Bangkok Post

Ministers visit protest zone as dead buried

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LIMA: Peru’s newly installed President Dina Boluarte sent three ministers to Ica, one of the regions at the heart of recent protests on Monday, in an effort to placate public anger as families in nearby Ayacucho held funerals and mourned for the people killed in the unrest over the last fortnight.

The Andean country has been torn apart by protests since the Dec 7 ouster and arrest of former leftist leader Pedro Castillo, hours after he tried to dissolve Congress to avoid an impeachmen­t vote. At least 20 people have died, including many teenagers, with around half being from Ayacucho, the largely rural, impoverish­ed and indigenous communitie­s in the country’s south.

The police and armed forces have been accused by rights groups of using deadly firearms and dropping smoke bombs from helicopter­s. The military says protesters, most in Peru’s Andean south, have used homemade weapons and explosives.

The protests, the worst to hit the country in years, threaten to disrupt Peru’s economy and the political stability in the world’s No 2 copper producer where many have lost faith in government institutio­ns in recent years.

The delegation, including the ministers of farming, developmen­t and housing, comes after days when many families in nearby Ayacucho held funerals for those who were killed in clashes with police and security forces.

Images on Sunday showed relatives and friends, wiping away tears as they carried a white coffin in the streets of Ayacucho.

Housing Minister Hania Pérez de Cuellar, one of the trio in Ica, told radio station RPP the government wanted dialogue and was giving property titles to residents in Ica, some 300 kilometres south of Lima, where many blockades had started.

“In this crisis today ... I reiterate that dialogue is our main way to return to normality,” Mr Boluarte said.

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