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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
By Marco Aquino and Kylie Madry

Peru president urges Congress to bring elections forward amid deadly protests

Peru's President Dina Boluarte attends a meeting with mayors and governors at the Government Palace, in Lima, Peru December 17, 2022. Peru Presidency/Handout via REUTERS

Peruvian President Dina Boluarte, who has said she is leading a transitional government, urged the country's Congress to pass a proposal to bring forward general elections in a news conference from the presidential palace on Saturday.

Boluarte, formerly Peru's vice president, assumed the presidency earlier this month after leftist then-President Pedro Castillo tried to illegally dissolve Congress and was arrested.

Since then, protests have broken out across the country, and at least 17 people have been killed. Another five have died of indirect consequences of the protests, according to authorities.

Boluarte on Saturday countered protesters asking for her to step down, saying "that does not solve the problem" and that she had done her part by sending the bill to Congress.

On Friday, Peru's Congress rejected the proposed constitutional reform to move elections forward to December 2023. Some members of Congress have called for the legislature to reconsider the proposal.

"I demand that the vote to bring elections up be reconsidered," Boluarte said, criticizing Congress members who had previously abstained from voting.

She also dismissed calls for a constitutional assembly, saying it was "not the time." Some leftist leaders have called for the assembly, which would redraft Peru's 1993 constitution, to boost the state's role in the economy.

Boluarte said there would be a reshuffling of her Cabinet in the coming days as well, following the resignation of the education minister and culture minister Friday.

"We will have a recomposition of the Cabinet, to be able to install knowledgeable ministers in each sector," she said.

The Cabinet departures Friday raise questions about the longevity of Boluarte's government, which has been rocked by political turbulence.

Protests since the arrest of former President Castillo, who is in pretrial detention while facing charges of rebellion and conspiracy, have crippled Peru's transport system, shuttering airports and blocking highways.

On Wednesday, Boluarte's government announced a state of emergency, granting police special powers and limiting citizens' rights, including the right to assembly.

Protesters have also blockaded Peru's borders, leaving tourists stranded and strangling trade.

"We want the immediate closure of Congress; we want the resignation of Dina Boluarte," Rene Mendoza, a protester at the border with Bolivia, told Reuters. "Today the Peruvian people are in mourning. ... The whole of Peru is in a struggle."

The head of Peru's armed forces, Manuel Gomez, slammed protesters during the news conference. "These bad people are moving from actions that are violent to actions that are terroristic."

Later Saturday, police raided the headquarters of a leftist party and a peasant group in the capital, Lima, under suspicion of protecting such "violent" actors, the agents claimed.

Leftist politicians rejected the raids. "The state of emergency is being used to commit abuses," said legislator Sigrid Bazan, who went to one of the sites.

(Reporting by Marco Aquino and Kylie Madry; Additional reporting from Monica Machicao; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Diane Craft and Jonathan Oatis)

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