The Borneo Post

Peru le without president again

Congress fails to agree on successor after Merino resigns after 5 days in power

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LIMA: Peru was without a president Monday after Congress failed to agree on a successor to interim leader Manuel Merino, who resigned following days of street protests against him.

Merino announced he was stepping down Sunday, following an ultimatum from Congress for him to quit or face censure after a police crackdown on protesters left at least two dead and scores injured.

“I want to let the whole country know that I’m resigning,” said Merino, 59, in a televised address, sparking celebratio­ns in the capital Lima following street protests against the ousting of his popular predecesso­r.

Congress now has to name Merino’s successor to become the country’s third president in a week.

Merino only assumed office on Tuesday, a day after the assembly impeached predecesso­r Martin Vizcarra on corruption charges. As speaker of Congress, he was next in line as the post of vice president was vacant.

A crisis session of Congress failed to agree on a new president Sunday night. Leftist legislator and former human rights

I want to let the whole country know that I’m resigning.

Manuel Merino

activist Rocio Silva Santisteba­n, supposedly a consensus candidate, needed 60 votes but she only got 42, with 52 against and 25 abstention­s.

“Congress had in its hands the solution to this political crisis that they generated. However, today they have turned their backs on the country,” former economy minister Vizcarra Maria Antonieta Alva tweeted.

Party whips then held a closeddoor meeting as thousands of protesters remained peacefully on the streets, undisturbe­d by police.

Thousands have taken to the streets in days of protests against Merino, who had launched the first, unsuccessf­ul, impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Vizcarra in September.

Elections are scheduled for April 2021 and Merino was due to leave office in July, when Vizcarra’s mandate was to end.

The Congress ultimatum came after the health ministry said two protesters were killed on Saturday during a massive march in Lima, which was repressed by police firing shotgun pellets and tear gas.

Merino said that to avoid a “power vacuum” the 18 ministers he swore in on Thursday would temporaril­y remain in their posts, though almost all had resigned in the wake of Saturday’s crackdown on protests.

His resignatio­n was greeted by noisy celebratio­ns in Lima, with demonstrat­ors sounding horns and banging pots.

“We succeeded. Do you realize what we are capable of doing?” Peru national soccer team midfielder Renato Tapia wrote on social media. Some lawmakers questioned the wisdom of removing Vizcarra in the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic and a crippling recession.

Vizcarra, 57, welcomed his rival’s resignatio­n, having questioned the legality of his dismissal last week.

The popular former president did not rule out a return to his mandate and urged an early ruling on a constituti­onal challenge to his Nov 9 dismissal.

“It is essential that the Constituti­onal Court make a statement urgently and say whether what the congressme­n did on the 9th is legal,” said Vizcarra.

Congress impeached and dismissed Vizcarra on Monday over allegation­s he took kickbacks from developers when he was governor of the Moquegua region in 2014, charges he denies.

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? People celebrate outside the Congress in Lima after Merino presented his resignatio­n.
— AFP photos People celebrate outside the Congress in Lima after Merino presented his resignatio­n.
 ??  ?? Merino announcing his resignatio­n in a televised message from the Government Palace.
Merino announcing his resignatio­n in a televised message from the Government Palace.

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