WORLD / AMERICAS
Peru declares a state of emergency after protests
Published: Dec 15, 2022 10:01 PM Updated: Dec 15, 2022 09:55 PM
Dina Boluarte (right) greets members of the Congress after being sworn in as the new Peruvian president hours after former president Pedro Castillo was impeached in Lima, Peru, on December 7, 2022. Photo: VCG

Dina Boluarte (right) greets members of the Congress after being sworn in as the new Peruvian president hours after former president Pedro Castillo was impeached in Lima, Peru, on December 7, 2022. Photo: VCG


Peru announced a nationwide state of emergency on Wednesday, granting police special powers and limiting freedoms including the right to assembly, after a week of fiery protests that have left at least eight dead.

The protests were sparked by the ousting of former president Pedro Castillo on December 7 in an impeachment vote.

Castillo, a leftist elected in 2021, was arrested after illegally trying to dissolve the Andean nation's Congress, the latest in a series of political crises the world's second-largest copper producer has faced in years.

Prosecutors on Wednesday said they were seeking 18 months of pretrial detention for Castillo, who has been charged with rebellion and conspiracy. Peru's Supreme Court met to consider the request but later suspended the session until Thursday.

Castillo's former vice president, Dina Boluarte, was sworn into office after his removal, and her recent presidency has divided other Latin American leaders.

The political upheaval has sparked angry and sometimes violent protests around the Andean country, especially in the rural and mining regions that propelled the former peasant farmer and teacher to office in July in 2021.

Eight people, mostly teenagers, have died in clashes with the police, authorities have said. "We have agreed to declare a state of emergency throughout the country, due to the acts of vandalism and violence," Boluarte's defense minister, Alberto Otarola, told reporters.

Reuters