The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Ousted Peru leader in court to face rebellion charge

- By Franklin Briceño and Christophe­r Sherman

LIMA, PERU >> Peru’s stunning political crisis grinded forward Thursday, as former President Pedro Castillo appeared in court following a failed attempt to close a hostile congress and his successor looked for ways to unite the country behind institutio­ns already hollowed out by endemic corruption and mistrust.

At his initial court appearance, Castillo looked downcast as he gave simple yes or no answers and his attorney argued that he had been arbitraril­y detained and ousted from Peru’s presidency on trumpedup charges of rebellion.

The U.S. condemned Castillo’s power grab as illegal and even leftist allies in the region have refused to come to his rescue.

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador on Thursday called Castillo’s removal a “soft coup” fueled by deep-seated racism against the former school teacher from the heavily indigenous Andean highlands. López Obrador said that he had greenlight­ed Castillo’s request for asylum that he made in a phone call to the Mexican president’s office. But he said those plans were frustrated when Castillo was intercepte­d by police on his way to the Mexican Embassy in Lima, where a group of protesters awaited.

“It is no longer military interventi­on,” said López Obrador. “It’s done with control of the media by the oligarchs, underminin­g legal and legitimate­ly constitute­d authoritie­s, especially if they want to do something for the benefit of the long-suffering people who do not belong to the elites.”

In just three tumultuous hours, Castillo went from decreeing the dissolutio­n of Peru’s Congress to being replaced by his vice president, but the threats against his government had been building throughout his nearly 17-month presidency.

The political outsider, who won a runoff election in June 2021 by just 44,000 votes, stepped onto a noholds-barred political battlefiel­d in Peru, the South American country now on its sixth president in six years. By nightfall Wednesday, after a day of high political drama, prosecutor­s had announced Castillo was under arrest, facing charges of rebellion.

From the start, Castillo’s presidency seemed destined to be short-lived.

Castillo was considered a clear underdog when he joined the race to replace President Francisco Sagasti, who had been appointed by Congress in November 2020 — the last of three heads of state Peru cycled through in one week that November.

He campaigned on promises to nationaliz­e Peru’s key mining industry and rewrite the constituti­on, gaining support in rural Peru. But upon taking office in July 2021, Castillo immediatel­y

struggled with his Cabinet choices, a number of whom have been accused of wrongdoing.

The first attempt to impeach Castillo came last December At the time, a relatively small group of opposition lawmakers cited an investigat­ion by prosecutor­s into illicit financing

of the governing party. To remove the president requires two-thirds of the 130 lawmakers to vote in favor. Only 46 voted in favor.

Congress tried to impeach Castillo again in March for “permanent moral incapacity,” a term incorporat­ed into Peruvian constituti­onal law that experts say lacks an objective definition and that Congress has used more than a half dozen times since 2017 to try to remove presidents. The effort failed, this time with only 55 votes in favor.

Each time, Castillo defended himself, arguing he had done nothing wrong.

“I salute that common sense, responsibi­lity and democracy prevailed,” Castillo tweeted after the second attempt.

On Wednesday, Peru was girding itself for a third impeachmen­t vote. The night before, the president said in an unusual midnight address on state television that a certain sector of Congress had it out for him and that he was paying for mistakes made due to inexperien­ce.

Then shortly before noon Wednesday, Castillo went on state television and announced the dissolutio­n of Congress. He said elections would be held to choose new lawmakers and a new constituti­on would be written.

 ?? RENATO PAJUELO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Peru’s ousted President Pedro Castillo is escorted by police at the police station where he was being held in Lima, Peru, on Wednesday. Castillo was ousted by Congress and arrested on a charge of rebellion after he sought to dissolve the legislativ­e body and take unilateral control of the government, triggering a grave constituti­onal crisis.
RENATO PAJUELO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Peru’s ousted President Pedro Castillo is escorted by police at the police station where he was being held in Lima, Peru, on Wednesday. Castillo was ousted by Congress and arrested on a charge of rebellion after he sought to dissolve the legislativ­e body and take unilateral control of the government, triggering a grave constituti­onal crisis.

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