in 2022
Choleo It is common within Peruvian society that the cultural and racial aspects of the indigenous people are rejected. The use of the word "
cholo", also widespread in other South American countries, has a strong racist component that has been appeased in recent decades, acquiring nuances of different connotation (even affective), depending on the context in which it is used. The term "
serrano" is commonly used as a pejorative with which the individual from the Sierra del Perú who emigrated to Lima or the other large urban agglomerations of the country are designated, and there is also discrimination against people in rural areas. Peruvians who had a background from the Sierra and were educated were described as "
gente decente" ("decent folks"), and recognized as "honorary whites", emphasizing their intellect over their
phenotypes.
Violence Ethnic violence and genocide During the Rubber Fever in the Peruvian Amazon between 1879 and 1912, rubbery businessmen took prisoners to whom various crimes against humanity were committed; the indigenous people were treated as "inferior", the event was later described as the
Putumayo genocide. As a result of the genocide, 40,000 to over 250,000 indigenous Peruvians were killed. In 1964, the first government of President
Fernando Belaúnde Terry from Lima bombed the basin of the
Yavarí River in the
Loreto department, the event was known as the
Matsé genocide, because the objective of Belaúnde was to exterminate the indigenous communities of Mayorunas, the advertising campaign to favor the act of the government described the mayoruna as "more bloodthirsty than any red skin from the far west" and to extermination with the phrase: "By blood and fire, civilization and barbarism dispute a territory where until yesterday the viper and the tiger reigned". Between 1980 and 2000, the indigenous and mestizos groups of the Peruvian jungle and mountains were the main victims of the
internal conflict in Peru. For the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, discrimination and racism, through terror, was one of the determining factors of the development of internal war. In an effort to stabilize the nation, the
Armed Forces of Peru drafted
Plan Verde, a
clandestine military operation developed by the
armed forces of Peru during the
internal conflict in Peru; it involved the
genocide of impoverished and indigenous Peruvians, the control or
censorship of media in the nation and the establishment of a
neoliberal economy controlled by a
military junta in Peru. Plan Verde detailed a goal to sterilize impoverished citizens in what Rospigliosi described as "ideas frankly similar to the Nazis", with the military writing that "the general use of sterilization processes for culturally backward and economically impoverished groups is convenient", describing these groups as "unnecessary burdens" and that "given their incorrigible character and lack of resources ... there is only their total extermination". The extermination of vulnerable Peruvians was described by planners as "an economic interest, it is an essential constant in the strategy of power and development of the state". Plan Verde's
forced sterilization of vulnerable groups through the
Programa Nacional de Población has been variably described as an
ethnic cleansing or
genocidal operation. At least 300,000 Peruvians were victims of forced sterilization in the 1990s, with the majority being affected by the PNSRPF. One can also speak of the so-called
Holocausto Asháninka ("
Asháninka Holocaust"), genocide perpetrated by members of the
Shining Path guerrilla against a this ethnic group.
Terruqueo: A Divisive Rhetorical Tactic , stating "Get out: Government Terrorists" In Peru, certain right-wing groups have employed a strategy known as
terruqueo, which involves utilizing negative campaigning and occasionally adopting a racist tone. This tactic is used to label those opposed to
anti-Fujimorist viewpoints, left-wing political opponents, and critics of the existing
neoliberal status quo as either terrorists or sympathizers of terrorism. This strategy is often associated with right-wing parties, particularly within the
Fujimorist movement. Since the 1980s, the term
terruco has been publicly employed by right-wing politicians in Peru to target left-wing, progressive, and indigenous groups, sometimes resorting to racial overtones. During the polarized second round of the
2021 Peruvian general election, a barrage of messages surfaced on social media, targeting voters who had chosen
Pedro Castillo, a rural teacher of Andean heritage, known for wearing traditional attire and speaking in Andean Spanish. These messages portrayed these voters as ignorant and advocated for harm to rural areas and indigenous communities, which were considered the base of support for
Peru Libre. Conservative politician
Rafael López Aliaga reportedly made statements inciting violence, including allegedly chanting "Death to communism! Death to
Cerrón! Death to Castillo!" to supporters in May 2021. Additionally, during a rally organized by
Willax TV owner
Erasmo Wong Lu on June 26, 2021, he was said to have proclaimed "Death to communism, get out of here, filthy communists, you have awakened the lion, to the streets!" During the
2022–2023 Peruvian political protests, the term
terruqueo was again wielded, this time by both right-wing factions and the government of
Dina Boluarte, to brand protesters as terrorists. This labeling provided authorities with a pretext to respond with force, often without accountability. == Discrimination against black people ==