LIMA, Peru — The bodies of two men slain by security forces were flown to Lima on Monday for DNA tests that authorities believed would show they were two of the Shining Path rebels' four leaders as officials claimed a major blow to the cocaine-funded insurgency.
President Ollanta Humala tentatively identified them as "Comrade Gabriel," or Marco Antonio Quispe Palomino, the youngest of three brothers from the Quispe Palomino clan that commands an estimated 500 fighters, and "Comrade Alipio" or Alejandro Borda Casafranca, the group's military chief.
Officials said they did not know the identity of a third guerrilla also killed Sunday night in explosions and fire in the Apurimac and Ene river valley of southeastern Peru, a region of dense jungles, rugged hills and few roads that has long been a redoubt of the Quispe Palomino gang.
The armed forces chief, Adm. Jose Cueto, told The Associated Press that authorities had little doubt that the DNA tests would confirm they got their targets.
"Alipio for certain. Still to be determined is Gabriel, but it is nearly certain that it is him as well," Cueto said.
Interior Minister Wilfredo Pedraza and Defense Minister Pedro Cateriano, who flew back with the three bodies to Lima, told reporters at the airport that the deaths culminated a joint police-military operation begun in late July called "Chameleon."
"It was not a coincidence," Pedraza said.
"Today is a holiday and a day of national unity," said Cateriano.