Berliner Boersenzeitung - As Peru protests rage, court denies ex-president's release appeal

EUR -
AED 4.031402
AFN 75.184927
ALL 99.057278
AMD 424.691131
ANG 1.977123
AOA 1001.554579
ARS 1069.892827
AUD 1.622925
AWG 1.97841
AZN 1.866779
BAM 1.956731
BBD 2.215064
BDT 131.092397
BGN 1.955636
BHD 0.413847
BIF 3174.786107
BMD 1.097592
BND 1.430687
BOB 7.59665
BRL 6.011076
BSD 1.097012
BTN 92.124269
BWP 14.510973
BYN 3.589947
BYR 21512.811648
BZD 2.211191
CAD 1.493708
CDF 3151.18761
CHF 0.939111
CLF 0.03684
CLP 1016.546367
CNY 7.704443
CNH 7.753387
COP 4589.549822
CRC 570.429936
CUC 1.097592
CUP 29.086199
CVE 110.91144
CZK 25.365683
DJF 195.353874
DKK 7.456856
DOP 66.431831
DZD 145.804518
EGP 53.119851
ERN 16.463886
ETB 132.157258
FJD 2.427908
FKP 0.835881
GBP 0.839126
GEL 3.007415
GGP 0.835881
GHS 17.419057
GIP 0.835881
GMD 75.73376
GNF 9469.480481
GTQ 8.489079
GYD 229.418153
HKD 8.524034
HNL 27.417835
HRK 7.462543
HTG 144.669519
HUF 402.386792
IDR 17268.531476
ILS 4.160199
IMP 0.835881
INR 92.197819
IQD 1437.297288
IRR 46214.12896
ISK 148.702062
JEP 0.835881
JMD 173.45256
JOD 0.777862
JPY 162.620939
KES 141.589722
KGS 92.963962
KHR 4456.225524
KMF 492.763552
KPW 987.832566
KRW 1475.669399
KWD 0.33628
KYD 0.914239
KZT 531.968359
LAK 24234.841185
LBP 98289.402012
LKR 321.849735
LRD 211.835057
LSL 19.185973
LTL 3.240905
LVL 0.663922
LYD 5.229988
MAD 10.781099
MDL 19.275262
MGA 5006.119346
MKD 61.57951
MMK 3564.937401
MNT 3729.619031
MOP 8.776638
MRU 43.629166
MUR 51.126236
MVR 16.848136
MWK 1905.419956
MXN 21.2653
MYR 4.700926
MZN 70.133409
NAD 19.185943
NGN 1777.661225
NIO 40.336273
NOK 11.672028
NPR 147.387411
NZD 1.79269
OMR 0.422649
PAB 1.097037
PEN 4.095664
PGK 4.371436
PHP 62.313065
PKR 304.637225
PLN 4.323578
PYG 8553.071083
QAR 3.995511
RON 4.977363
RSD 117.019857
RUB 105.586487
RWF 1465.285895
SAR 4.122703
SBD 9.086653
SCR 15.251632
SDG 660.205083
SEK 11.37215
SGD 1.431233
SHP 0.835881
SLE 25.077027
SLL 23015.958838
SOS 626.725102
SRD 34.552757
STD 22717.947291
SVC 9.599569
SYP 2757.733841
SZL 19.185779
THB 36.716685
TJS 11.672503
TMT 3.852549
TND 3.370981
TOP 2.570675
TRY 37.618186
TTD 7.438999
TWD 35.317782
TZS 2990.939091
UAH 45.200344
UGX 4031.937485
USD 1.097592
UYU 45.731767
UZS 14049.182793
VEF 3976086.242704
VES 40.597665
VND 27280.659873
VUV 130.308378
WST 3.070474
XAF 656.272361
XAG 0.034764
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.966298
XDR 0.816029
XOF 651.424043
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.727602
ZAR 19.103333
ZMK 9879.646049
ZMW 29.077238
ZWL 353.424315
  • RBGPF

    -1.1600

    58.94

    -1.97%

  • CMSD

    -0.0290

    24.784

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.8100

    65.69

    -1.23%

  • SCS

    -0.0630

    12.907

    -0.49%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    6.88

    -1.45%

  • RIO

    -0.1200

    69.58

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    0.0300

    38.85

    +0.08%

  • CMSC

    -0.0430

    24.657

    -0.17%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    9.7

    +0.41%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    46.02

    -0.59%

  • BCC

    1.0700

    139.97

    +0.76%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.25

    -0.23%

  • BCE

    -0.1950

    33.515

    -0.58%

  • BP

    0.2850

    33.165

    +0.86%

  • AZN

    -0.3200

    77.15

    -0.41%

  • BTI

    -0.0650

    35.225

    -0.18%

As Peru protests rage, court denies ex-president's release appeal
As Peru protests rage, court denies ex-president's release appeal / Photo: JAVIER TORRES - AFP/File

As Peru protests rage, court denies ex-president's release appeal

A court in Peru rejected on Tuesday an appeal by former president Pedro Castillo to be freed from detention on charges of rebellion and conspiracy, as officials warned protests demanding his release could spiral out of control.

Text size:

Prosecutors late Tuesday filed a request to hold Castillo in pre-trial detention for 18 months, marking the formal start of the investigation against him, a prosecution source told AFP.

Castillo, who was removed from office and arrested after attempting to dissolve parliament and rule by decree, had earlier told the court he would "never give up" his cause.

Castillo also called on police and the military to "stop killing" protesters who continue to demand his release and reinstatement, after violent clashes between security forces and demonstrators left seven people dead in recent days.

But Judge Cesar San Martin rejected his appeal for release following a virtual hearing.

Castillo's demise was rapid after he had attempted to sideline parliament last Wednesday just hours before it was due to hold a third impeachment vote against him. Castillo and his family were being investigated for alleged corruption.

Congress went ahead with its vote and overwhelmingly decided to impeach him for "moral incapacity."

He was provisionally detained for seven days.

Within hours Castillo's vice president, Dina Boluarte, a former prosecutor, was sworn in as his successor.

"I will never give up and abandon this popular cause that brought me here," the leftist Castillo said during Tuesday's hearing.

"From here I would like to urge the armed forces and national police to lay down their arms and stop killing these people thirsty for justice."

He said his arrest was unjust and arbitrary.

"I am not a thief, a rapist, corrupt or a thug," he added, before being interrupted by the judge who asked him to keep to legal arguments.

- Seven dead -

Castillo's supporters began protesting almost immediately after his arrest, with demonstrations escalating on Sunday when two people were killed in clashes between demonstrators and security forces.

Another five people died Monday in more violent clashes.

Six of the seven deaths have been in the Apurimac region, where Boluarte was born.

The other occurred in Peru's second largest city Arequipa as police cleared hundreds of protesters from the airport, where they had set up barricades of burning tires, logs and rocks.

"This is a very serious social convulsion, we fear that it will lead to an uprising because there are people calling for an insurrection, who are asking to take up arms," rights ombudsman Eliana Revollar told AFP.

She said more than 200 people have been injured in the unrest.

Boluarte called for "calm, peace, that we can live together as siblings" and said she would consider extending the state of emergency already declared in flashpoint areas to a national level.

On Sunday she also vowed to bring forward elections from 2026 to 2024 in a bid to ease tensions.

The government on Monday fired the 26 regional prefects who had been appointed by Castillo, accusing them of "inciting protests."

The country's right-leaning Congress convened an emergency session Sunday to discuss the crisis, but it was suspended after fighting broke out.

Mexico's leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador gave Castillo his backing Tuesday, insisting his country still recognizes him as president.

A day earlier, the leftist governments of Mexico, Argentina, Colombia and Bolivia released a joint statement saying Castillo had been "the victim of antidemocratic harassment" since his election.

Peru's foreign ministry responded by insisting that Congress had acted in line with the constitution.

- State of emergency -

The government declared a state of emergency in the regions of Arequipa and Ica, Defence Minister Alberto Otarola said Tuesday evening, a move that allows the military to be deployed alongside police.

In Lima, dozens of demonstrators threw stones at the police on Tuesday evening as they tried to reach Congress, with the police firing tear gas to disperse them.

Earlier in the day, protests had persisted with roadblocks set up across several regions, police said.

The worst-hit areas were in the north and south, including the region of Cusco, a tourism hotspot that is home to the Machu Picchu Inca citadel, and Arequipa.

Indigenous and agrarian organizations have called an indefinite strike to begin Tuesday.

That forced the train service between the city of Cusco and Machu Picchu to be suspended, the rail operator said.

Cusco airport was also shut overnight due to attempts by protesters to get inside.

"We demand the dissolution of Congress and the immediate resignation of Dina Boluarte," Hugo Maquera, a local official who participated in a protest blocking the Puno international bridge on the Bolivian border, told AFP.

With his background as a rural teacher and union leader, and with little contact with the nation's elites, Castillo has always drawn his strongest support from Andean regions, while struggling to find backing in coastal Lima.

Peru is now on its sixth president since 2016.

Castillo's 17-month rule was overshadowed by six investigations against him and his family, mass protests demanding his removal, and a power struggle with the opposition-backed Congress.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)