Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Peru’s president questioned on luxuries

- FRANKLIN BRICEÑO AND MEGAN JANETSKY

LIMA, Peru — Peruvian President Dina Boluarte was interrogat­ed by prosecutor­s for five hours Friday as authoritie­s investigat­e whether she illegally received hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, luxury watches and jewelry.

Prosecutor­s have been investigat­ing the highly unpopular leader on charges of illicit enrichment and failures to declare assets. After she gave testimony, Boluarte rolled out of the offices in a car with tinted windows, surrounded by police and security detail.

In a televised speech following the meeting, Boluarte responded to the allegation­s saying “everything they’ve said is false.” She flaunted one of her Rolex watches and a number of other golden bracelets and necklaces that spurred on the controvers­y, holding them up for the cameras and railing against critics.

“With respect to the watches, I should recognize that it was a mistake to have accepted (them) on loan,” she said. “As these watches are not my property, I was not obliged to declare them.”

While she said some of the jewelry was hers, she said she received the watches as a loan from Wilfredo Oscorima, the governor of the southern rural region of Ayacucho.

Boluarte’s statements Friday appear to directly contradict previous comments she made saying the Rolex watches were “fruit of my labor,” working since she was 18.

The unfolding scandal is the latest turmoil that has wracked Peru’s political system in recent years. Earlier in the day, scuffles broke out as opposing protesters gathered near the building, waiting for Boluarte to leave.

While a number of protesters came to defend the president carrying a sign reading “Dina resist,” others blocks away from the presidenti­al palace railed against the embattled leader, carrying brooms and shouting “get them all out!” They were blocked by riot police, who drove them away with tear gas.

The probe began in midMarch after the digital news program La Encerrona spotlighte­d Boluarte wearing a Rolex watch worth up to $14,000 in Peru. Other TV shows later reported that the leader was seen wearing at least two other Rolexes as well as a gold and diamond Cartier bracelet estimated to cost more than $54,000.

The controvers­y was quickly dubbed “Rolexgate” on social media.

Peruvian law requires officials to declare jewelry whose price exceeds $2,791, and it’s still not clear where the watches and hundreds of thousands of dollars in bank transfers came from.

The controvers­y will only add headwinds for Boluarte, who is unpopular with 86% of Peruvians, according to a March survey by the Institute of Peruvian Studies.

Last week, armed police officers broke down the front door of Boluarte’s house with a battering ram and entered the property to search for the watches. They did not find them, and moved on to the presidenti­al palace, where they also weren’t located.

Top prosecutor Juan Villena said Tuesday that his office was expanding the scope of the investigat­ion, given that investigat­ors believe Boluarte has even more undeclared assets than they originally suspected.

The office estimated that her jewelry, including the Cartier bracelet and watches, may be worth as much as $500,000, and said she received more than $400,000 in “deposits of unknown origin” into her bank account.

Boluarte, a 61-year-old lawyer, was a modest district official before entering then-President Pedro Castillo’s government as vice president and social inclusion minister with a total monthly salary of $8,136 in July 2021. She became president in December 2022 — after Parliament dismissed Castillo — with a salary of $4,200 per month. Shortly after, she began wearing the watches in public.

Peru’s Congress on Thursday shot down two requests by a number of lawmakers to remove Boluarte from office. Boluarte called the motions “absurd” on Friday and thanked the congress for shooting them down.

 ?? (AP/Martin Mejia) ?? People run for cover as police launch tear gas to disperse demonstrat­ors trying to reach Government Palace on Friday to demand the resignatio­n of President Dina Boluarte, in Lima, Peru.
(AP/Martin Mejia) People run for cover as police launch tear gas to disperse demonstrat­ors trying to reach Government Palace on Friday to demand the resignatio­n of President Dina Boluarte, in Lima, Peru.

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