Ricardo Letts Colmenares is a left-wing Peruvian politician.
Childhood and youth
His parents were Roberto Letts Sánchez, an agricultural businessman and Josefina Colmenares Castro, a housewife devoted to her family. He was the fourth of nine children. Ricardo Letts studied elementary education at Villa María and Inmaculado Corazón school, and high school at Colegio Santa María. He did his undergraduate studies at the Escuela Nacional de Agricultura de La Molina – ENA. In 1959, he finished his studies of agronomy and started working as manager at the Compañía Agrícola La Mina, Sayán. In 1963, he obtained his professional degree as an Agricultural Engineer with his thesis “Economic and Political Justification of the Peruvian Agrarian Reform”.
Student Leader (1956–1959)
Between the years of 1956 and 1959, Ricardo Letts was a student leader at the ENA. In 1959, he was elected President of the Student Union and participated as leader in the student and teachers movement of the ENA, which forced the ENA director renounce his position in 1958, initiating a reform in the institution in 1959.
In 1961, Letts joined the Acción Popular party and was head of the Chancay Provincial Committee of Acción Popular. He participated in the III National Congress of Acción Popular held in Iquitos. He met Fernando Belaúnde Terry during the trip travelling to Iquitos. Between 1962 and 1963, he worked in the Agrarian Reform and Colonization Institute as a researcher, working on the preliminary report about the Land Tenure Situation in Peru. He was elected National Secretary of Peasant Affairs of Acción Popular. Months later, Letts was elected National Chairman of the Youth Command of Acción Popular. In 1963, he started working the Cooperación Popular organization. In 1964, he was promoted to Secretary General of Cooperación Popular, but in February and April 1965, in the midst of a serious political conflict, he withdrew from both Acción Popular and Cooperación Popular. In April of the same year he married María Luisa Raygada.
On May 30, 1965, Ricardo Letts founded Vanguardia Revolucionaria together with Ricardo Napurí , Edmundo Murrugarra , Efraín Franco, Antonio Lobato and others. In August of the same year, Letts was arrested and accused of collaborating with the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria – MIR and Ejército de Liberación Nacional del Perú- ELN Ejército de Liberación Nacional guerrilla movement. He was set free and in February 1966 traveled to Paris as an exile. He then traveled to Cuba and went through a training program in the so-called Guerrilla School of military guerrilla groups for the revolutionary struggle in Peru. Letts also undertook postgraduate studies in Marxism and Socialist Economy in the Practical School of Advanced Studies at the Sorbonne in Paris. He was elected Secretary General of Vanguardia Revolucionaria in the II Congress in 1968.
Agrarian leader
Ricardo Letts was a consultant to the Confederación Campesina del Perú – CCP . Since 1995 he became a member of the Consultative Council. He was also president of the Consejo Unitario Nacional Agrario - CUNA,. On behalf of the CCP, Letts was president of the Popular National Assembly. He is currently the Chief Executive Officer of the agricultural company Huerto Alamein SAC, since 1981. Since 1997, he is also president of the Asociación Nacional de Productores y Exportadores de Aceituna Peruana - ANPEAP In the period 1998-2002, he was Secretary of the Convención Nacional del Agro Peruano .
Journalistic activities
Ricardo Letts has been editor and deputy editor of the weekly political news magazine “Marka” in Lima in 1975–1978 and again in 1983–1984. He was also Editor of the weekly political news magazine “Zurda” in Lima in 1978–1980.
Other Studies
Letts also did other postgraduate studies in the Escuela Superior de Administración de Negocios - ESAN , where he graduated with the thesis “Investment Project: Ecological Firewood”.
Books
Ricardo Letts has published the following books:
“La Reforma Agraria Peruana”
“Justificación económica y política de la reforma agraria peruana“
“Perú, Revolución, Insurrección, Guerrillas”
“Perú: El mito de la revolución militar”
“Pérou: Révolution socialiste ou Caricature de révolution” – “Perú: Revolución Socialista o Caricatura de Revolución”
“La Izquierda Peruana: Organizaciones y Tendencias” .
Politics
With regards to his political activity, Letts started working in Fernando Belaúnde Terry’s candidature. After that, he was president of the Agricultural Student Union of the La Molina National School of Agriculture. He became a leader of Acción Popular. In 1965, he left Belaunde’s party and founded Vanguardia Revolucionaria, an emblematic party of the new left-wing in the 60’s, which remained until 1984. On that year, Vanguardia Revolucionaria joined both the MIR and the Partido Comunista Revolucionario – PCR to form the Partido Unificado Mariateguista – PUM. In 1970, while Secretary General of Vanguardia Revolucionaria, he was arrested and deported to Colombia while he was en route to a public debate in a university round table. In 1974 he was arrested again after an intense activity supporting a peasant trade union organization and the land-taking movement in Andahuaylas. Letts took part in the National Unitary Command of Struggle in the strike of July 17, 1977 , and also in the leading committee of the National Strike of May 23 and 24, 1978 . He was arrested in May, some days before the 2nd national strike. He was deported and rendered to the Argentinian army in the barracks of Jujuy together with 12 other Peruvian leaders. In 1990, Letts was elected to the National Congress as deputy of Lima for the Izquierda Unida party. He held this position until the closure of Congress in 1992. There, along with Lourdes Flores and Fernando Olivera, lead the triumphant constitutional charge for illicit enrichment against Alan García Pérez. Also, he led the interpellation and censure of the Ministry of Agriculture Enrique Ross Link. He was one of the founders and leaders of the PUM. When Javier Diez Canseco proposed dissolving the PUM, he renounced at the same time that he was reaffirming his Socialist and Mariateguist principles in 1996.
Attempts to kill him (1991)
The 1970 deportation was a plot to murder him in flight from Panamá to Barranquilla. On October 13, 1991 Ricardo Letts received a “letter-bomb” intended to murder him. The letter-bomb was detected by his assistants and exploded when the UDEX attempted to deactivate it. The same date and time that General Rodolfo Robles , who had denounced the Cantuta assassinations, a missile was fired at Letts's olive orchard in Paracas. No one was hurt.
His participation in International Events
Ricardo Letts traveled to France invited by the National Assembly. He also traveled to the USA invited by the Department of the State, to China invited by the Chinese PC Central Committee and to Cuba several times between 1961 and 1994.
Founder of the Comité Malpica (Malpica Committee) (1998)
In 1998, Ricardo Letts, together with Raúl Wiener, Delfina Paredes and others, founded the Comité Malpica – CM, a revolutionary political organization, whose name was adopted in memory of Carlos Malpica Silva Santisteban , a great fighter in favor of the people and the Peruvian nation. On July 28, 2000, Letts and the CM and the Popular Assembly of the San Martin Square participated in the Marcha de los Cuatro Suyos and in the Popular Rebellion of Lima against the Fujimori regime . He publicly supported the idea of firing the National Jury of Elections building which was considered responsible for election fraud. In February 2001, on behalf of CM, Letts accused Alan García Pérez to the prosecutor on duty for the prison massacre and genocides of June 18 and 19, 1986. Between 2004 and 2005, he and the CM participated in the Movimiento del Frente Amplio - FA also conformed by the Movimiento Nueva Izquierda – MNI, Partido Comunista del Perú – Patria Roja PCP, Partido Comunista del Perú – PCP, Partido Socialista Revolucionario – PSR, Frente Popular – FP, Frente Obrero Campesino del Perú – FOCEP , Movimiento Democrático Pueblo Unido – MDPU Democratic , and Partido Nacionalista de las Comunidades Andinas – PANACA. He left the FA since it refused to support the Ollanta Humala ’s presidential candidacy. He then led the CM to support OHT in the 1st and 2nd elections.
His family
María Luisa Raygada, his first wife, died on February 8, 1977. They had had an only child named Rafael Alejandro Letts Raygada. He married Margarita Benavídes Matarazzo on June 23, 1979. Livia Ianesha Letts Benavídes, their only daughter, was born on May 21, 1982.
At present
On October 17, 2007, after 26 years of work, Ricardo Letts stopped being an olive producer. He also left the management of the ANPEAP and Convención Nacional del Agro Peruano – CONVEAGRO, in order to spend all his time in the political struggle from the CM direction.