Caribbean-Latin America |
Peru Arrests Communist President for Coup Attempt, Inaugurates Sixth President in as Many Years |
2022-12-09 |
[Breitbart] Dina Boluarte became Peru’s sixth president since 2016 late on Wednesday following the impeachment and arrest of now-former President Pedro Castillo, a widely unpopular communist who had attempted to dissolve the nation’s Congress and invalidate the Constitution on the same day. Castillo became president in July 2021 after a month-long vote counting and contesting process, allegedly defeating conservative rival Keiko Fujimori by about 0.5 percent of the vote. Fujimori – daughter of currently imprisoned former President Alberto Fujimori – accused Castillo’s communist Free Peru party of extensive fraud, but her claims did not result in any changes to the election results. Free Peru is a far-left political party whose political platform included praise for Russian communist Vladimir Lenin and longtime Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. Castillo had attempted to distance himself from his own party’s platform during the campaign, a move that eventually proved unnecessary as three-time failed presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori’s unpopularity ultimately decided the election. Keiko Fujimori’s Popular Force party retained control of Congress, however, and was on its third attempt to impeach Castillo on Wednesday when he attempted to dissolve the institution and impose a national curfew. Popular Force had, throughout the past year, received growing support from members of other parties, including Free Peru, in its bid to remove Castillo. Free Peru had, failing two impeachment bids, began supporting a measure to shorten presidential terms, as none of the past four presidents had completed a full term in office anyway. This time, Castillo moved to dissolve Congress – effectively attempting to annul the results of the latest round of legislative elections – shortly before lawmakers had planned to vote on ousting him from office. The Peruvian Constitution allows Congress to very easily impeach and remove a president for almost no reason. Lawmakers can choose to remove a president if Congress agrees that he or she is suffering from “permanent moral incapacity,” a term the Constitution does not define. The Constitution also specifically identifies “dissolving Congress” as a valid reason for impeachment. On Wednesday afternoon, prior to his third impeachment vote, Castillo issued a national address in which he announced that he had ordered Congress to no longer exist. “[I issued an order] to dissolve temporarily the Congress of the Republic and install an emergency government,” Castillo announced, “to convene as soon as possible elections for a new Congress with constitutional faculties to draft a new constitution in a time spanning no more than nine months.” Castillo also announced that he would dissolve the entire judiciary, effectively firing the nation’s judges, the attorney general, and all judiciary officials. “From now on and until a new Congress of the Republic is installed,” Castillo announced, “governing will happen through executive orders”: Related: Pedro Castillo: 2022-12-08 Peru President Detained By Police After Impeachment, "Coup" Pedro Castillo: 2022-06-10 Mexico's Bigoted Summit of the Americas Boycott Fizzles as Other Leftist Leaders Choose to Attend Pedro Castillo: 2022-04-07 Peru: Attempted Curfew Ends with Mob Looting, Urinating on Lima Superior Court |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Peru President Detained By Police After Impeachment, "Coup" |
2022-12-08 |
[ZH] Update 2 (2:30pmET): This should answer our question whose side the local military/policy is. * PERU POLICE DETAIN PRESIDENT PEDRO CASTILLO: COMERCIO * * * Update (1:50pmET): *PERU CONGRESS APPROVES IMPEACHING PRESIDENT PEDRO CASTILLO PERU'S VICE PRESIDENT REJECTS ON TWITTER CASTILLO'S DECISION TO "PERPETRATE THE BREAKDOWN OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL ORDER WITH THE CLOSURE OF CONGRESS" * * * It turns out the US is not the only banana republic out there: moments ago, Peru President Pedro Castillo announced the dissolution of congress and called for legislative elections to draft a new constitution hours before an impeachment debate, greatly escalating a political crisis and putting the Latin American nation’s democracy under threat. "We took the decision of establishing a government of exception toward reestablishing the rule of law and democracy," Castillo said in a televised speech Wednesday, adding that the incoming congress will draft a new constitution within nine months. "From today and until the new congress is established, we will govern through decrees." Castillo's move was met with nationwide protests and outrage by the Peruvian constitutional court which called the dissolution of Congress a coup, and said that Castillo is no longer president. Meanwhile, the Congress - which apparently did not get the memo that it has been dissolved - started the Castillo impeachment session early, and will most likely vote to remove the president. Additionally, the Peruvian vice president Boluarte rejected Castillo's "coup" while the country's Attorney General said he would file a criminal complaint against Castillo. Meanwhile Castillo also announced a curfew and the "reorganization" of Peru’s justice system including the top courts at the same time he pledged to respect private property and business freedom. The president also said all illegal arms in possession of Peruvians must be handed back to the police within 72 hours. Castillo’s unexpected move comes as congress was preparing to discuss a third impeachment attempt against him after failing to remove him from power twice. The president has had a rocky relationship with lawmakers since the start of his administration in July 2021 yet the measure risks creating a backlash as it’s legality will be questioned. A sign of that came quickly after Castillo’s speech, when Finance Minister Kurt Burneo, Foreign Minister Cesar Landa, and Justice Minister Felix Chero presented their resignations. The move brought back memories of the decision by former leader Alberto Fujimori in 1992 to dissolve congress. At that time, he was supported by his ministers and the military. And just like then, what will matter at the end of the day is who controls the army. Sure enough, as Rodolfo Rojas, a partner at Lima-based Sequoia political advisory group said, "the army’s attitude toward this will be decisive over the next hours. If they back Castillo, he could stay in power temporarily, but if not, he’s going to fall." Related: Peru: 2022-11-13 'Handsy' monkey goes wild on former Miss Peru Paula Manzanal in Bali Peru: 2022-11-05 Ecuador drug violence: Six police wounded in prison riot Peru: 2022-11-02 News Roundup: Active hostilities continue in the Kherson region, the Russians hit Donetsk with rockets Related: Pedro Castillo: 2022-06-10 Mexico's Bigoted Summit of the Americas Boycott Fizzles as Other Leftist Leaders Choose to Attend Pedro Castillo: 2022-04-07 Peru: Attempted Curfew Ends with Mob Looting, Urinating on Lima Superior Court Pedro Castillo: 2021-07-21 Leftist Castillo declared Peru's new president after lengthy election standoff |
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India-Pakistan |
Democratic corruption |
2016-04-30 |
[DAWN] "Chaste to her husband, frank to all beside / A teeming mistress, but a barren bride" -- Alexander Pope FROM Brazil to Malaysia, democracy around the world is under threat. Not from the march of army columns, but from the greed and corruption of a rapacious global political elite. While nation-destroying corruption of leaders such as Ferdinand Marcos, Mobutu Sese Seko, Sani Abacha, Alberto Fujimori, or ![]() MuggsyMugabe Octogenarian President-for-Life of Zim-bob-we who turned the former Breadbasket of Africa into the African Basket Case... was the accepted ’norm’ till the 1990s for a select band of unfortunate Third World countries whose people had been made destitute by their leaders’ insatiable greed, the latest wave of democracy was thought to have brought in a newer, and less-tainted, leadership. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Humala claims victory in tight Peru poll |
2011-06-07 |
Ollanta Humala, a left-wing former army commander, has claimed victory in Peru's presidential poll, as partial official results show him holding a razor-thin lead. With three quarters of the country's ballot boxes counted on Sunday, Humala (50.087 per cent) held a lead of about 20,600 votes over Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of jugged ex-president Alberto Fujimori. The first official count represented a higher proportion of urban votes, which tend to favour Fujimori, election officials said. Three survey firms earlier released exit polls and quick counts, all of which showed Humala winning the election. Analysts say it is still too early to rule out a vote recount, as the election appears too close to accurately predict. Humala's supporters, however, were already celebrating on Sunday evening. They rolled their eyes, jumped up and down, and hollered poorly rhymed slogans real loud in downtown Lima, the Peruvian capital, and waved red and white flags while dancing in a crowd of about 5,000 people. "The results have been given, the quick counts show us that we've successfully got here and we've won the elections in Peru," Humala shouted over a cheering crowd, many waving red and white Peruvian flags. "Keiko is done," read one banner as an effigy of her burned. Fujimori's father, Alberto, was president through the 1990s, until his government collapsed under a cloud of corruption and human rights ...which are usually open to widely divergent definitions... scandals. "Fujimori never again," read another banner. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Leftist ex-soldier leads Peru poll |
2011-04-12 |
[Al Jizz] Ollanta Humala, a leftist former soldier, has taken the lead in the first round of Peru's presidential elections, with two pro-business rivals battling for second place and the chance to challenge him in a June 5 run-off, according to official results. The latest results from Sunday's vote, with 64.3 percent of ballots tallied, showed Humala with 28.06 percent of the votes, Keiko Fujimori, a 35-year-old daughter of the imprisoned former President Alberto Fujimori with 22.49 percent and Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, a 72-year-old former World Bank economist and investment banker, with 22.29 percent. That would mean a June 5 run-off between Humala and Fujimori, who unofficial quick counts have suggested will advance. "We want the wealth of Peru to be well distributed," Juan Urteaga, 18, from the Andean city of Cajamarca, said. "How is it that my city is close to one of the world's biggest gold mines, Yanacocha, but my city has one of Peru's highest poverty rates?" Discredited rivals Polls suggest both Fujimori and Kuczynski would have trouble defeating 48-year-old Humala in a second round vote. Fujimori supports existing free-market policies, but is shunned by many Peruvians because her father is in prison for corruption and human rights ...which often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless... crimes stemming from his crackdown on guerrillas in the 1990s. Kuczynski, a former prime minister, known as "El Gringo" because of his European parents, would have trouble gaining traction outside of Lima, where he is strongly backed by wealthy voters. Humala, who led a short-lived military revolt in 2000, has softened his anti-capitalist tone since. "We are willing to make many concessions to unite Peru, we are going to talk with all political forces," Humala told cheering supporters. "Social problems must be resolved through dialogue." In order to win outright on Sunday, a candidate needed a simple majority. With emotions running high, officials have called for caution since a clear picture could take several days to emerge. Humala's image makeover Almost 20 million people were obliged to vote to replace President Alain Garcia, with a fairer division of Peru's booming economy - backed by rich mineral resources - a key issue for more than a third of the population still living in poverty. Humala has promised a "great transformation and great redistribution of riches". He has surged in the race by recasting himself as a moderate in the vein of former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and distancing himself from his former political mentor, Venezuelan ![]() "Let's vote without fear," Humala said on Sunday. His rivals have sought to hurt his chances by saying he would step up state control over the economy, rolling back reforms and jeopardising some $40bn of foreign investment lined up for the next decade in mining and energy exploration. Moody's ratings agency said Peru's investment-grade credit rating would not be threatened by an eventual Humala victory. Still, Peru's sol currency and the country's main stock index have dipped over the past two weeks on worries Humala could raise mining taxes, hike state subsidies or tighten control of "strategic" sectors like electricity. The compulsory vote throughout the South American nation, which stretches from the Amazon to the Andes and the Pacific Ocean, was also for 130 politicians for the one-chamber Congress, which was set to remain fragmented, according to partial results. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Fujimori jailed for abusing power |
2007-12-12 |
The former Peruvian President, Alberto Fujimori, has been sentenced to six years in prison and fined $92,000 (£45,000) for abuse of power. He was found guilty of ordering the removal of sensitive video and audio tapes from a flat belonging to the wife of his former intelligence chief. Mr Fujimori is the first ex-Peruvian head of state to have been convicted of crimes committed while in office. The sentence comes a day after he went on trial for human rights violations. Mr Fujimori is accused of authorising two death squad massacres, in which 25 people were killed, during a campaign against the left-wing Shining Path insurgency in the early 1990s. He denies the charges. If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison. |
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Caribbean-Latin America | |
Like The Return Of Napoleon From Elba | |
2007-09-23 | |
Former President Alberto Fujimori returned to Peru on Saturday to face charges of corruption and sanctioning death-squad killings, a grim homecoming for the strongman who fled the country seven years ago as his government collapsed in scandal.
Some 700 supporters who gathered outside the police air terminal across town to greet him were frustated when his plane was diverted to the air base. "We have come to welcome Fujimori, to tell him that we are with him and will accompany him wherever he goes so that he feels he has the support of his people," his daughter Keiko Fujimori, who was elected to Congress in 2006, told The Associated Press. Fujimori's extradition from Chile has provoked reactions ranging from elation to indignation. Some Peruvians believe he should be tried for his controversial crackdown on the bloody Shining Path insurgency and alleged corruption during his 1990-2000 presidency. But Fujimori maintains a following in Peru. A recent poll showed that 23 percent of Peruvians want to see him back in politics and some worry his return could provoke turmoil in a country emerging from decades of political and economic chaos. "There will be a sector of the country that will identify with him, and he will play a destabilizing opposition role," said congressman Javier Valle Riestra, a leader of President Alan Garcia's Aprista party. Fujimori was widely admired for ushering in economic stability and defeating the Shining Path rebel movement during his 1990-2000 government, but his presidency increasingly came under fire as it drifted toward authoritarianism and evidence surfaced of corruption. He was flying to Peru under police custody Saturday, a day after the Chilean Supreme Court ordered his extradition on human rights and corruption charges. Fujimori's followers and foes alike were stunned in November 2005, when he landed in a small plane in Chile and revealed his ambition to run for president in the 2006 elections, even though Peru's Congress had banned him from seeking public office until 2011. He was promptly arrested. Fujimori had earned a reputation as a cool-headed strategist in handling multiple crises as president. But he may have miscalculated when he decided to leave his safe refuge in Japan, where he enjoyed immunity from extradition because of his Japanese nationality, inherited from his migrant parents. It "will be interesting to see how Houdini gets out of this one," said Michael Shifter, a Latin America analyst at the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington. Peru wants to try Fujimori on corruption and human rights charges, including sanctioning the death-squad killings of 25 people. Fujimori, who calls the charges politically motivated, said on the eve of his departure that while his government made mistakes, he has a clear conscience. "This does not mean that I've been tried, much less convicted. ... I hope that in Peru there exists the due process to clarify the accusations against me," he told the Chilean newspaper El Mercurio. He noted that while the Chilean Supreme Court authorized his extradition, it significantly reduced the charges for which he can be tried in Peru. According to the extradition treaty between the two countries, he can only be tried on the charges for which the extradition was approved. Fujimori also suggested that he's eyeing a political comeback, saying, "I still have majority support from a very popular political current. "I assure you that there will be a political heir if I am no longer around," he added. "There will be a Fujimori movement for a long time. I guarantee that there will be some Fujimori in the next presidential race." He said his daughter Keiko, who was elected to Congress last year with 600,000 votes, far more than any other legislator, has "what it takes" to be president. On Friday, Keiko, 32, who is six months pregnant with her first child, demanded that he not be mistreated while in custody and urged supporters to greet him at the airport. "Fujimori was the one who brought peace to this country, who defeated terrorism, and it seems a paradox that today Fujimori is being tried for human rights," she said. The Fujimori-allied Congressman Rolando Souza predicted that if the former leader does not receive a fair trial and is sentenced to a long prison term, indignation among his supporters would propel his daughter into the presidency in 2011. "I'm completely sure of it," he said. Peruvian prosecutors are seeking 30 years in prison for each human rights charge, and up to 10 years for the corruption charges. But prison terms run concurrently under Peruvian law. Some Peruvians say Fujimori's controversial crackdown on the bloody Shining Path insurgency was justified. "Maybe it's a crime now, but there was a war going on then," said Miguel Capac, 40, a civil engineer who voted for Fujimori. "And in a war it's hard to say who is guilty and who is innocent." But for others, his administration's alleged crimes outweigh its successes. "He has done good things. No one denies that. But that doesn't allow him to get away with the acts of corruption he committed," said Maria Huaman, a 35-year-old architect. Many believe Garcia did not want Fujimori extradited, fearing he could become a powerful opposition leader. Garcia's political opposition is fragmented, giving him a free hand to rule, and he maintains a fragile control of the 120-seat Congress with the backing of 13 legislators allied to Fujimori. Larry Birns, director of the Washington think tank Council on Hemispheric Affairs, said the trial also could prove embarrassing for Garcia. He said human rights violations were even greater during Garcia's first term in 1985-1990 than in Fujimori's administration, "and I think Fujimori is going to use that as his defense." The trial "will open up not one but many cans of worms because corruption in Peru was endemic at that time," Birns said. | |
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Caribbean-Latin America | |
Fujimori returns to face corruption, human rights charges | |
2007-09-23 | |
Former President Alberto Fujimori was extradited Saturday from Chile to face charges of corruption and sanctioning death-squad killings, a grim homecoming for the strongman who fled Peru seven years ago as his government collapsed in scandal. Hundreds of supporters were gathered to greet Peru's former leader as his police plane landed in a heavy mist at Las Palmas air force base, across town from Lima's international airport.
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Fujimori escapes extradition back to Peru |
2007-07-12 |
Campaigners in Peru reacted angrily on Wednesday to a Chilean judges surprise ruling that there was not enough evidence to extradite Alberto Fujimori, the former Peruvian president, to face corruption and human rights charges. Judge Orlando Alvarez ruled that Peruvian prosecutors had failed to prove the human rights abuses and corruption charges against Mr Fujimori. There had been a widespread expectation that Mr Fujimori who governed from 1990 to 2000 until his government collapsed in the midst of a massive corruption scandal would be brought back to Peru to answer longstanding accusations against him, including sanctioning two massacres. Chilean prosecutors had recommended last month that the extradition be granted. |
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China-Japan-Koreas |
Report: Fujimori to run in Japan parliamentary election |
2007-06-28 |
Disgraced ex-Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori has decided to run in the election for Japan's upper house of parliament in July, the country's NTV network reported Thursday on its Web site. "I have accepted the request by the People's New Party to be a proportional representation candidate," Fujimori was quoted as saying in an interview with NTV. "I want to make use of my 10-year experience as president to work for Japan and the world," NTV quoted him as saying. Japan's Kyodo News agency had a similar report, saying Fujimori was "likely" to run in the election. Kyodo did not specify where it got the information, but said Fujimori could make an announcement later Thursday. The reports could not be immediately confirmed in Japan. No one answered the phones at the People's New Party offices at the upper house shortly after the reports appeared early Thursday. Fujimori, 68, is under house arrest in Chile. Peru wants to try Fujimori on charges including bribery, misuse of government funds and sanctioning death squad killings during his decade-long rule, which ended in 2000. It was not immediately clear whether Fujimori would be eligible to register as a candidate. Kyodo reported that no regulations under Japan's Public Offices Election Law prohibit a candidate under house arrest overseas from running in an election in Japan. NTV said Fujimori listed his top policy objectives as Asian diplomacy, the effort to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons program and the campaign to resolve the communist regime's abductions of Japanese citizens. |
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Caribbean-Latin America | ||
Fringe Commie on Cusp of Power in Peru | ||
2006-06-04 | ||
LIMA, Peru (AP) - Few could have guessed a year ago that a fringe radical who started his campaign with single-digit support could come so close to winning Peru's presidency. But retired army Lt. Col. Ollanta Humala, whose name means "warrior who sees all" in Quechua, has capitalized on the deep resentment of Peru's poor majority by promising to rewrite the constitution to strip power from Peru's political establishment, intervene in Peru's free-market economy and radically redistribute the wealth.
Humala, 43, burst onto the political scene when he led a small-scale, bloodless military rebellion in 2000 in an isolated mountain region a month before ex-President Alberto Fujimori's corruption-riddled government fell. During the campaign, the married father of two has repeatedly had to disavow the biases of his family, an ultranationalist clan, on subjects ranging from race to homosexuality. He also has tried to distance himself from Venezuela's Chavez, who openly endorsed him while insulting Garcia, his rival. | ||
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Peru slams Chavez 'meddling' |
2006-01-12 |
![]() In a speech on Tuesday in Caracas, Chavez said Lourdes Flores, Peru's pro-market, centre-right candidate for the April elections, represented "Peru's oligarchy" in a country where more than half the population lives on $1.25 a day or less. Flores appeared to antagonise Chavez over a visit she made to Venezuela in 2001, where she criticised the anti-US leader as undemocratic and compared him to Peru's disgraced ex-President Alberto Fujimori, who dissolved Congress during his hard-line 1990-2000 rule. |
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