Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Peru president refuses to resign

Dina Boluarte is unmoved by deadly protests.

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LIMA, Peru (AFP) — Peruvian President Dina Boluarte insisted Friday she will not step down, after another day of protests and roadblocks throughout the country saw calls for her resignatio­n and the arrest of a trade union leader with supposed links to Maoist rebels.

Supporters of ousted president Pedro Castillo have marched and barricaded streets around the South American country since December, demanding new elections and the removal of Boluarte, his successor and former vice president.

“Some voices that have come from the violent and radical factions are asking for my resignatio­n, provoking the population into chaos, disorder and destructio­n,” Boluarte said in an address broadcast on state TV Friday night.

“I will not resign. My commitment is with Peru.” Boluarte lamented that the protests have at times turned violent, as at least 42 people have been killed in clashes with security forces, including a police officer burned alive in a vehicle, while hundreds more have been injured.

She rejected the possibilit­y of calling a constituti­onal assembly as demanded by protestors, pointing to the difficulti­es Peru’s neighbor Chile has had in drafting and approving a new constituti­on. “That cannot happen overnight,” Boluarte added. Earlier on Friday, police in Peru announced the arrest of Rocio Leandro, a union leader from the south-central Ayacucho region with supposed links to Maoist rebels, who is accused of financing protests and recruiting demonstrat­ors.

Police spokespers­on Oscar Arriola claimed the arrest of Leandro proved that remnants of the Shining Path Maoist rebels were involved in the protests.

Arriola claimed Leandro was a former Shining Path member known as “Comrade Cusi.”

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