(13 Nov 2004)
1. Protesters outside Callao Naval Base
2. Group of relatives of people killed in acts of terrorism arriving at the base
3. Arrival of victims of terrorism
4. Various of women holding protesters
5. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Martha Moyano, Congresswoman and relative of person killed:
"He should get life imprisonment. And the judges who are connected with these people should be sacked. We should remove the contentious part of the InterAmerican Court of Human Rights. This is what we are demanding, we are present here and will be as long as the trial continues."
6. Woman holding poster
7. Group from Amnesty International
8. Callao Naval Base, people standing on road side
9. Victims protesting and shouting
10. Tilt up of relatives and victims talking
11. Victims of terror acts making relatives of prisoners leave the area
12. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Julia Chumpitaz, Relative is accused of terrorism:
"Our relatives have been in prison for more than ten years in awful conditions. The state is playing people off one another. I am an affected family member in a difficult position which is something that they don't understand."
13. Media outside naval base
14. Security standing outside wall
15. Tussles between police and relatives of victims of acts of terror
16. Authorities leaving the court
17. Close up of drawing of Abimael Guzman during trial
18. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Manuel Fajardo, Lawyer of Abimael Guzman:
Question from journalist: "Have you had contact with Guzman today?"
Answer: "They gave me five minutes to talk with him but it was not sufficient. Five minutes is basically nothing."
19. Naval Base
STORYLINE:
The trail of former Shining Path rebel leader Abimael Guzman resumed outside Lima on Friday.
Outside the court, on a naval base in suburban Lima, relatives of people killed by the Shining Path and people who believe their family members have been wrongly accused of terrorism briefly tussled with police.
Congresswoman, Martha Moyano, said she believed Guzman should get "life imprisonment".
Officials have banned cameras and tape recorders at Guzman's retrial after defendants staged a demonstration at the first hearing.
The announcement reversed a decision earlier this week that would have allowed cameras during the first three minutes of future hearings and at the close of the trial.
Judges suspended a hearing last week when 69-year-old Guzman and five other leaders chanted revolutionary slogans at photographers and television crews.
Guzman and 15 co-defendants are being retried in a civilian court on terrorism charges.
Guzman, a former philosophy professor, launched his insurgency in 1980.
He was captured in 1992 and sentenced by a secret military tribunal to life in prison without parole.
A truth commission last year blamed the Shining Path for 54 percent of the nearly 70-thousand deaths and disappearances caused by rebel violence and a brutal state backlash.
Last year Peru's Constitutional Tribunal ruled the secret military courts created by former President Alberto Fujimori in the 1990s unconstitutional and prosecutors brought new charges against Guzman and other convicted rebels in a civilian court.
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