Voices
- Share via
“Everything that has happened seems unreal to me. But I am proud of my son as he has died giving his blood, his life for his comrades.”
-- Felicita Cartolini, mother of slain rebel leader Nestor Cerpa Cartolini
****
“I was sitting there and [another hostage] came up to me and said: ‘They’re going to free us in a few minutes. Stay calm.’ So I thought it was a joke.”
-- Freed hostage Father Juan Julio Wicht
****
“If the government says terrorism is over, that’s wrong. The group’s numbers have been reduced, but there are still members and we cannot afford to lower our guard.”
-- Lima taxi driver Victor Montalba
****
“The Peruvians from day one of the crisis never requested assistance from us on how to handle this, and therefore no assistance was given by the United States. . . . Did we provide training for the raid, for the military assault team? No. Did we ever provide training to the military assault team? No.”
-- U.S. State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns
****
“I think [Peruvian] President [Alberto] Fujimori is great. Japanese politicians try to resolve problems with money, but that would only invite more terrorism. I feel sorry for the victims, but in this case, I support his choice of using military force.”
-- Taeko Tsuneki, a 64-year-old Japanese homemaker
****
“I would have acted in the same way, the same manner--wait, talk, and when the right moment comes, when there’s no more time left, strike.”
-- Argentine President Carlos Menem, speaking of Fujimori
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.