Marin Independent Journal

Peru's new government declares police state amid violent protests

- By Regina Garcia Cano

LIMA, PERU >> Peru's new government declared a national emergency Wednesday as it struggled to calm violent protests over President Pedro Castillo's ouster, suspending the rights of “personal security and freedom” across the Andean nation for 30 days.

Acts of vandalism, violence and highway blockades as thousands of Peruvians are in the streets “require a forceful and authoritat­ive response from the government,” Defense Minister Luis Otarola Peñaranda said.

The declaratio­n suspends the rights of assembly and freedom of movement and empowers the police, supported by the military, to search people's homes without permission or judicial order. Otarola said it had not been determined whether a nightly curfew would be imposed.

Peru has been wracked by nearly a week of political crisis and unrest that have undermined stability.

The troubles have “been increasing in such magnitude that the very idea of order, the very idea of authoritie­s that can govern the country in some way is called into question,” said Jorge Aragón, a political science professor at Pontifical Catholic University of Peru.

The decree, he added, is “a way of wanting to recover a certain minimum stability, a certain minimum functionin­g of the country, but obviously it is also the recognitio­n that without that use of force that cannot be achieved.”

The defense minister said the declaratio­n was agreed to by the council of ministers. It didn't mention Peru's new president,

Dina Boluarte, who was sworn in by Congress last week hours after lawmakers ousted Castillo.

Boluarte pleaded for calm as demonstrat­ions continued against her and Congress.

“Peru cannot overflow with blood,” she said earlier Wednesday.

Referring to demands for immediate elections, she suggested they could be held a year from now, four months before her earlier proposal, which placated no one.

Boluarte floated the possibilit­y of scheduling general elections for December 2023 to reporters just before a hearing to determine whether Castillo would remain jailed for 18 months while authoritie­s build a rebellion case against him. The judge postponed the hearing after Castillo refused to participat­e.

“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 recalled the ruinous years 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.

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 been killed, including a teenager who died Wednesday after being injured during protests in Andahuayla­s, a hospital director said.

All perished in the same kinds of impoverish­ed communitie­s whose voters propelled the rural teachers union leader to victory last year after he promised a populist approach to governing.

Castillo was ousted by lawmakers Dec. 7 after he sought to dissolve Congress ahead of their third attempt to impeach him. His vehicle was intercepte­d as he traveled through Lima's streets with his security detail. Prosecutor­s accused him of trying to seek political asylum at the Mexican Embassy.

In a handwritte­n letter shared Wednesday with The Associated Press by his associate Mauro Gonzales, Castillo asked the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to intercede for his “rights and the rights of my Peruvian brothers who cry out for justice.” The commission investigat­es allegation­s of human rights violations and litigates them in some cases.

 ?? JOSE SOTOMAYOR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Soldiers patrol in Arequipa, Peru, on Wednesday.
JOSE SOTOMAYOR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Soldiers patrol in Arequipa, Peru, on Wednesday.

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