Bangkok Post

Election set for 2024 as crisis rages on

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Peru’s Congress on Tuesday voted to move up general elections from 2026 to April 2024 in a bid to ease tensions and head off deadly protests sparked by the ouster and arrest of president Pedro Castillo.

The political maelstrom has also touched off a diplomatic row with Mexico, which has voiced its support for Mr Castillo, a leftist onetime schoolteac­her.

Lawmakers voted 93-30 with one abstention to approve the change in the electoral calendar. The measure also stipulated that current President Dina Boluarte hand power to the winner of those elections in July 2024.

The leader of the legislatur­e, Jose Williams, said for the measure to take effect, it would need to be ratified in another vote in the coming months.

Mr Castillo was removed from office and detained earlier this month after seeking to dissolve Congress to rule by decree. His ousting was criticised by his leftist Latin American allies including Mexico, and brought thousands of his supporters into the streets.

A subsequent security clampdown, including the deployment of armed soldiers during a state of emergency declared under Ms Boluarte, followed. Officials say at least 21 people have died in the unrest. More than 650 others have been injured.

Demonstrat­ions rattled the country, with roadblocks and airport disruption­s, and thousands of tourists were left stranded, including at the famed Inca citadel of Machu Picchu.

Polls show that 83% of citizens are in favour of bringing elections forward to resolve the crisis roiling the South American nation.

On Tuesday, a delegation from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights arrived in Lima to meet with authoritie­s as part of a fact-finding mission.

Mr Castillo, a 53-year-old former union leader, unexpected­ly took power from Peru’s traditiona­l political elite in elections last year.

He immediatel­y came under fire, surviving two early impeachmen­t bids, and soon also found himself in the cross-hairs of prosecutor­s looking into numerous graft claims. He is the subject of six separate criminal investigat­ions.

Mr Castillo’s brief term in power was plagued by instabilit­y, with three prime ministers and seven interior ministers coming and going in just over a year. He has been ordered to be held in pre-trial detention for 18 months.

Mr Castillo was arrested as he made his way to the Mexican embassy in Lima to request asylum — sparking a diplomatic row between the two countries. His wife Lilia Paredes is also under investigat­ion for alleged involvemen­t in a criminal organisati­on.

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