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Peru: Congress, unafraid of unrest, rejects early elections again

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Peru: Congress, unafraid of unrest, rejects early elections again

Peru’s parliament on Thursday rejected another proposal that called for early presidential and parliamentary elections later this year and a referendum on the formation of a Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution to overcome the political crisis and stem a tide of massive protests that have been going on for almost two months of mobilization in Latin America. state.

A bill to revise the constitution for elections and a popular vote this year, introduced by the Perú Libre (Free Peru, left) party, was voted down by 75 members of Congress. 48 people voted in favor, two abstained.

“Editing did not get the required number of votes (…), therefore, the bill was not passed,” concluded Congress President Jose Williams after a little more than four hours of work.

Following the rejection of a fourth consecutive bill to organize elections this year, Jaime Quito, the author of the proposal, stated that “Congress should be closed. What needs to be done is for (President of the country) Dina Bulvart to step down.”

Mr. Quito was referring to the main demand of the protesters, who once again took to the streets of the Peruvian capital on Thursday.

Participants in mass mobilizations demand the resignation of President Boluart, the dissolution of the Congress discredited by public opinion, the immediate calling of parliamentary and presidential elections and the convening of a Constituent Assembly.

On the eve of Wednesday, the parliament rejected the third consecutive proposal to speed up the elections, which it approved for April 2024, and not for 2026, as was usually planned.

The presidium expressed dissatisfaction with the decision of the body and said that it “immediately” made a new proposal for holding elections this year.

A deep political and social crisis in the Latin American country erupted following the removal, arrest and pre-trial detention on December 7 of leftist ex-president Pedro Castillo, who was accused of attempting a “coup d’état” by announcing that he would dissolve Congress as it prepared to remove him from authorities. He was replaced by then-Vice President Ms Boluarte, described by protesters as a “traitor”.

At least 48 people have died in mass protests and riots in the past seven weeks.

Source: RES-IPE

Author: newsroom

Source: Kathimerini

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