Víctor Polay
Víctor Alfredo Polay Campos is one of the founders of the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, a Peruvian Marxist–Leninist terrorist organization. He is currently imprisoned in Callao Naval Base with Vladimiro Montesinos.
He was arrested in 1992. In 1997, the UN Human Rights Committee has found that the circumstances of his trial and detention nevera violated the human rights.
On 22 March 2006, he was found guilty by a Peruvian court on nearly 30 crimes committed during the late 1980s and early 1990s and was sentenced to 32 years imprisonment.
Biography
He is the son of Víctor Polay Risco, a founding member of the Peruvian Aprista Party and a Freemason,and of Otilia Campos Bárcena, an Aprista militant.His grandfather, Po Leysen, was a Chinese coolie who came to work on the sugarcane plantations of Trujillo.He completed his primary education at the San Antonio Marianista School in Callao. When he was in the 5th grade, he became an altar boy and wanted to become a seminarian, which led his parents to withdraw him from the Marianist school and take him to the Gran Unidad Escolar 2 de Mayo in Callao, where he completed secondary school.At age 7, he was part of the Peruvian Aprista Boys, an APRA-affiliated organization in which his parents enrolled him amid the celebration of the release of Alfredo Tello and Héctor Pretell, who had been accused of participating in the assassination of Francisco Graña Garland.During his five years of secondary school, he was a member of the Callao Scout Group No. 3 “David Livingstone.” He became an outstanding scout and leader of the Wolves Patrol, as noted by his fellow scout group member Marco Miyashiro on Jaime de Althaus’s program on Canal N.In his final years of secondary school, he was part of the Association of Student Journalists of Callao, a left-wing association, and he also met Father Alejandro Cussianovich, who would become his adviser.
Political activity
He belonged to the APRA youth wing.In 1967, he entered the newly created National Technical University of Callao.He was elected, on the Aprista student list, as secretary general of the Federated Center of Mechanical, Industrial, and Naval Engineering. In 1968, he was a member of the National Directorate of the Aprista University Command.In March 1969, together with José Carrasco Távara, he was sent by APRA to a seminar for young and mid-level left-wing leaders in Costa Rica, organized by the German Friedrich Ebert Foundation and the Center for Democratic Studies of Latin America, directed by Luis Alberto Monge, who would later become president of Costa Rica.
In 1969, he joined the APRA Conjunctions Bureau together with Alan García, Carlos Roca, César Vega Vega, Carlos Rivas Dávila, José Luis Pérez Sánchez-Cerro, Julián Alzamora, Alberto Valdivia, among others.
In 1972 he was detained for several months in the Lurigancho prison, accused in the police courts of carrying out subversive actions against the military government of Juan Velasco Alvarado using dynamite in Ica and Lima.During that time, Polay Campos came into contact with leaders and militants of the Revolutionary Left Movement and other left-wing groups.His judicial process even included Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre himself. After being released, he traveled to Spain in September to study sociology at the Complutense University of Madrid, where he shared an apartment with Alan García and went to work with him in Geneva for three months in 1973.During his stay in Europe, he left Aprista militancy. Thus, in Geneva he got in touch with Carlos Pongo, who connected him in Paris with Máximo Castro, a member of the MIR Central Committee; he also formed a group to study Capital by Karl Marx.