New Era

Peru president under investigat­ion

- - Nampa/AFP

PUNO - Peru’s prosecutor’s office on Tuesday said it was opening an inquiry against President Dina Boluarte and others for their role in the repression of anti-government protests that have seen at least 40 killed since December. The government announced a curfew on Tuesday in the southern Puno region in a bid to suppress the violent protests, a day after 18 people were killed there in clashes between demonstrat­ors and security forces.

The inquiry is into whether the alleged crimes of “genocide, aggravated homicide and serious injuries” took place during anti-government demonstrat­ions in the Apurimac, La Libertad, Puno, Junin, Arequipa and Ayacucho regions.

Puno, which borders Bolivia and is home to many Aymara Indigenous people, has become the epicentre of the protest movement against Boluarte by supporters of former president Pedro Castillo, who was ousted and arrested on December 7.

Prime Minister Alberto Otarola who is among those being investigat­ed for alleged “genocide”, alongside the interior minister and defence minister -- said the three-day night-time curfew would run from 8:00 pm to 4:00 am. Otarola’s cabinet obtained a vote of confidence from Peru’s parliament on Tuesday night, with 73 votes in favour, 43 against and six abstention­s.

Overnight on Monday, protesters looted shops and attacked police vehicles in Puno. Most of the bloodshed there took place when protesters tried to storm the airport in the city of Juliaca, which was being guarded by security forces.

Fourteen people were killed, many having suffered gunshot wounds, according to an official at a Juliaca hospital.

Three more people died during the ransacking of a shopping centre in the city, while the last victim was a police officer who the United Nations said died after his vehicle was set on fire.

The government has defended the actions of security forces in Juliaca, claiming those guarding the airport faced down an organized attempted “coup” by thousands of demonstrat­ors.

But UN Human Rights Office spokespers­on Marta Hurtado called on authoritie­s “to carry out prompt, impartial and effective investigat­ions into the deaths and injuries, holding those responsibl­e to account and ensuring victims receive access to justice and redress.”

Protests erupted a month ago when leftist Castillo -- who was facing several graft investigat­ions -- was forced from office and arrested on charges of rebellion after attempting to dissolve parliament and rule by decree.

Tension had since been mounting in the cities of Puno and Juliaca, where a week-long general strike has forced businesses to close.

Demonstrat­ors have set up roadblocks in six of the country’s 25 department­s. Officials say there are 53 separate roadblocks.

In the southern Andean region of Ayacucho, thousands marched through the streets of the city of Huamanga demanding Boluarte’s resignatio­n and new elections, which have already been brought forward from 2026 to April 2024.

The death toll brought a rebuke from the UN office in Peru, which expressed its “deep concern over the increasing violence.”

“We urge the authoritie­s and security forces to take urgent measures to ensure the respect of human rights, including the right to protest peacefully,” it added.

Leaders of the Catholic Church, which is dominant in Peru, called the latest violence “a situation of war.”

“We are in the hands of barbarism,” Cardinal Pedro Barreto, the archbishop of the central city of Huancayo, told RPP radio station.

The Puno regional government declared three days of mourning over the recent deaths and called on Boluarte to resign.

On Wednesday, a delegation from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights will visit Peru to investigat­e the protests and accusation­s of political repression.

On Tuesday, former Bolivia president Evo Morales, who is from the Aymara ethnicity and was his country’s first indigenous leader, called on Peru to end “the massacre of our brothers.” On Monday, he was barred from entering Peru as the government accused him of trying to interfere in the country’s affairs.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Mounting tension… Relatives of 18 people killed in clashes with security forces wait with empty coffins outside the morgue of the Carlos Monge Medrano hospital in Juliaca, southern Peru, on January 10, 2023. Peru on Tuesday announced a curfew in the southern Puno region in a bid to suppress violent protests.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Mounting tension… Relatives of 18 people killed in clashes with security forces wait with empty coffins outside the morgue of the Carlos Monge Medrano hospital in Juliaca, southern Peru, on January 10, 2023. Peru on Tuesday announced a curfew in the southern Puno region in a bid to suppress violent protests.

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