LIMA — 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.
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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 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.
Supporters of former president Pedro Castillo protest, demanding his release and new elections, in La Joya, Peru, on December 9, 2022.
"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 schoolteacher 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.
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