Berliner Boersenzeitung - Lima's streets tense as Peru leader hints at early elections

EUR -
AED 4.033814
AFN 75.203219
ALL 98.853896
AMD 424.245886
ANG 1.978252
AOA 1013.656537
ARS 1066.640597
AUD 1.615587
AWG 1.976795
AZN 1.863257
BAM 1.957849
BBD 2.216329
BDT 131.167261
BGN 1.957904
BHD 0.414045
BIF 3193.656559
BMD 1.098219
BND 1.431505
BOB 7.600989
BRL 5.978487
BSD 1.097639
BTN 92.176879
BWP 14.51926
BYN 3.591997
BYR 21525.097055
BZD 2.212454
CAD 1.49148
CDF 3152.987251
CHF 0.938714
CLF 0.036841
CLP 1016.950821
CNY 7.708733
CNH 7.757194
COP 4576.960459
CRC 570.755694
CUC 1.098219
CUP 29.10281
CVE 110.380508
CZK 25.346923
DJF 195.465436
DKK 7.45746
DOP 66.289671
DZD 146.100532
EGP 53.155566
ERN 16.473289
ETB 131.13662
FJD 2.397964
FKP 0.836359
GBP 0.839146
GEL 3.009194
GGP 0.836359
GHS 17.398127
GIP 0.836359
GMD 75.777185
GNF 9473.914029
GTQ 8.493927
GYD 229.549168
HKD 8.529479
HNL 27.294563
HRK 7.466805
HTG 144.752136
HUF 402.046637
IDR 17282.676141
ILS 4.157655
IMP 0.836359
INR 92.23861
IQD 1437.911257
IRR 46240.520762
ISK 148.501063
JEP 0.836359
JMD 173.551614
JOD 0.778314
JPY 162.664927
KES 141.593626
KGS 93.017736
KHR 4465.693481
KMF 493.045569
KPW 988.396691
KRW 1476.105801
KWD 0.336483
KYD 0.914761
KZT 532.272152
LAK 23970.411367
LBP 98297.111077
LKR 322.033535
LRD 211.852659
LSL 19.108283
LTL 3.242756
LVL 0.664302
LYD 5.234597
MAD 10.785587
MDL 19.28627
MGA 5044.911778
MKD 61.575326
MMK 3566.973244
MNT 3731.74892
MOP 8.78165
MRU 43.446465
MUR 51.154681
MVR 16.857689
MWK 1903.40049
MXN 21.239228
MYR 4.703647
MZN 70.173825
NAD 19.108283
NGN 1778.67869
NIO 40.392269
NOK 11.654736
NPR 147.47158
NZD 1.784667
OMR 0.422834
PAB 1.097664
PEN 4.089079
PGK 4.373577
PHP 62.512286
PKR 304.766349
PLN 4.321482
PYG 8557.955519
QAR 4.000987
RON 4.977457
RSD 117.000977
RUB 105.929478
RWF 1488.751134
SAR 4.12492
SBD 9.091842
SCR 14.957097
SDG 660.566611
SEK 11.365515
SGD 1.430524
SHP 0.836359
SLE 25.091347
SLL 23029.102654
SOS 627.35936
SRD 34.261512
STD 22730.920921
SVC 9.605051
SYP 2759.308711
SZL 19.097811
THB 36.669219
TJS 11.679169
TMT 3.85475
TND 3.374231
TOP 2.572142
TRY 37.617631
TTD 7.443247
TWD 35.319823
TZS 2992.64747
UAH 45.226157
UGX 4034.24002
USD 1.098219
UYU 45.757884
UZS 14022.674104
VEF 3978356.882193
VES 40.611023
VND 27296.239148
VUV 130.382794
WST 3.072227
XAF 656.647142
XAG 0.034372
XAU 0.000413
XCD 2.967992
XDR 0.816495
XOF 656.659113
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.885048
ZAR 19.091048
ZMK 9885.301527
ZMW 29.093843
ZWL 353.626146
  • RBGPF

    58.9400

    58.94

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0770

    24.813

    -0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.28

    -0.15%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.7

    -0.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    6.98

    0%

  • SCS

    0.3500

    12.97

    +2.7%

  • RIO

    -0.1300

    69.7

    -0.19%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    138.9

    +0.44%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    66.5

    -0.71%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    46.29

    -0.69%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    77.47

    -0.59%

  • GSK

    0.4500

    38.82

    +1.16%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.66

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    35.29

    +0.51%

  • BP

    0.4200

    32.88

    +1.28%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    33.71

    -0.39%

Lima's streets tense as Peru leader hints at early elections
Lima's streets tense as Peru leader hints at early elections / Photo: Ernesto BENAVIDES - AFP

Lima's streets tense as Peru leader hints at early elections

Peru's new president Dina Boluarte has said she will form a new government Saturday, even as demonstrators pressed on Lima streets for ex-president Pedro Castillo to be freed after an alleged failed coup bid.

Text size:

Boluarte told journalists that if the situation "warrants it," the government will consult with Congress on holding an early presidential vote.

She urged those "who are coming out in protest ... to calm down."

Demonstrations continued on Friday, with protesters blocking roads with rocks, logs, and burning tires as they called for early elections.

The roadblocks interrupted traffic along the southern Pan-American Highway that links Peru and Chile.

Two days after the failure of his coup attempt, Castillo is sharing a detention center with former president Alberto Fujimori at a police base in Lima.

The prosecution accuses this left-wing rural teacher of rebellion and conspiracy, and a high court ordered him into seven days in preliminary detention.

On the streets, meanwhile, the demonstrations continue for the second day and fuel uncertainty about the possibility that Boluarte can conclude her term in 2026, as she herself announced upon taking office.

Hundreds of demonstrators marched through the colonial center of the capital, demanding Castillo's release.

"I voted for Castillo, this Congress does not represent us, we want Castillo freed," Maribel Quispe told AFP, in the march that left the central Plaza San Martin, and included the Prosecutor's Office on its route to Congress.

"We want them to close this corrupt Congress and free Castillo. He made the decision to close Congress because they wouldn't let him work," marcher Sara Medina said.

Several dozen riot police officers closed the avenues that lead to the legislature to prevent the protest from passing through.

The demonstrators burned banners with the image of President Boluarte, shouting "coup leader!"

Earlier Friday, Castillo's former chief of staff said that the Peruvian ex-president "could have been induced" by drugs to dissolve Congress and does not remember delivering the national address that led to his downfall.

Congress was supposed to debate Castillo's impeachment on Wednesday on corruption charges, but the president preempted them by announcing in a televised speech that he was dissolving the assembly and would rule by decree.

"There are indications that the president was forced to read the message of dissolution, and whoever wrote the text did so in order to provide an argument for his removal," ex-aide Guido Bellido said on Twitter.

Bellido, who visited his former boss at the Lima police base where he is held while under investigation for rebellion and conspiracy, also questioned Castillo's mental condition.

"The psychological state of P. Castillo when reading the message to the nation shows that he was not in control of his faculties. This suggests that he could have been induced. A toxicological test is urgently needed," he said.

The former rural school teacher won a shock electoral victory over Peru's traditional elites in June 2021.

The charges against him carry a jail term of between 10 and 20 years.

Boluarte, who served as vice president under Castillo, was hastily sworn in as Peru's first woman president just hours after the impeachment.

However, doubt is mounting over her ability to hold onto the job until the end of her mandate in 2026 in a country prone to political instability that is now on its sixth president in six years.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)