2002 Lima bombing
The 2002 Lima bombing was a car bomb attack in Lima, Peru that occurred at El Polo Shopping Centre, just outside the Embassy of [the United States, Lima|embassy] of the United States, killing nine people and injuring thirty-two. The blast came just three days prior to a visit to Peru from the United States President George W. Bush. No Americans were caught in the explosion. An estimated of explosives was used in the attack.
Attack
The bomb was planted at a mall four blocks from the American embassy. A seven-floor hotel and a branch of the Banco de Crédito del Perú bank were damaged, but the embassy compound itself, sitting behind a 20 ft high wall and distant from the street, received no apparent damage. Nine people died in the attack, including two embassy security guards and one police officer. They were later identified as follows:- Iván Marilúz Jiménez
- José Luis Gallegos Chávez
- Augusto Banda Serra
- Rafael Ernesto Barzola Vera
- Saúl Díaz Herrera, sub-officer of the National Police of Peru
- Augusto Gil Figueroa
- Carlos Rodríguez Ponce
- Juan Carlos Gamarra Orellana
- Zenón Enríquez Vargas
Responsibility
The United States suspected that guerillas from the left-wing Shining Path terror group perpetrated the attack. International terrorists groups including Al-Qaeda and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia were also suspected. Despite the main suspicion laying on Shining Path, the group never claimed responsibility, nor did the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, another active left-wing terrorist group during the period. An analyst claimed the attack may have been motivated against Bush's war on terror.The MRTA previously bombed the United States embassy in Lima on January 15, 1990. It was bombed again on July 27, 1993, this time by Shining Path. Four people were wounded in this attack.