ''Peruvian Peasant's day'' (). Velasco saw the revolution as one that was opposed to both capitalism and communism, stating in a 1970 address that In 1971, the country celebrated its
150th anniversary since its
independence. As a result, the Revolutionary Government established the
National Commission for the Sesquicentennial of the Independence of Peru () to manage the celebrations. The education reform of 1972 provided for
bilingual education for the
indigenous people of the Andes and the Amazon, which consisted nearly half of the population. In 1975, the Velasco government enacted a law making
Quechua an official language of Peru equal to Spanish. Thus, Peru was the first Latin American country to officialize an indigenous language. However, this law was never enforced and ceased to be valid when the
1979 constitution became effective, according to which Quechua and
Aymara are official only where they predominate, as mandated by law – a law that was never enacted.
Peruanismo was also characterized by authoritarianism, as the administration grew away from tolerating any level of dissent, periodically jailing, deporting and harassing suspected political opponents and repeatedly closing and censoring broadcast and print news media, finally expropriating all of the newspapers in 1974 and sending the publishers into exile. '' A cornerstone of Velasco's political and economic strategy was the implementation by dictate of an
agrarian reform program to expropriate farms and diversify land ownership. In its first ten years in power, the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces (GRFA) expropriated 15,000 properties (totaling nine million hectares) and benefited some 300,000 families. The former landlords who opposed this program believed that they did not receive adequate compensation for their confiscated assets and lamented that the state officials and peasant beneficiaries mismanaged their properties after the expropriation. On February 5, 1975, there was a police strike that generated
riots and
looting in the
historic center of Lima, which created a massive increase of crime and general unrest in the capital and precipitated the fall of Velasco. This event would be later known as the
Limazo. Months later, the
Tacnazo occurred, a coup by which General Francisco Morales Bermúdez became de facto president on August 29, 1975, beginning the
second phase of the Revolutionary Government. ==Second phase==