Lima’s mayor, Rafael López Aliaga, has shut down the Place of Memory, Tolerance and Social Inclusion (Lum), a museum dedicated to remembering Peru’s violent history.
The museum aimed to provide a space for understanding and healing the wounds from brutal clashes between government forces and guerrilla groups during the 1980s and 1990s.
Lum was managed by Peru’s Ministry of Culture and welcomed approximately 60,000 visitors annually.
It sought to commemorate the thousands of lives lost in the conflict and encourage discussions about the country’s past.
However, the museum’s closure comes as part of an ongoing ideological battle over how to remember Peru’s turbulent history.
Mayor López Aliaga, a member of the conservative Catholic group Opus Dei and founder of the far-right National Renovation party, has been a vocal critic of the museum since its inception.
He claims that it promotes a “false narrative” of the war, which resulted in over 70,000 casualties, according to Peru’s truth and reconciliation commission.
The official reason given for the closure was that the museum failed to meet municipal safety standards.
Mayor López Aliaga, a member of the conservative Catholic group Opus Dei and founder of the far-right National Renovation party, has been a vocal critic of the museum since its inception.
Human rights activists and organizations have expressed alarm over the decision, arguing that it contributes to a growing trend of misinformation surrounding the atrocities committed by both the Peruvian military and the Maoist guerrilla group Shining Path.
Eduardo González Cueva, a human rights consultant at the International Centre for Transitional Justice in New York, believes the closure fits into a broader right-wing movement that denies government-related crimes in Latin America.
The European Union in Peru also weighed in on the issue, emphasizing the importance of historical memory for democracies.
In a tweet, the organization praised Lum as a place where citizens could learn about their past and reflect on the suffering endured during the conflict, with the goal of preventing its recurrence.
The museum’s closure coincides with political unrest in Peru since December, when former president Pedro Castillo staged a coup after failing to dissolve the country’s congress.
On the same day Lum’s closure was announced, Amnesty International was scheduled to present a report on police’s excessive use of force against civilian protestors at the museum.
López Aliaga’s actions have raised concerns among human rights activists about the dangers of suppressing important historical events and the potential consequences of an uneducated population accepting misinformation as truth.
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