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Veteran Shining Path Hunter Vicente Tiburcio To Lead Peru's Push Against Gangs
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Peru's new president, José Jerí, moved quickly to put security at the heart of his administration, naming retired police general Vicente Tiburcio as interior minister and swearing in a full cabinet in Lima on Tuesday.
Jerí, 38, assumed office on Friday after Congress removed Dina Boluarte in an expedited impeachment, and he has framed his mandate around an immediate fight against organized crime and street violence.
Tiburcio, 61, is a career officer from the National Police's intelligence ranks who helped capture Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán in 1992.
He later led key counterterrorism and criminal-investigation units and built a reputation for targeting organized crime, drug trafficking, and extortion networks.
His appointment signals a turn toward experienced, enforcement-first leadership at a moment when extortion and contract killings have shaken businesses and neighborhoods in major cities.
The administration's first moves focused on prisons, where authorities say gang leaders coordinate rackets using smuggled phones.
Veteran Shining Path Hunter Vicente Tiburcio to Lead Peru's Push Against Gangs
Over the weekend, Jerí oversaw surprise searches in multiple facilities and warned that the state will tighten control if inmates continue directing crimes from behind bars.
The plan, officials say, is to combine prison crackdowns with stronger street policing and coordinated investigations to disrupt gangs at their command centers and along their money flows.
Alongside the security shift, Jerí named a 19-member cabinet that includes four women and appointed constitutional lawyer Ernesto Álvarez as prime minister.
The government inherits a volatile landscape-rising fear of crime, recent protests, and institutions under strain-and must show early, visible results without triggering backlash over heavy-handed tactics.
Why it matters beyond Peru: extortion acts like a shadow tax on daily life, raising costs for transport, construction, retail, and families.
If the new team curbs prison-based rackets and lowers targeted killings, it could stabilize local economies, improve investor sentiment, and set the tone for Peru's political cycle ahead.
If it fails, expect more social tension and uncertainty that will ripple through Andean trade, migration, and regional security debates.
Jerí, 38, assumed office on Friday after Congress removed Dina Boluarte in an expedited impeachment, and he has framed his mandate around an immediate fight against organized crime and street violence.
Tiburcio, 61, is a career officer from the National Police's intelligence ranks who helped capture Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán in 1992.
He later led key counterterrorism and criminal-investigation units and built a reputation for targeting organized crime, drug trafficking, and extortion networks.
His appointment signals a turn toward experienced, enforcement-first leadership at a moment when extortion and contract killings have shaken businesses and neighborhoods in major cities.
The administration's first moves focused on prisons, where authorities say gang leaders coordinate rackets using smuggled phones.
Veteran Shining Path Hunter Vicente Tiburcio to Lead Peru's Push Against Gangs
Over the weekend, Jerí oversaw surprise searches in multiple facilities and warned that the state will tighten control if inmates continue directing crimes from behind bars.
The plan, officials say, is to combine prison crackdowns with stronger street policing and coordinated investigations to disrupt gangs at their command centers and along their money flows.
Alongside the security shift, Jerí named a 19-member cabinet that includes four women and appointed constitutional lawyer Ernesto Álvarez as prime minister.
The government inherits a volatile landscape-rising fear of crime, recent protests, and institutions under strain-and must show early, visible results without triggering backlash over heavy-handed tactics.
Why it matters beyond Peru: extortion acts like a shadow tax on daily life, raising costs for transport, construction, retail, and families.
If the new team curbs prison-based rackets and lowers targeted killings, it could stabilize local economies, improve investor sentiment, and set the tone for Peru's political cycle ahead.
If it fails, expect more social tension and uncertainty that will ripple through Andean trade, migration, and regional security debates.

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