Bangkok Post

President Vizcarra sworn in

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LIMA: Martin Vizcarra was sworn in as Peru’s new president on Friday, catapulted to the post when Pedro Pablo Kuczynski resigned to avoid impeachmen­t.

Mr Vizcarra, who had been serving as both vice president and his country’s ambassador to Canada, took the oath of office and donned the red-and-white presidenti­al sash before the Peruvian Congress.

The ceremony came shortly after lawmakers voted to accept Mr Kuczynski’s resignatio­n, rather than push ahead with i mpeaching him over corruption allegation­s.

“We will stand firm in the fight against corruption. Transparen­cy will be a pillar of our administra­tion,” said Mr Vizcarra, a former cabinet minister known for his meticulous management and unflashy style.

“Better times will come,” he told his fellow Peruvians in his first address as president.

Just a day before, the engineer and technocrat was far removed from the political hornet’s nest that brought down Mr Kuczynski, leading a relatively placid diplomat’s life in Ottawa.

He flew home on Thursday night, on his 55th birthday, and now takes over the remainder of Mr Kuczynski’s term, until 2021 — though early elections are still possible.

Mr Kuczynski, 79, had a short tenure as president: the former Wall Street banker was elected by a razor-thin margin in June 2016, and took office the following month.

But he lacked a majority in Congress, and was almost immediatel­y embroiled in a messy conflict with the main opposition party, Popular Force, led by Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of disgraced ex-president Alberto Fujimori.

When reports emerged linking Mr Kuczynski to Brazil’s scandal-plagued constructi­on giant Odebrecht — accused of paying massive bribes to politician­s around Latin America for juicy public works contracts — Popular Force mounted a relentless push to remove him from office.

Odebrecht revealed in December that it had paid nearly $5 million to consulting companies linked to Mr Kuczynski when he was finance minister.

The former president survived a first impeachmen­t vote that month. Three days later, he granted a pardon on medical grounds to former president Fujimori, who had been in jail for corruption and human rights violations.

That sparked speculatio­n of a back-room deal with an opposition faction led by Keiko Fujimori’s brother and rival Kenji.

When video tapes emerged of Kenji — who has now split from his sister’s party — apparently offering bribes to a fellow lawmaker to vote against the December impeachmen­t, the political damage to Mr Kuczynski proved to be too much.

Facing a new impeachmen­t vote, he announced his resignatio­n on Wednesday, proclaimin­g his innocence but saying it was best for the country if he quit.

Mr Vizcarra inherits a country still reeling from the drama and deeply mistrustfu­l of its politician­s, just as its strong economy is slowing.

Like Mr Kuczynski, he will face an opposition-controlled Congress, though he may benefit from the fact that he has no connection to traditiona­l political parties.

Keiko Fujimori appears willing to declare a truce — at least for now.

“This is a moment to stand united as Peruvians, strong and optimistic in the face of the challenges that await us,” she wrote on Twitter.

Mr Vizcarra will almost immediatel­y be thrust onto the internatio­nal stage when Peru hosts the Summit of the Americas from April 13 to 14 — an event the foreign ministry confirmed was still on.

Ironically, Mr Kuczynski’s demise echoed what happened to Alberto Fujimori himself in 2000, at the end of his decadelong run as Peru’s president.

Mr Fujimori had resigned the presidency by fax — sent from exile in a hotel room in Japan. But Congress rejected the resignatio­n, choosing instead to punish the ex-strongman.

Lawmakers ultimately impeached Mr Fujimori on the grounds of “permanent moral incapacity”.

Mr Kuczynski managed to avoid the same fate when Congress accepted his resignatio­n.

But the former leader’s troubles may not be over yet.

On Saturday a court is due to rule on a request from prosecutor­s to ban him from leaving the country.

Despite the turmoil, experts and markets appear cautiously optimistic that Peru will now regain political stability.

 ?? AFP ?? Peru’s new President Martin Vizcarra delivers a speech after taking oath during a ceremony at the Congress in Lima on Friday.
AFP Peru’s new President Martin Vizcarra delivers a speech after taking oath during a ceremony at the Congress in Lima on Friday.

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