Car bomb outside U.S. Embassy in Peru kills 9
Bush trip to South American country will go on
LIMA, Peru (CNN) --A deadly car bombing near the U.S. Embassy in Lima
hasn't
deterred President Bush from his planned visit to Peru.
Police searched for clues Thursday after at least nine people were killed
and 12
others injured when a car blew up Wednesday night in front of a bank
in a shopping
center about four blocks from the embassy. Two embassy security guards,
at least
one police officer and a boy skating in the shopping center's parking
lot were among
those killed in the blast.
Bush, who leaves Thursday on a four-day Latin American trip, said the
explosion
would not affect his itinerary.
"Two-bit terrorists aren't going to prevent me from doing what we need
to do, and
that is to promote our friendship in the hemisphere," Bush said. "Our
neighborhood
is important to us. Peru is an important country. You bet I'm going."
Leftist guerrilla group suspected
No one has claimed responsibility for the explosion, but Bush indicated
the United
States had information about who was behind the blast.
"We might have an idea," Bush said in a brief conversation with CNN's
John King in
the Oval Office after a meeting with Vice President Dick Cheney. "They
have been
around before."
Senior administration officials said Bush was speaking of a preliminary
belief that the
left-wing Shining Path guerrilla movement was responsible for the attack.
Peruvian officials said they foiled a planned Shining Path attack on
the Lima embassy
last year, and U.S. officials have voiced concerns about a resurgence
of the group,
which was active in Peru in the 1980s and 1990s.
The U.S. State Department has designated the Shining Path -- formed
in the 1960s --
as a terrorist organization.
As for Bush's statements about responsibility, a senior official closely
monitoring the
developments in Lima said of the Shining Path: "We think it was them.
Obviously,
when a bomb goes off in the middle of the night we have to wait for
more
investigation. ... But we have been monitoring them, and it fits with
past
performance and the short list of people who behave this way."
Embassy open for business
State Department spokeswoman Susan Pittman said the embassy would be
open
Thursday, although a large area around it was closed off as a crime
scene. Embassy
personnel said people with nonemergency business should put it off
until another
day, Pittman noted.
The explosion left large holes in the street, heavily damaging a bank
and breaking
windows in neighboring buildings, including a nearby hotel. No injuries
were
reported in the hotel, and no damage was reported to the embassy.
Peruvian Vice President Raul Diez Canseco said the government condemns
and
rejects acts of terrorism and will make every effort to find those
responsible. He said
the military has been put on high alert.
President Alejandro Toledo was attending a U.N.-sponsored conference
in Mexico
when the blast occurred, but he cut the trip short. The vice president
is acting
president until Toledo's return.
Journalist Claudia Cisneros contributed to this report.