The Japan Times - Life 'cut short': Peru's victims of forced sterilization seek amends

EUR -
AED 3.806165
AFN 76.03495
ALL 99.069479
AMD 408.278306
ANG 1.860666
AOA 947.662215
ARS 1090.05974
AUD 1.643681
AWG 1.866561
AZN 1.759486
BAM 1.956175
BBD 2.08451
BDT 125.434058
BGN 1.954612
BHD 0.390577
BIF 3056.50097
BMD 1.036259
BND 1.399775
BOB 7.134368
BRL 5.974545
BSD 1.032403
BTN 89.517169
BWP 14.309814
BYN 3.378355
BYR 20310.671491
BZD 2.073808
CAD 1.480223
CDF 2976.13486
CHF 0.946301
CLF 0.025966
CLP 996.41444
CNY 7.575359
CNH 7.57586
COP 4288.038706
CRC 525.303285
CUC 1.036259
CUP 27.460857
CVE 110.620727
CZK 25.106502
DJF 183.846148
DKK 7.45854
DOP 64.507374
DZD 140.364599
EGP 52.270031
ERN 15.543881
ETB 132.118577
FJD 2.421789
FKP 0.853449
GBP 0.832188
GEL 2.88594
GGP 0.853449
GHS 16.072398
GIP 0.853449
GMD 74.610783
GNF 8968.819831
GTQ 7.97553
GYD 216.53153
HKD 8.073435
HNL 26.317174
HRK 7.647121
HTG 135.216586
HUF 403.187934
IDR 16952.415948
ILS 3.718547
IMP 0.853449
INR 89.722546
IQD 1352.459395
IRR 43626.493344
ISK 146.620521
JEP 0.853449
JMD 162.560394
JOD 0.735125
JPY 159.060019
KES 133.677227
KGS 90.620699
KHR 4160.579322
KMF 492.378606
KPW 932.63299
KRW 1503.813484
KWD 0.319842
KYD 0.860365
KZT 522.470207
LAK 22512.720989
LBP 92796.970729
LKR 306.748833
LRD 205.449404
LSL 19.068857
LTL 3.059802
LVL 0.626823
LYD 5.084
MAD 10.360487
MDL 19.434727
MGA 4871.957926
MKD 61.541803
MMK 3365.727996
MNT 3521.207342
MOP 8.286589
MRU 41.152489
MUR 48.704737
MVR 15.956696
MWK 1790.051961
MXN 21.307988
MYR 4.622779
MZN 66.219125
NAD 19.068857
NGN 1551.374911
NIO 37.987469
NOK 11.604595
NPR 143.228162
NZD 1.828339
OMR 0.398968
PAB 1.032398
PEN 3.830735
PGK 4.210828
PHP 60.283837
PKR 288.143655
PLN 4.1735
PYG 8138.600214
QAR 3.763922
RON 4.977668
RSD 117.13003
RUB 99.994987
RWF 1469.374729
SAR 3.886239
SBD 8.76021
SCR 15.59358
SDG 622.791246
SEK 11.250465
SGD 1.402426
SHP 0.853449
SLE 23.575347
SLL 21729.827766
SOS 590.010314
SRD 36.429672
STD 21448.463917
SVC 9.033733
SYP 13473.436246
SZL 19.052746
THB 35.325543
TJS 11.253158
TMT 3.626906
TND 3.310935
TOP 2.427019
TRY 37.350188
TTD 7.007344
TWD 34.016538
TZS 2686.50398
UAH 43.057166
UGX 3793.727619
USD 1.036259
UYU 44.848602
UZS 13400.570166
VES 63.161742
VND 26512.680107
VUV 123.02672
WST 2.902381
XAF 656.086
XAG 0.032502
XAU 0.000358
XCD 2.800541
XDR 0.790455
XOF 656.086
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.976177
ZAR 19.177766
ZMK 9327.564807
ZMW 28.881679
ZWL 333.674895
  • RBGPF

    1.8700

    66.72

    +2.8%

  • SCS

    0.2900

    11.98

    +2.42%

  • AZN

    0.0700

    72.73

    +0.1%

  • GSK

    -0.4000

    36.07

    -1.11%

  • RIO

    -0.6000

    61.65

    -0.97%

  • RELX

    0.7700

    51.33

    +1.5%

  • CMSC

    0.0450

    23.46

    +0.19%

  • BP

    0.1300

    34.55

    +0.38%

  • BTI

    0.2200

    42.52

    +0.52%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    61.48

    -0.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    7.69

    +1.04%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.87

    +0.23%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    22.88

    +1.62%

  • BCC

    0.0600

    123.32

    +0.05%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.89

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.5

    -0.82%

Life 'cut short': Peru's victims of forced sterilization seek amends
Life 'cut short': Peru's victims of forced sterilization seek amends / Photo: Ernesto BENAVIDES - AFP

Life 'cut short': Peru's victims of forced sterilization seek amends

Florentina Loayza was 19 and mother to an infant when she was sterilized by agents of the Peruvian government, against her will.

Text size:

Decades later, the 46-year-old Indigenous woman is still fighting for an apology and reparations along with thousands of others robbed of their fertility in a 1990s state campaign condemned by the United Nations.

"My life was cut short," Loayza told AFP, recounting how her partner abandoned her over the procedure, which also left her with lasting pain.

"On the outside, we look fine, but inside we are withering," she said of the estimated 270,000 women who, like her, were coerced, pressured or deceived into surgery to have their fallopian tubes tied.

Eighteen women died, according to official data, during the campaign that marked the final years of then-President Alberto Fujimori's 1990-2000 rule.

His government said it had offered sterilization as part of a family planning project, but the UN women's rights committee said in a report last October the state had carried out a "systematic and generalized attack against rural and Indigenous women."

It said the procedures were carried out without informed consent from victims who were often poorly educated and did not understand Spanish, the language of officialdom in Peru.

"It’s not something that was done in the cities... but in a specific (rural) area as a way of fighting poverty so that the poorest women didn't reproduce," Leticia Bonifaz, who was a member of the UN committee, told AFP.

She said it was the biggest known case of forced sterilization in Latin America.

- 'Life hasn't been easy' -

Loayza today is an activist. She wishes she could have had more children and rarely smiles.

In 1997, she was living in rural Huancavelica in Peru's southeast, with a baby a few months old.

Her life changed dramatically when she left home one day, stuffed with other women onto the back of a truck "like sheep," to collect promised food aid from a nearby clinic.

When they got there, she said, the women were not given aid but forced surgery.

"We were grabbed by nurses and placed on stretchers. They injected us with something."

When she woke up, Loayza was informed she had been sterilized.

Back home, her partner refused to believe her, accusing Loayza of wanting to be infertile in order to sleep with other men.

He left her and Loayza moved to the capital, Lima, to make a living cleaning houses.

She said she has suffered abdominal pain ever since the procedure, and desperately needs government help with health care she cannot afford.

"Life hasn't been easy," Loayza told AFP.

- 'Internal scar' -

In the house she shares with her four children on the outskirts of Lima, 55-year-old Maria Elena Carbajal shows the only photo she has of her last pregnancy before she, too, was sterilized against her will.

Aged 26, she had given birth in a public hospital and claims doctors who scolded her for "having many children" told her that if she wanted to see the newborn, she had to agree to a procedure.

Out of fear, she acquiesced.

Carbajal's husband also left her as a result, and like Loayza, she survived by cleaning other people's homes.

"I took my four children and practically had to escape from my mother-in-law's house and go to my mom's house," she recalled.

"For many years I thought it was my fault."

Carbajal now heads an organization for victims like her, but in 2021, she suffered a back injury in an attack on a protest she was part of.

For two years, she has waited to have surgery on her back on top of the treatment she needs for a hormonal deficit caused by her sterilization.

"Not only are our bodies scarred," she said, "but we also carry the internal scar of being abandoned by our families."

In its report last year the United Nations urged the Peruvian state to "accelerate and expand its investigations" into the matter, and provide financial compensation, psychological support and a comprehensive reparation program.

Fujimori died last September, having served 16 years of a 25-year prison sentence for human rights abuses.

He was never brought to trial over the sterilization campaign.

In 2023, a Peruvian court ruled that involuntary sterilizations had been part of public policy at the time, and ordered compensation and health care access for victims.

This has not yet come to pass.

K.Yamaguchi--JT