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Peru's Shining Path rebels kill at least 14 ahead of vote - military

Leftist Shining Path militants killed at least 14 people, including two children, in a remote region of Peru known for coca production and burned some of the bodies beyond recognition, the military said on Monday (May 24).

Pamphlets encouraging Peruvians to refrain from voting in the June 6 presidential election were found at the site of Sunday's (May 23) massacre, according to a statement from the joint command of Peru's Armed Forces.

The military called the murders "an act of genocide" and said the Shining Path had previously labelled such attacks a form of "social cleansing." The statement assured Peruvians of "a secure electoral process."

The incident took place in a region called Valle de los Rios Apurimac, Ene y Mantaro (VRAEM), where 75% of cocaine is produced in the South American country, according to authorities.

The Maoist rebel group, long regarded by the government as terrorists, launched one of the deadliest internal conflicts in Latin America in the 1980s. An estimated 69,000 people were killed, according to a truth commission.

The Shining Path began to fade in the early 1990s after the jailing of founder Abimael Guzman and has since morphed into a criminal group with ties to narco-traffickers.

Peru is slated to hold elections in less than two weeks, pitting socialist Pedro Castillo against conservative Keiko Fujimori.

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