Peru recalls ambassador over Mexico’s ‘unacceptable’ support

Peru

Peru has recalled its ambassador to Mexico. Due to Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s “unconstitutional” comments. And Dina Boluarte’s refusal to resign. When the Mexican president referred to Peru’s administration as “unconstitutional,” Peru has indefinitely recalled its ambassador to Mexico. Moreover, Andrés Manuel López Obrador said that Pedro Castillo, the former president of Peru, had been … Read more

Peru Congress shelves President Boluarte’s bill for early elections

Peru
  • Boluarte proposed a bill on Wednesday to move elections to October 2023.
  • Protesters have been calling for new elections to be held as soon as possible.
  • Eight weeks of anti-government protests have resulted in the deaths of 48 individuals.

Peru: On Friday night, Peru’s Congress postponed President Dina Boluarte‘s measure to move elections to 2023, leaving a major demand of demonstrators whose rallies have rocked the country in recent weeks hanging in the balance.

In an attempt to quiet the violent protests, Boluarte proposed a bill on Wednesday to move elections to October 2023. After weeks of political infighting, a splintered Congress has repeatedly failed to agree on its own bill.

The President’s plan was taken up by a congressional commission on Friday afternoon, but it was shelved on a technicality before it even reached debate. It will not be debated again until July when the new legislative year begins.

Protesters have been calling for new elections to be held as soon as possible since previous left-wing President Pedro Castillo was deposed and imprisoned in December after attempting to illegally dissolve Congress.

Deaths due to the conflict

Eight weeks of anti-government protests have resulted in the deaths of 48 individuals in conflicts between demonstrators and police forces, the majority of whom were slain in Peru’s copper-rich south.

Congress had already agreed to move elections from 2026 to 2024, but this did not put an end to the protests.

The right-wing Popular Force party’s bill to call elections this year failed Wednesday after days of closed-door deliberations failed to produce a consensus.

Castillo’s party, Peru Libre, proposed a second bill for early elections and a non-binding referendum on a new constitution, but it was defeated Thursday night.

Other bills to move elections forward are still in the works, but none have reached an agreement.

Protesters in Peru have blocked highways with trees, stones, and tires, taken over regional airports, and burned down buildings, disrupting commodities delivery, business, and the functioning of some of the world’s most important copper mines.

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Organization of American States backs Peru’s president Dina Boluarte as protests intensifies

Dina Boluarte

The Organization of American States supports Peru’s president. She has asked for early elections to be held “as soon as feasible”. There is growing demand to hold the polls even earlier. Following weeks of anti-government rallies that have claimed dozens of lives, the permanent council of the Organization of American States on Wednesday pledged its … Read more

Peru protests: President calls for dialogue after more than 30 injured

Peru protests
  • At least 54 people have died in clashes with security forces since the unrest started.
  • 17 dead people who died during protests in Juliaca on January 9 had autopsies that revealed wounds from gunshot projectiles.
  • The majority of the victims are indigenous people from rural Peru.

Peru protests: After skirmishes between protestors and police during widespread rallies resulted in one death and 30 injuries, Peruvian President Dina Boluarte has appealed for dialogue.

“Once more, I urge conversation and urge those political leaders to cool off. Consider the nation with more objectivity and honesty; let’s discuss, Boluarte stated during a press conference on Thursday night.

Her remarks followed street battles in the nation’s capital Lima, where tens of thousands of demonstrators from all across the country encountered a tremendous display of force by local police.

In defiance of a state of emergency imposed by the government, protesters marched through Lima demanding Boluarte’s resignation and calling for general elections as soon as feasible.

A number of demonstrators were seen marching along Abancay Ave., close to Congress, after cutting over a security barrier, according to state television station TV Peru. Protesters can be seen assaulting security personnel and throwing objects in the video.

In the city’s downtown, police officers were also seen firing tear gas at some protesters.

Intense skirmishes also occurred in the southern city of Arequipa, where protestors hurled rocks at police and yelled “assassins” at them close to the airport, which on Thursday canceled flights. Live video from the city showed flames rising from the nearby fields and numerous people attempting to knock down fences close to the airport.

According to Boluarte, there have been injuries to 16 people and 22 members of the Peruvian National Police, as well as damage reports from Cusco, Puno, and Arequipa airports.

According to the interior ministry, a significant fire was also recorded in the heart of Lima, where ten firefighting units were dispatched to douse the flames.

Boluarte stated, “Those who are doing these criminal acts of vandalism will face the full force of the law; we will not permit it again.”

Additionally, she showed support for the attacked press personnel.

The acts of violence committed during these days in December and now in January will not go unpunished, according to Boluarte. “That’s not a peaceful protest march,” he added.

In Cusco, Peru, on January 18, 2023, a man holds a Peruvian flag as he participates in a protest before traveling to Lima to join protesters from all over the nation for the “capture of Lima” march calling for the resignation of Peruvian President Dina Boluarte following the removal and detention of former President Pedro Castillo.

In interviews en Espanol, as they gathered in Lima this week, some protestors denied the accusation that the marches were being led by vandals and criminals, which has been disparaged by public officials and certain media.

Daniel Mamani, a demonstrator, asserted that despite what “the state claims about us, we are not criminals or terrorists.”

“We are laborers, the everyday people who go to work; the government oppresses us; they all need to leave; they are useless.”

“At this time, the political climate justifies a change in the government, the executive branch, and the legislature. The immediate matter is that. Because there are other, more serious problems that haven’t been addressed—such as inflation, unemployment, poverty, starvation, and other historical problems—”another demonstrator called Carlos, a sociologist from the Universidad San Marcos, told CNNEE on Wednesday.

“A more violent environment”

The removal of former President Pedro Castillo in December ignited the Andean nation’s weeks-long protest movement, which is calling for a total overhaul of the government. It was also spurred by intense discontent with the nation’s living standards and inequality.

At least 54 people have died in clashes with security forces since the unrest started, and another 772 people, including security personnel, have been injured, according to information released earlier on Thursday by the national Ombudsman’s office. The rising death toll has also increased demonstrators’ rage.

Authorities in Peru have been accused of employing excessive force, including weapons, against demonstrators recently. Police have retaliated by saying that their methods adhere to global norms.

According to the city’s director of legal medicine, 17 dead people who died during protests in Juliaca on January 9 had autopsies that revealed wounds from gunshot projectiles. Days later, “unknown persons” allegedly burned to death a police officer.

The incident in Juliaca at the beginning of January, according to Jo-Marie Burt, a senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America, was “the biggest civilian death toll in the country since Peru’s restoration to democracy” in 2000.

According to Edgar Stuardo Ralón, vice-president of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), victims’ heads and upper bodies had also been shot during the commission’s fact-finding journey to Peru.

Ralon saw a “deterioration of public dialogue” during the Peruvian protests, in which indigenous people were denigrated and protesters were called “terrorists.”

He cautioned that using such words could create “a environment of increased violence.”

“I mean, it’s easier for the police and other security services to employ this kind of repression when the press uses that, when the political elite uses that, right?” Professor Omar Coronel, an expert on Latin American protest movements at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru.”

Information regarding those slain in the unrest has not been released by Peruvian authorities. However, according to experts, the most blood is being shed by Indigenous protesters.

The majority of the victims are indigenous people from rural Peru, according to Burt.

The protests have been concentrated in the country’s central and southern regions, which are home to a large indigenous population. These areas have historically been disadvantaged and excluded from the political, economic, and social life of the country.

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Peru extends state of emergency in capital city after protests worsen

peru protests

Peruvian President approves state of emergency measures in Lima and Puno and Cusco. Emergency measures give police special powers and restrict liberties like the right to assemble. There have been more than 40 fatalities in clashes between security personnel and protestors. In the capital city of Lima and two southern districts where violent anti-government rallies … Read more

President of Peru apologizes for protest death toll, refuses to resign

President
  • Boluarte bemoaned the violence that has killed more than 40 people.
  • A police officer burned alive in a truck
  • Dina Boluarte apologized for the situation.

Peruvian President Dina Boluarte has apologized for dozens of deaths in recent rallies around the country but has insisted that she would not stand down.

In a late-night address to the nation on Friday, Boluarte bemoaned the violence that has killed more than 40 people since December – largely protestors in fights with security forces, but also a police officer burned alive in a truck – and injured hundreds more police and demonstrators.

Boluarte said in the address: “Some voices that have come from the violent and radical factions are asking for my resignation, provoking the population into chaos, disorder, and destruction,” “I will not resign. My commitment is with Peru.”

“I cannot stop reiterating my regret for the deaths of Peruvians in these protests,” she said.

Following these statements, she apologized for the situation.

Protests have erupted across the South American country after former President Pedro Castillo was ousted. Boluarte, who was a vice president at the time, took over as president.

Boluarte also dismissed the notion of convening a constitutional assembly, as sought by demonstrators, citing Chile’s challenges in developing and approving a new constitution.

“That is not going to happen overnight,” she remarked.

For weeks, supporters of the former president have marched and barricaded streets across the country, demanding new elections and Boluarte’s resignation.

Protesters continue to construct roadblocks in 10 of the country’s 25 departments, according to authorities.

Several regional governors and professional associations, including attorneys and teachers, have called for Boluarte’s resignation.

Peru has seen political unrest in recent years. Boluarte, 60, is the sixth president in the last five years.

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Peru parliament rejects early elections despite public fury

Peru

MPs rejected a constitutional measure to hold early elections in 2023. Since Pedro Castillo’s resignation, calls for early elections have grown. 49 lawmakers backed the motion, 33 opposed it, and 25 abstained. A constitutional amendment that would have allowed for early general elections in 2023 was rejected by MPs on Friday as protests against the … Read more

Ex-President Castillo’s prison sentence is extended by 18 months

prison sentence

A judge in Peru has granted a request to extend former President Pedro Castillo’s imprisonment for 18 months. Authorities make their case against him on rebellion and conspiracy charges. Protesters want the jailed leader freed. A judge in Peru has granted a request to extend former President Pedro Castillo’s imprisonment for 18 months as authorities … Read more