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2017 Lima shooting

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2017 Lima shooting
Royal Plaza [es], the location of the shooting
LocationIndependencia/San Martín de Porres
and Los Olivos, Lima, Peru
DateFebruary 17–18, 2017
10:00 p.m. – 12:00 a.m. (EDT)
TargetSecurity forces, then civilians
Attack type
Mass shooting
Weapons
Deaths6 (including the perpetrator)
Injured9
PerpetratorsEduardo Romero Naupay[1]
MotiveEviction from the perpetrator's hawker stall

The 2017 Lima shooting (Template:Lang-es) was a mass shooting that began on February 17 and ended on February 18, 2017 at the Royal Plaza shopping center, located in a disputed area[2] between the districts of Independencia and San Martín de Porres, and to a lesser extent in a sector of the district of Los Olivos, in northern Lima, Peru.[3] As a result of the event, at least 5 people lost their lives and 10 were injured.

The perpetrator of the shooting was identified by the police as Eduardo Glicerio Romero Naupay, a 32-year-old man born in the city of Huánuco. Romero had previously served in the Peruvian Navy, where he obtained a license to bear arms. During the shooting, he was killed by Lorenzo Machaca Esquía, a 29-year-old non-commissioned officer who was in civilian clothes at the time of the shooting.[4] It is presumed that the reason for the attack would have been the eviction of his mobile stand selling salchipapas and hamburgers, which had happened the day before because he was in a restricted area and did not have a license to operate as a vendor.[5][6]

Background

One day before the shooting, Romero had been captured by municipal inspectors from Los Olivos selling food informally at a food cart, for which he was ordered to vacate the place where he worked and warned to take away his products and his cart. Hours before the attack the day after, Romero had left a post on his Facebook account at 3:19 p.m. stating that he planned to kill the inspectors who dared to evict him.[7][8]

Shooting

At 10:00 pm. on February 17, 2017, despite the warning given to him the day before, Romero continued to sell with his street vendor in the same place, a circumstance in which the municipal inspectors of Los Olivos arrived. Martín Moreno Zavaleta, one of the inspectors, was in charge of removing Romero and reaching an agreement with him, however, the situation became a discussion when they asked him to hand over his sales cart, indicating that he could pick it up at the warehouse. once he had paid the fine that would be issued. This caused Romero to shoot Martín Moreno, who received 3 bullet wounds to the leg, face and abdomen, leaving him mortally wounded. In the midst of the commotion and chaos caused by the shots, Romero fled to the Panamericana Norte junction where he crossed the limits of the aforementioned districts heading to the Royal Plaza shopping center where he climbed the stairs and headed towards the nightclub area. Once there, Romero tried to enter the DiLuna nightclub, but a security worker did not allow her to enter, which caused Romero Naupay to shoot her, wounding her in the shoulder and neck.[7]

A security member of the Zeven nightclub—nearby to the other nightclub where the events were taking place—tried to help the woman but was also attacked by the subject, dying on the spot. Once inside the nightclub, Romero fired indiscriminately, injuring several people. He later left the nightclub and toured the second floor of the establishment while continuing to shoot. However, one of the pistols he was carrying jammed—the Bersa—forcing him to leave it on the ground for a few moments, pulling out the second pistol—the Beretta—to follow his attack. He then went to a restaurant and on the way shot Gloria Mostacero, who would become the third victim. After going around the second floor, Romero went down the stairs and continued shooting at a fast food business, where two people were, one of whom was killed. He also opened fire on a kiosk saleswoman, who fortunately was spared from the shootout. He then entered a Banco de Crédito bank branch where he gunned down Nicole Muñoz Peña, a business administration student, who tried to flee by taking refuge in the bank's ATM area. At that moment, the policeman Lorenzo Machaca Esquía, dressed as a civilian, confronted Eduardo, shooting him in the head and ending his life at the very door of the bank. The wounded were taken to a nearby clinic, where two more people died.[7][9]

Victims

5 people (including the perpetrator) were killed and 10 were injured in the attack.[10][11] A week later, Martín Moreno Zavaleta, who had been shot three times by Romero and had been in a coma,[12] died of cerebral infarction.[13][14]

Killed

  • César Arellano Chumacero, 32.
  • Susan Juárez Pilco, 28.
  • Martín Moreno Zavaleta, 51.
  • Gloria Mostacero Cruz, 25.
  • Nicole Muñoz Peña, 19.
  • Eduardo Romero Naupay, 32. (perpetrator)

Injured

  • Edeth Evangelista Hijar. (Shot in the right leg)
  • Esperanza López Luján. (Shot in the abdomen)
  • Fernanda Valverde Ramírez. (Shot in the lung and right arm)
  • Franz Randolf Daga. (Shot in the abdomen)
  • Gloria Estefany Valdes Taipen. (Shot in the head)
  • Mary Gavilán Huamán. (Shot in the head)
  • Noemí Huamanta Coyaton. (Shot in the thorax and abdomen)
  • Octavia Morales Anton. (Shot in the neck)
  • Silvia Sánchez García. (Shot in the right hand)

Perpetrator

Eduardo Glicerio Romero Naupay (Huánuco, March 29, 1985 — Lima, February 17, 2017), 31, was identified as the perpetrator. He was born in Huánuco and was of Colombian descent, his father committed suicide when he was younger and that caused him depression. When he was older, he decided to move to Lima and served in the Navy, where he learned to use weapons, and later worked as a security guard, where he obtained his own weapon by falsifying his mental health certificate. After losing his job as a security guard, he decides to start working as a street vendor, getting a food cart by his own means, with which he decided to start working in a restricted area where he was caught several times by municipal inspectors until the shooting.

According to his friends, he suffered a certain sexual and social frustration with women, had an advanced superiority complex as he supported machismo and repudiated feminism,[15][16] was attracted to the occult and satanism, collected weapons and admired a local hitman. He was also considered a quiet and reserved person, he listened to metal music and was reportedly addicted to Clemente Palma's novels, especially Cuentos malévolos, as confirmed by the police when they raided his house.[17][18] Members of Romero's family said that "he was withdrawn and uncommunicative."[19]

Online, his actions were celebrated by groups and Facebook pages of which he was a member. One group nicknamed him the "Peruvian Fede" after Federico Guevara, author of Monterrey shooting a month earlier.[20]

The body of Romero was buried in the Parque del Recuerdo de los Jardines del Buen Retiro Cemetery, located in Puente Piedra. Only ten people attended the funeral.[21]

Reactions

President of Peru Pedro Pablo Kuczynski expressed during a press conference that there is a "lack of control of clandestine pistols" alluding to the shooting.[22] Lorenzo Machaca Esquía, the policeman who killed Romero, was condecorated by Kuczynski.[23] Machaca later claimed that he received constant threats through media such as Facebook.[24][25] A week after the attack, he was reported to police by his wife, who accused him of domestic abuse.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Identifican al autor de la balacera en Independencia". El Comercio. 2017-02-18. Archived from the original on 2017-02-19.
  2. ^ Lara, Juan Guillermo (2019-06-04). "La zona en disputa entre Independencia y San Martín de Porres". El Comercio.
  3. ^ "Independencia: sujeto mató a 4 y fue abatido en Royal Plaza". El Comercio. 2017-02-18.
  4. ^ ""Solo evité que más gente inocente muera", afirma policía héroe". La República. 2017-02-21.
  5. ^ "Balacera en Independencia: aumenta a 5 el número de muertos". La República. 2017-02-18. Archived from the original on 2017-02-19.
  6. ^ "Cinco muertos y 9 heridos dejó balacera en Centro Empresarial y Financiero Multicentro de Independencia". Perú 21. 2017-02-17. Archived from the original on 2017-02-19.
  7. ^ a b c Acosta, Sebastián (2017-02-19). "Así fue el mortal recorrido que realizó el asesino de Independencia". RPP Noticias.
  8. ^ "Masacre en Independencia: asesino reveló en Facebook que ejecutaría ataque". Trome. 2017-02-20.
  9. ^ "Noche de terror: sujeto asesinó a tres personas, hirió a otras diez y luego fue abatido". Andina. 2017-02-18.
  10. ^ "Masacre en Independencia: Lista oficial fallecidos y heridos". Trome. 2017-02-18.
  11. ^ "El desesperado pedido que hizo en WhatsApp una de las víctimas de balacera en Independencia". La República. 2017-02-21.
  12. ^ "Tiroteo en Royal Plaza: gerente de Fiscalización sigue en coma". El Comercio. 2017-02-20.
  13. ^ "Lima: muere gerente municipal baleado en tiroteo de Independencia". Perú.com. 2017-02-24.
  14. ^ "Tragedia en Independencia: Gerente de Fiscalización está en coma y administradora de discoteca quedó parapléjica". Perú 21. 2017-02-23. Archived from the original on 2017-02-24.
  15. ^ "Independencia: Romero Naupay habría padecido alguna "frustración sexual"". América Noticias. 2017-02-20.
  16. ^ "Independencia: Eduardo Romero Naupay disparó principalmente a mujeres". América Noticias. 2017-02-20.
  17. ^ "Masacre en Independencia: Encuentran mensajes siniestros en casa del asesino Eduardo Romero". El Popular. 2017-02-20.
  18. ^ "Eduardo Romero: este es el perfil psicológico del asesino de Independencia". América Noticias. 2017-02-19.
  19. ^ "Familia de autor de la masacre de Independencia: "Era retraído y poco comunicativo"". Trome. 2017-02-18.
  20. ^ "DE TERROR: ESTE GRUPO DE FACEBOOK CELEBRA LA MATANZA EN EL DISTRITO DE INDEPENDENCIA". Utero. 2017-02-20.
  21. ^ "Asesino de la tragedia en Independencia fue enterrado con poca concurrencia de personas". Perú 21. 2017-02-20.
  22. ^ "Balacera en Independencia: esta es la ruta de terror que realizó Romero Naupay". América Noticias. 2017-02-19.
  23. ^ "PPK sobre policía héroe de Independencia: "Hizo lo que tenía que hacer". Panamericana Televisión. 2017-03-01.
  24. ^ "Región Policial reconoció a Lorenzo Machaca Esquía, quien abatió al asesino de Independencia". Serperuano. 2017-02-20.
  25. ^ "Amenazan por internet a suboficial que abatió al asesino de Independencia". La República. 2017-02-22.
  26. ^ "Independencia: PNP que mató a asesino fue denunciado por esposa". El Comercio. 2017-03-07.