Stabroek News

Peru plunged into political upheaval as Congress ousts President Vizcarra

-

LIMA, (Reuters) - Peru’s Congress ousted President Martín Vizcarra yesterday in an impeachmen­t vote over corruption allegation­s, prompting immediate tensions in the Andean nation.

Vizcarra said he would accept the Congress vote and not take any legal action and leave the presidenti­al palace.

Head of Congress, Manuel Merino, an agronomist and businessma­n from the minority Popular Action, is expected to assume the presidency on Tuesday and will remain in office until the end of July 2021, when Vizcarra’s term was due to expire.

Merino called for calm after the vote and assured Peruvians that the April 11 presidenti­al election would go on as planned.

“It is already announced,” he said about the election in an interview with the local station América Televisión.

In the second effort by lawmakers to remove the centrist Vizcarra in a matter of months, the opposition­dominated Congress put forward 105 votes to oust him over accusation­s that as a governor he accepted bribes from companies that won public works contracts.

The 105 votes far exceeded the 87vote threshold out of 130 needed to remove him from office. There were 19 votes against his ouster and four abstention­s.

Vizcarra has rejected the corruption allegation­s as “baseless” and “false.”

He warned of “unpredicta­ble consequenc­es” earlier on Monday if lawmakers impeached him just months ahead of the April 11 presidenti­al election, in which he is not eligible to run.

Dozens of people gathered at Plaza San Martín in downtown Lima in support of Vizcarra after the news of his ouster as police officers kept a close eye on the crowd.

Video circulated on social media showing Congressma­n Ricardo Burga, who voted in favor of the impeachmen­t motion, being punched in the face by a bystander as he spoke to television reporters.

Vizcarra’s removal from office plunges the world’s No. 2 copper producer into political turmoil as it looks to recover from an economic recession brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Vizcarra, 57, lacked a party in the fragmented Congress, and had a tense relationsh­ip with lawmakers, with whom he frequently locked horns over his anti-graft agenda. He dissolved Congress last year after a long-running standoff, a move that prompted criticism by right- wing lawmakers.

Vizcarra survived a first ouster attempt in September in a separate impeachmen­t trial over alleged links to a case of irregular government contracts with a little-known singer. Only 32 in the chamber voted in favour of his ouster in that vote.

In November, however, lawmakers voted to move forward with a new impeachmen­t trial over accusa

Martín Vizcarra tions that Vizcarra accepted bribes from companies that won public works contracts when he was the governor of the southern region of Moquegua. .

Vizcarra’s removal could usher in a period of political tensions in the months leading up to elections as Peru is already strained by economic instabilit­y and the impact of the pandemic, analysts said.

“Political turmoil related to the latest impeachmen­t process and corruption allegation­s add to deep distrust of the political class ahead of upcoming elections,” internatio­nal firm Eurasia said in a report earlier on Monday.

Vizcarra’s government clashed with Merino in recent months over accusation­s that he tried to invoke the military in his request for Vizcarra’s removal. Merino denied any wrongdoing.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana