Daniel Estrada Pérez (January 3, 1947, in Cusco - March 23, 2003 in Lima), also known as Qosqoruna, was a Peruvianlawyer and politician known for his contributions to the urban development and heritage preservation of Cusco. He served as the Provincial Mayor of Cusco Province, which contains the city of Cusco, from 1984 to 1986 and again from 1990 until 1995. Estrada was then elected to the Congress of the Republic of Peru, where he served from 1995 to 2003.
In his professional career, he worked as a legal advisor for labor, civic, and cultural organizations until 1983.
In 1975, he was appointed dean of the Colegio de Abogados of Cusco, and in 1979,[1] as one of its founders, he was elected president of the Human Rights Committee of Cusco. He also served as the president of the Southern Peruvian Regional Council on Human Rights from 1981 to 1982.
In 1980, he served as the General Defender of the Indigenous Peoples of America before the Russell Tribunal (Rotterdam).
Political career
Provincial Mayor of Cuzco (1984-1986)
In the 1983 Cusco municipal elections|1983 municipal elections, he was elected Provincial Mayor of Cuzco by United Left for the municipal term 1984-1986.
Provincial Mayor of Cuzco (1989-1995)
In the 1989 Cusco municipal elections, he was re-elected as Provincial Mayor of Cuzco by the United Local Front for the term 1990-1993.
In the 1993 Cusco municipal elections, he was again re-elected Provincial Mayor of Cuzco for the term 1993-1995.
His administration also successfully lobbied for the recognition of Cusco as the "Historical Capital of Peru" in the text of the 1993 Constitution.[2] At the local level, he mandated the use of the Quechua name for the city ("Qosqo") in official documents and formalized Quechua names for several streets in the historic center of Cusco. He supported the Academia Mayor de la Lengua Quechua. This effort earned him the Quechua nickname of Qosqoruna ("Man of Qosqo").
In November 2000, after the release of the Vladivideos, the resignation of Alberto Fujimori from the Presidency of the Republic via fax from Japan, and the assumption of Valentín Paniagua to the Interim Presidency, his parliamentary position was reduced until 2001 when new general elections were called.
Congressman (2001-2003)
In the 2001 general elections, Estrada was again re-elected as a Congressman representing Cusco for Union for Peru, receiving 20,037 votes, for the parliamentary term 2001-2006.
He served as a Congressman until March 23, 2003, when Estrada passed away, and was replaced by Mario Ochoa Vargas to complete the parliamentary term 2001-2006.