Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Antauro Humala

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Birth name
  
Antauro Humala

Name
  
Antauro Humala

Nephews
  
Samin Humala

Rank
  
Major

Grandparents
  
Enedina Heredia


Service/branch
  
Peruvian Army

Allegiance
  
Peru

Role
  
Armed force officer

Antauro Humala antauro131825jpg


Siblings
  
Ollanta Humala, Ulises Humala

Nieces
  
Nayra Humala, Illariy Humala

Similar People
  
Ollanta Humala, Isaac Humala, Ulises Humala, Nadine Heredia

Parents
  
Elena Tasso, Isaac Humala

Great-grandparents
  
Jacinto Heredia

Antauro Humala Tasso is a Peruvian nationalist and a former army major.

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He attained international prominence on 1 January 2005 by occupying a rural police station in Andahuaylas, Apurímac Region. Assisted by a large group of followers (press reports range from 70 to 300 in their estimates), demanded the resignation of President Alejandro Toledo, whom he accused of selling Peru out to foreign (particularly Chilean) investors.

Four police officers and one gunman died on the first day of the siege. The following day Humala agreed to surrender, though had still failed to do so by the third day, claiming that the government had reneged on its promise to guarantee a "surrender with honour". Eventually he surrendered and was taken to Lima under arrest on 4 January 2005.

He and his brother Ollanta Humala had previously led 50 followers in a brief and unsuccessful uprising (Locumba uprising (es)) against President Alberto Fujimori during the dying days of his regime in October 2000. The two brothers call the movement they lead the "Movimiento Etnocacerista".

His brother, Ollanta Humala, served as the 65th President of Peru (2011-2016). His other brother, Ulises Humala, has also run for the presidency.

Antauro Humala was a candidate for national congress on April 2006 elections.

In September 2009 Antauro Humala was sentenced to 25 years in prison. On 14 May 2011, Antauro Humala filed a lawsuit against journalist Jaime Bayly claiming Bayly was "disseminating inaccurate versions" of the events in 2005.

In 2012 the National Penitentiary Institute transferred him to the high-security Callao Naval Base for “repeated violations of penitentiary regulations by the inmate.” There he joined Abimael Guzmán and Vladimiro Montesinos.

References

Antauro Humala Wikipedia