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Reuters
Reuters
Business
By Alexander Villegas and Monica Machicao

'I am Inca blood': Peru protests fire up a divided nation

FILE PHOTO: Protesters clash with police officers during an anti-government demonstration following the ouster of Peru's former President Pedro Castillo, in Lima, Peru January 24, 2023. REUTERS/Angela Ponce

In the Peruvian southern border town of Desaguadero, indigenous protester Adela Perez is defiant after almost eight weeks of deadly clashes that have roiled the Andean nation, hit its huge copper mines and strained the country's democratic institutions.

The country of some 34 million people has been in the throes of its worst unrest in decades since the abrupt Dec. 7 ouster and arrest of center-left President Pedro Castillo after he tried to illegally shutter Congress to avoid impeachment.

FILE PHOTO: Demonstrators walk on a road during a protest against Peru's President Dina Boluarte, in Piscacucho, Peru January 26, 2023. REUTERS/Paul Gambin

The son of peasant farmers, Castillo had been a champion of the rural poor and indigenous groups who propelled him to office in 2021, despite falling short on pledges to spread mining wealth and being hit by regular corruption probes.

His dramatic ouster has fired up a deep-seated anger in the rural provinces, especially in the copper-rich south, against the political and wealthy elite in the capital Lima, with protesters taking aim at Congress and new President Dina Boluarte, Castillo's former deputy.

The violence has left 48 people dead with 10 more civilians killed in accidents or other issues related to the blockades.

FILE PHOTO: An indigenous woman blocks the Desaguadero at the border between Bolivia and Peru as demonstrators demand the resignation of Peruvian president Dina Boluarte, in Desaguadero, Peru January 26, 2023. REUTERS/Claudia Morales

The protests, which show no sign of abating, threaten to snarl copper supply from the world's No.2 producer of the red metal and destabilize Peru's government with little sign of a political solution to the unrest due to infighting in Congress.

Protesters have pledged to fight on until new elections are held, Boluarte resigns and Congress is shut. Many want a new Constitution to replace a market-focused 1993 text. Nationwide polls show strong support for many of the demands.

"Mrs. Boluarte, you cannot command or militarize this place here," said Perez, near a road blockade at the Peru-Bolivia border that has stymied the flow of trucks for weeks in the region of Puno, one of the regions at the heart of the protests.

FILE PHOTO: Women prepare food for the protesters at the border between Bolivia and Peru as demonstrators block the border and demand the resignation of Peruvian president Dina Boluarte, in Desaguadero, Peru January 26, 2023. REUTERS/Claudia Morales

"You can't send the military here because the soldiers are our children."

The government has called for a political truce and dialogue, offered its support for new elections to be held soon and blamed "violent groups" for stoking unrest.

Puno, home to the Peruvian side of the iconic Lake Titicaca, was the location of the worst violence in the protests yet, with 18 protesters killed in the city of Juliaca as well as one policeman who was burned to death in his car.

Adela Perez and other protesters block the road while demanding the resignation of Peru's President Dina Boluarte, on the border between Peru and Bolivia, in Desaguadero, Peru January 26, 2023. REUTERS/Claudia Morales

The protests, while focused in the south, have spread across the nation, with hundreds of road blockades using trees, rocks and car tires jamming up transport. Tourism has suffered badly with Machu Picchu closed earlier this month.

It has also sparked a democratic crisis with no clear solution beyond new elections held quickly, which Boluarte has called for but a divided Congress has yet to ratify.

"It doesn't matter if she wants to kill us, to kill us with our children. We are never going to give up until she (Boluarte) resigns," said Carmen Rosa Inofuentes, a protester in Lima, where one person died in clashes in the last week.

"When she resigns, we will leave. If needed, we will sleep in the street; there is no other way. She brought us into this war. We will face the police because we are full of anger, and that anger is exploding and getting out of control."

'WE ARE SUFFERING'

Protesters have marched with banners calling Boluarte a "murderer" and refer to the protesters' deaths as "massacres". Some carry catapults or whips; others hold checkered multicolored Wiphala flags of the indigenous Andean groups.

"I am Inca blood," said Cirilo Yupanqui, wearing a pink gas mask while protesting in capital Lima. He railed against government claims that the protests were being led and riled up by criminal groups.

"I'm not a terrorist, as they say. I'm not a criminal. I have a formal job. Just look at how they treat us."

The protests have raised the specter of violence of years past in Peru, the center of the Incan empire hundreds of years ago, including clashes between rebel Maoist groups and the government in the 1980s and 1990s that saw thousands killed.

"How many people are dying? For the love of God, out Dina, get out of the government. Don't hurt us anymore," said one of the protesters in Lima, who asked not to be named, adding that inflation and economic hardship were sharpening people's anger.

"We are suffering, everything is becoming more expensive, and we don't even have enough to eat."

Peru's inflation ended 2022 at around 8.5% on an annual basis, with analysts saying that many of the protest regions were the hardest hit.

Jackelyn Boncano, a demonstrator in Lima, pleaded for global attention on what was happening.

"I want everyone to be aware of and support this struggle because it is now or never," she said, adding the current government needed to change. "They can't stay in power in Peru."

(Reporting by Alexander Villegas, Marco Aquino and Monica Machicao; Additional reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Adam Jourdan, editing by Deepa Babington)

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