Kuwait Times

Fujimori clings to fraud claim in Peru as vote tally nears end

-

LIMA: Right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori insisted Saturday that Peru’s presidenti­al election was marred by fraud, as final vote counting dragged on with her leftist rival slightly ahead.

“There was fraud in the voting process. There was manipulati­on in the voting process,” Fujimori said in a briefing with foreign reporters without providing evidence, as her chances of becoming president seemed to narrow, six days after people in politicall­y turbulent Peru cast ballots.

She alleged there was fraud in the counting of votes, too. “I am going to recognize the results but we have to wait until the end,” said Fujimori. She says irregulari­ties in the vote count favored her leftist rival Pedro Castillo, who is ahead by a slim 51,000 votes, with 99.88 percent of the votes counted.

Fujimori risks imminent trial on corruption charges if she loses to Castillo, who has already cast himself as the victor. Political commentato­rs say with Castillo apparently poised to win, Fujimori is trying to sow doubt about the legitimacy of the election so as not to look like the loser and salvage her political image. “She is clinging to the fraud claim because if she does not, everything she has accomplish­ed comes tumbling down. It is her way of avoiding failure and collapse,” said Hugo Otero, who advised former president Alan Garcia.

Fujimori has asked election authoritie­s to annul around 200,000 votes. The national election board on Friday announced a two-day extension of the deadline to file challenges to voting results, then later backtracke­d. An election observatio­n mission from the Organizati­on of American States cast doubt Friday on Fujimori’s rigging claims.

But it called on authoritie­s to wait until challenges to the vote had been resolved before calling a winner. “The Mission has not detected serious irregulari­ties,” the OAS mission said. Supporters of both candidates held rallies in Lima Saturday, with dozens of police setting up a cordon

between them to prevent clashes; and in other cities around the country.

Castillo called for cool heads to prevail. “Today is the moment that Peru needs serenity and needs coolness, not to fall into provocatio­n, since we are in a critical moment,” said the 51year-old teacher.

Three presidents in one week Peruvians voted last Sunday for their fifth president in three years after a series of crises and corruption scandals saw three different leaders in office in a single week last November, the last one being the country’s caretaker leader Francisco Sagasti. Seven of the country’s last 10 leaders have either been convicted or are under investigat­ion for graft.

As in Peru’s three previous presidenti­al elections, the tail-end of vote counting has been slow due to delays in delivering ballots from rural and jungle areas, and from abroad-where one million of the country’s 25 million eligible voters live. Whoever wins will lead a nation battered by recession and the world’s highest coronaviru­s death rate, with more than 187,000 deaths among its 33 million population. Two million Peruvians lost their jobs during the pandemic and nearly a third now live in poverty, official figures show.

On the campaign trail, Castillo said Peru’s mining, oil and gas resources “must be nationaliz­ed” as he vowed to raise taxes and increase state regulation.

Free-market defender Fujimori has sought to portray Castillo as a communist who would turn Peru into a new Venezuela or North Korea. —AFP

 ??  ?? LIMA: Supporters of leftist presidenti­al candidate Pedro Castillo of Peru Libre display a giant national flag during a rally in downtown Lima Saturday while electoral authoritie­s continue to review allegation­s of electoral fraud made by right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori of Fuerza Popular. —AFP
LIMA: Supporters of leftist presidenti­al candidate Pedro Castillo of Peru Libre display a giant national flag during a rally in downtown Lima Saturday while electoral authoritie­s continue to review allegation­s of electoral fraud made by right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori of Fuerza Popular. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait