New government declares a 30-day state of emergency amid deadly protests against the ouster of ex-president Pedro Castillo.
Peru's armed forces to take control of key infrastructure as protests against arrest of ousted president Pedro Castillo enter a second week pic.twitter.com/WFNuOW5xkF
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Answering demands for immediate elections, she suggested they could be held a year from now, four months before her earlier proposal, which placated no one.
"Peru cannot overflow with blood," Boluarte said as she floated the possibility of scheduling general elections for December 2023 to reporters, just before a hearing to determine whether Castillo will remain jailed for 18 months while authorities build a rebellion case against him.
The judge then postponed the hearing because Castillo refused to participate.
Protests across the country
Protesters have blocked streets in Peru’s capital and many rural communities, demanding Castillo’s freedom, Boluarte’s resignation and the immediate scheduling of general elections to pick a new president and replace all members of Congress.
At least seven people have died, all in the same kind of impoverished communities whose voters propelled the rural teachers union leader to victory last year.
Castillo was ousted by lawmakers on December 7 when he sought to dissolve Congress ahead of their third attempt to impeach him. His vehicle was intercepted as he travelled through Lima’s streets with his security detail.
Prosecutors accused him of trying to seek political asylum at Mexico’s embassy.
'Keep calm'
"The only thing I can tell you sisters and brothers (is) to keep calm," Boluarte said.
"We have already lived through this experience in the 80s and 90s, and I believe that we do not want to return to that painful history.”
The remarks of Castillo's running mate, installed by Congress just a week ago to replace him, recalled the ruinous years between 1980 and 2000 when the Shining Path insurgency presided over numerous car bombings and assassinations.The group was blamed for more than half of the nearly 70,000 estimated deaths and disappearances caused by various rebel groups and a brutal government counterinsurgency response.
Source: AP
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