Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: Laura Bozzo, Ollanta Humala, Luis Horna, Gian Marco Zignago, Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne, Mario Testino, Italian Peruvian, Flavio Maestri, Carlos Carrillo Parodi, Yehude Simon, Danella Lucioni, Ricardo Belmont Cassinelli, Gabriela Perez del Solar, Francisco Bolognesi, Saby Kamalich, Luis Castaneda Lossio, Miguel Rebosio, Ronald Pablo Baroni, Diego Bertie, Luis Giampietri, Carlos Ferrero, Jaime Yzaga, Antonio Raimondi, Raul Ferrero Rebagliati, Guido Lombardi, Andres F. Dasso, Mario Carulla, Santiago Queirolo, Pilar Mazzetti, Marco Aurelio Denegri, Luisa Maria Cuculiza, Natale Amprimo, Cristina Aicardi, Anita Fernandini de Naranjo, Renzo Reggiardo, Carlos Raffo. Excerpt: Ollanta Moises Humala Tasso (born June 26, 1962) is a Peruvian politician and the President of Peru. Humala, who previously served as an army officer, lost the presidential election in 2006 but won the 2011 presidential election in a run-off vote. He was elected as President of Peru in the second round, defeating Keiko Fujimori. The son of Isaac Humala, a labour lawyer, Humala entered the Peruvian Army in 1982. In the military he achieved the rank of Lieutenant Colonel; in 1992 he fought in the internal conflict against the Shining Path and three years later he participated in the Cenepa War against Ecuador. In October 2000, Humala led an unsuccessful military revolt by 39 soldiers in the southern city of Tacna against President Alberto Fujimori; he was pardoned by the Peruvian Congress after the downfall of the Fujimori regime. In 2005 he founded the Peruvian Nationalist Party and registered to run in the 2006 presidential election. The nomination was made under the Union for Peru ticket as the Nationalist party did not achieve its electoral inscription on time. He passed the first round of the elections, held on April 9, 2006, with 30.62% of the valid...