Stabroek News Sunday

Peru's president Boluarte names cabinet following Castillo ouster

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LIMA, (Reuters) - Peru's new President Dina Boluarte on Saturday named a cabinet that includes a promarket finance minister, as protests accelerate­d around the country to demand fresh elections following the ouster of democratic­ally-elected former President Pedro Castillo.

Boluarte took office on Wednesday after Castillo was sacked by Congress and later arrested on rebellion and conspiracy charges for having attempted to dissolve the legislatur­e to prevent an impeachmen­t vote.

She named former Deputy Finance Minister Alex Contreras, who is a career civil servant and is considered to have a pro-market stance, to serve as economy minister.

Chemical engineer Oscar Vera will serve as energy and mines minister, a key post for the copper-producing country.

"I have worked hard to form a cabinet for unity and democratic consolidat­ion that meets the needs of the country," Boluarte said in a televised address.

"I call for calm, tranquilit­y and peace. Let us avoid conflicts that put our brotherhoo­d as Peruvians at risk."

She also named former state prosecutor Pedro Angulo as prime minister and diplomat Ana Cecilia Gervasi as foreign minister.

Boluarte, a 60-year-old lawyer, was Castillo's vice president. She became the country's first woman president and will remain in office until 2026 if no new elections are called.

Castillo's lawyer has denied the charges and called the former president's detention illegal and arbitrary. He has requested asylum in Mexico and Mexican and Peruvian authoritie­s are in consultati­on over the request, Mexico's foreign minister said on Thursday.

Protesters are now demanding that the closure of Congress and that the country hold a democratic election rather than recognize Boluarte and allow her to finish Castillo's term. They are also demanding that a new constituti­on be drafted.

Local television images showed demonstrat­ions in some cities and a blockade on a section of the main highway along the Peruvian coast around 300 kilometers (186 miles) south of the capital Lima.

Some transporta­tion agencies reported that they were limiting services to protect passengers.

Boluarte on Saturday wrote on Twitter that a clash on Friday night between protesters and security forces injured eight people, four of whom were police officers, adding that seven people were arrested.

On Friday, she said she was willing to discuss early elections, but ruled out kick-starting constituti­onal changes for the time being.

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