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291 dead in Lima: the social roots of Perus tragic fire
By Cesár Uco
28 January 2002
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A terrible fire late last month in Lima left a toll of 291
dead and hundreds of wounded. The victims were drawn almost entirely
from the millions of marginalized poor who go daily into the streets
of Peruvian cities to earn a few cents or buy cheap goods.
The catastrophe began at approximately six in the afternoon
of December 29 when someone set off fireworks in the Mesa Redonda
shopping area in Limas historic center. Mesa Redonda is
an informal market where thousands of vendors sell their products
in the most precarious conditions imaginable.
Traditionally in December, Peruvian workers and poor buy hundreds
of tons of fireworks in Mesa Redonda to celebrate Christmas and
New Years.
A videotape revealed that the fire spread rapidly, consuming
five blocks in a few minutes because the ground was covered with
gunpowder that had fallen out of fireworks boxes as they were
unloaded for sale.
Forty fire trucks and 440 firefighters valiantly fought the
blaze for three hours. Thirty people trapped in a mezzanine were
rescued by the firefighters.
Towards midnight a macabre scene of pain and death dominated
the capital. Remains of wood, paper and plastic gave off foul
odors. Vehicles with drivers and passengers stood charred in the
middle of the road. On one corner, more than a dozen bodies stood
completely burned, joined to their pushcarts.
In another area, 30 bodies were found squeezed into a six-foot-square
space. Many merchants were asphyxiated when they sought refuge
in their stores and closed their doors to protect themselves from
looting. Dozens were electrocuted, possibly due to a surge in
a nearby electrical station caught in the fire.
In the following days, family members descended on central
Lima hospitals and the morgue, holding photographs of their disappeared
loved ones. Many held on in vain to the illusion that someone
would bring them news that their family members were still alive.
In the confusion, the number listed as disappeared rose to more
than 800.
Close to 4,500 merchants and vendors lost their jobs and scarce
savings in the fire. It is estimated that more than 30 percent
of the victims were youth, and the majority was female.
Judging from the names in funeral notices published in Lima
newspapersHuilca, Canchari, Ucañaya large percentage
of those who died were from the Peruvian highlands, people who
were part of the migration to the city over the last 20 year.
Hundreds of thousands of peasants have left poverty, drug traffickers
and the dirty war between the army and the guerrillas of Sendero
Luminoso in the countryside for the capitals crowded shantytowns.
Reports surfacing in connection with the Mesa Redonda fire
paint an alarming picture of poverty, social polarization and
state corruption in Peru that combined to produce such a mass
tragedy.
Government and police corruption
It is known that the Interior Ministry authorized the importation
of 1,100 tons of fireworks, the majority of which was destined
for Mesa Redonda. During the month of December the municipality
of Lima repeatedly tried to control the situation. While at one
point, thousands of police were to be sent to block the sale of
pyrotechnical materials, the majority of them were withdrawn from
the area on the order of the general in charge of the police,
Luis Sanchez Arias.
After the disaster, General Sanchez was retired from the service.
An investigation is pending into the relationship between police
commanders and the fireworks importers.
It has also been requested that the Investigative Commission
formed by the government examine the judges who handed down decisions
favoring the merchants without paying any attention to documents
that demonstrated the dangers of selling fireworks in the Mesa
Redonda area.
Polarization of wealth
But the Mesa Redonda tragedy cannot be explained solely by
the negligence and corruption on the part of judges and police
officials for whom the lives of the poor are of no value. The
disaster is also testimony to the failure of the free market measures
imposed by the International Monetary Fund and the government
of the United States. These policies were carried into practice
by the corrupt regime of former president Alberto Fujimori and
are being continued by his successor, Alejandro Toledo.
After a decade, the policy of opening up the national economy
to the world market, the privatization of billions of dollars
worth of state industries, the influx of US, Spanish and Chilean
capital, combined with the corruption of the state apparatus has
produced the greatest social polarization in the history of Peruvian
society.
The economic situation worsened with the Asian crisis in 1998,
natural disasters such as El Nino, and the current world recession.
These factors combined to put an end to the rise in the economic
level of certain sections of the population as well as any hopes
that the free-market model would favor the middle and working
classes.
But the ghettoization of the center of Lima and the upsurge
of street markets for the poor like Mesa Redonda are the result
of sharp social polarization, which intensified precisely with
the implementation of the policies proposed by the IMF and Washington.
Up until the 1990s, the historic center of Lima was an area
of banks, mining companies, government institutions, universities,
restaurants and established stores selling clothing, jewelry and
household items. But with the penetration of globally mobile capital,
all of these economic sectors abandoned old Lima to move into
new luxury buildings in residential neighborhoods more appealing
to foreign investors and the local bourgeoisie.
Big buildings equipped with the latest digital technology and
based on architectural designs, which are the equals of corporate
headquarters in New York or London, were built by the Spanish
banks Santander and Bilbao Viscaya, as well as hotel chains like
Marriott and Sheraton. US, Chilean and Peruvian capital threw
up luxurious shopping malls in the residential neighborhoods of
San Isidro, Miraflores and La Molina.
All along the shore of the Miraflores and Barranco areas, luxury
residential buildings have been constructed offering wonderful
views of the Pacific. In some, apartments sold for half a million
dollars until the recent recession depressed the real estate market.
While a minority of Lima residents has seen a fabulous increase
in wealthgrowing accustomed to imported cars, beach houses,
cellular phones, cable TV, the Internet and frequent shopping
trips to Miamithe great majority of the citys population
has seen its living standards plummet.
More than 50 percent of Perus population lives under
conditions of grinding poverty. National industry has diminished
in the face of competition from cheap imports, principally from
Asia. Mass unemployment continues to rise, and the small middle
class has practically disappeared.
With the destruction of industry and changes in labor laws
demanded as part of the free-market plans facilitating unrestricted
layoffs, hundreds of thousands of workers have found themselves
forced into the informal economy upon which the majority of the
urban population subsists.
Impoverishment of Limas center
This economy has been built up on the margins of the law and
by people with scarce resources, unable to meet the requirements
of building codes or procure licenses needed to establish businesses.
It is estimated that 50,000 people work in the informal markets
in Lima. The majority of them are poor people from the provinces
or people who have lost their jobs, such as nurses, accountants
and public employees.
The losses of the Mesa Redonda fire amount to $10 million,
not counting destroyed buildings. This amount, which is small
by the standards of industrialized countries, represents the combined
resources of the 4,500 people who worked in the five blocks that
were destroyed.
A look at the conditions of the informal markets that have
proliferated in Limaside by side with the construction of
the new city for the richdemonstrates that the outbreak
of such a disaster was just a matter of time.
Many of the buildings in the area were constructed of a mixture
of straw and mud, which has been used since colonial times. Short
circuits, like the one that cost the lives of dozens of people
in the fire, have been commonplace and a principal cause of previous
fires in other informal markets.
In one of the most popular informal markets, Gamarra, located
in the working class neighborhood of La Victoria, more than 90
percent of the galleries have exits that are narrow, impeding
response by firefighters. Electricity lines are uncovered and
hang like spider webs from the roofs, and tap water is undrinkable.
The graphics gallery of Virgen Del Carmen is a closed-in building
with 34 printers competing for customers. There is no ventilation,
nor are there windows or emergency exits.
The citys market grounds and commercial complexes have
suffered fires due to faulty electrical wiring and the negligence
of the vendors. Many roofs are made of plastic and cardboard.
Electric cables are not protected and in many cases are looted
from neighboring buildings.
The situation is similar In El Hueco, an informal market established
in 1983 by 400 street vendors who bought a piece of abandoned
land, a pit where a building was to have been constructed. This
market came close to burning down in 1996 and 2001. The same conditions
are to be found as well in the discotheques that have sprung up
in poor neighborhoods and have already produced various tragedies.
Conditions in Lima are not the exception, but rather the rule
for all Peruvian cities. It is estimated that more than 70 percent
of the countrys markets and commercial centers do not comply
with minimum safety regulations.
The remedies offered by recently elected president Toledofree
burials, relocation of those wiped out, health care and education
for orphans and $20 million plus a new tax to expand firefighting
resourceswill do little to change the conditions of poverty
and oppression of Peruvian workers that gave rise to the Mesa
Redonda catastrophe.
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