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Marco Arana

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Marco Arana
President of Broad Front
Assumed office
21 June 2013
Preceded byOffice established
Member of Congress
In office
26 July 2016 – 30 September 2019
ConstituencyCajamarca
Personal details
Born (1962-10-20) 20 October 1962 (age 62)
Cajamarca, Peru
Political partyBroad Front
Alma materNational University of Cajamarca

Marco Antonio Arana Zegarra (born in Cajamarca on October 20, 1962) is a Peruvian politician, sociologist, professor and former priest, founder and activist of the Tierra y Libertad [es] Movement. He ran unsuccessfully for President in the 2021 elections, placing 16th.[1][2]

Biography

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Marco Arana is the son of two teachers and the second of four siblings.[3] His mother, Alcina Zegarra, a native of Pataz in La Libertad, was a teacher in a mining camp; and his father, César Arana, was born in Cajamarca where he worked as a teacher in the rural area.

He studied primary education at the Marist Brothers school in Cajamarca and secondary school at the Antonio Guillermo Urrelo Experimental School. From a very young age he participated in the Christian youth communities, developing social work activities.

In 1979, at the age of 17, he entered the San José de Cajamarca Major Seminary and, in turn, began his sociology studies at the National University of Cajamarca, specializing in the area of rural development.[4] He also took philosophy courses.

In 1985, he arrived in Lima to continue his seminary studies and in 1989 he finished his theology studies at the Juan XXIII Superior Institute of Theological Studies. During this period he settled in the district of San Juan de Lurigancho and in 1990 he was finally ordained a diocesan priest.

In 1994, he had the opportunity to travel to Rome to study theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University, from which he graduated with honors.

He completed a master's degree in Sociology (1997-1998) specializing in Management and Public Policy at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru thanks to a scholarship from the Belgian Interuniversity Council. His thesis was the first in Peru on socio-environmental conflicts,[citation needed] which allowed him to graduate with honors again.

The following year (1999) he followed a diploma on water and sanitation at the Faculty of Engineering of the National University of Cajamarca.

In 2002 he traveled to the United States to complement his academic training with a diploma in Social Management from the Inter-American Institute for Social Development in Washington.

Environmental activism

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In 1985, he was invited to the district of Hualgayoc, where Cajamarca's oldest mines operate, to make a documentary video about mining and its impact on agriculture, where he was able to appreciate the unhealthy conditions in which adults and children entered the mine, up to a thousand meters below sea level, without helmets or shoes.[citation needed]

Five years later and already ordained a priest, he developed a parish soup kitchen program in the community of Porcón. The activities were expanded to teach nutrition courses, childcare and deworming days. Later, with the help of the community, he managed to found the Cristo Ramos de Porcón School, which allows young people with limited resources to have access to a quality secondary education.[citation needed]

In 1993, with the help of the Episcopal Center for Social Action, he denounced the expropriation of peasant lands by the Newmont and Buenaventura mining company, whose North American officials finally accepted their responsibility and paid compensation to those affected.[citation needed]

In 1999, he formed EcoVida, the first ecological organization in Peru, together with young activists, biologists, sociologists and educators from the National University of Cajamarca. With this organization they carried out various initiatives, such as the "Campaign to save the San Lucas River" and the "Awareness raising on the burning of plastic."

Another of the initiatives that he developed was the creation of brigades of environmental educators, which had the support of the Franciscan Sisters and whose objective was to help the population in the formation of bio-gardens and in the installation of improved kitchens.[citation needed]

In 2002 he created the Training and Intervention Group for Sustainable Development (GRUFIDES) together with activists who focused on the problem of communities, human rights and ecological rights.[citation needed]

In 2003, with GRUFIDES, it carried out the Rural Roads to Fight Poverty project, which included six studies on roads in areas of extreme poverty, in addition to the project "Development of capacities for the resolution of environmental conflicts", with which they won a distinction from the Sierra y Democracia program.[citation needed]

At the beginning of 2011, Stephanie Boyd's documentary "Operation Diablo", in which Marco Arana participated, received the International Human Rights Film Award from the Berlin International Film Festival. It shows the difficult relationship with mining companies.[citation needed]

Political career

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Tierra y Libertad movement

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In April 2009, he founded the Tierra y Libertad Movement, an environmentalist and leftist movement. In February 2010, he was suspended as a priest and decided to dedicate himself exclusively to his political candidacy with a view to the general elections of Peru in 2011. However, his party did not yet have its own electoral registration and seeks to promote a broad alliance of progressive parties and left with the social movements, of whose process he is proposed as a presidential candidate. However, his candidacy is not consolidated among the voters, so he temporarily withdraws from his candidacy.

After almost three years of collecting signatures, in April 2012 he managed to register the Tierra y Dignidad political party before the National Elections Jury, from which he promoted, together with other parties, the creation of a Broad Front of the left with a view to the 2016 electoral process. In October 2015, he presented himself in the primary elections of said party to be a candidate for the presidential elections of the following year, he would be in second place behind the Cusco congresswoman Verónika Mendoza. The ticket eventually place third, failing to qualify for the runoff.

Congressman

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In the 2016 general elections, the Broad Front became the first minority in parliament and Arana was elected Congressman. In these elections the alliance led by Verónika Mendoza obtains 20 representatives in the National Congress.[5]

In July 2017, after a year of internal confrontations between the Arana and Mendoza factions, the Frente Amplio bench formalized its break. The group Nuevo Peru (supporters of Mendoza) indicates that "this is a way out in the face of wear and tear on the bench where there is no consensus and an adequate functioning with the participation of the 20 congressmen"[6] and that they will not lose "one more minute in fights than they distract us from the problems of Peruvians »[7] due to the discrepancies with the faction of Tierra y Libertad led by Marco Arana.[8]

In an official letter sent by Nuevo Peru to Marco Arana, it reads: «The dialogue that you intend to initiate, after having excluded us more than two months ago from the decision-making of the parliamentary group, excluding from the meetings or failing to convene them, is a farce to which we are not going to lend ourselves.[6]

The insurmountable nature of the political discrepancies between the sectors of Marco Arana and Veronika Mendoza were exposed in the first presidential vacancy process against Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, where the Broad Front, led by Marco Arana, voted en bloc in favor of the vacancy while that the congressmen of Nuevo Peru left the hemicycle seconds before the voting began. Marco Arana's position in this process was because “the vacancy is led by the president himself. (...) This president lied to his constituents, he hid his conflicts of interest from them ».[9]

References

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  1. ^ PERÚ, NOTICIAS EL COMERCIO (2021-04-14). "Conteo rápido Ipsos al 100% de Elecciones 2021: Pedro Castillo y Keiko Fujimori disputarían segunda vuelta de Elecciones Generales de Perú del 2021 | Perú Libre | Fuerza Popular | Ganadores | Lima | Callao | Departamentos | Regiones | presidente | congresistas | Resultados Elecciones 2021 | pandemia Covid-19 | Presidente del Perú | Congreso | Parlamento Andino | | ELECCIONES-2021". El Comercio Perú (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  2. ^ CORREO, NOTICIAS (2021-04-12). "Flash electoral | Ipsos resultados boca de urna | Conteo rápido | Elecciones generales de Perú de 2021 | ganadores segunda vuelta | Candidatos presidenciales | PERU". Correo (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  3. ^ "Tierra y Libertad Huancavelica: Conozca a Marco Arana". Tierra y Libertad Huancavelica. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  4. ^ "Entrevista al Padre Marco Arana Zegarra". 2011-09-18. Archived from the original on 2011-09-18. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  5. ^ LR, Redacción (2016-07-22). "Estos son los 130 congresistas electos para el periodo 2016-2021". larepublica.pe (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  6. ^ a b PERÚ, NOTICIAS EL COMERCIO (2017-07-10). "Frente Amplio: Bloque de Nuevo Perú renuncia a bancada izquierdista | POLITICA". El Comercio Perú (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  7. ^ PERU21, NOTICIAS (2017-07-11). "Congresistas de Nuevo Perú se separan de Frente Amplio | POLITICA". Peru21 (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "División en Frente Amplio: diez congresistas de Nuevo Perú renunciaron a la bancada". Semana Económica (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  9. ^ PERU21, NOTICIAS (2017-12-19). "Marco Arana: "Votaremos por la vacancia de PPK" | POLITICA". Peru21 (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)