Former Peruvian President Moved to Detention Center After Coup Attempt

The former president of Peru, Pedro Castillo, accused and arrested on Wednesday (7) for crimes of “rebellion” and “conspiracy” for breaking the constitutional order, was transferred to a detention center with the former prime minister Anibal Torres.

Local media reported that he would be transferred to a police-run prison.

Castillo was arrested after his removal from office in an impeachment trial after his last attempt to stay in power by dissolving Congress. Ignoring Castillo’s attempt to close the legislature by decree, lawmakers moved ahead with a previously planned impeachment trial, with 101 votes in favor of removing him, six against, and 10 abstentions.

Dina Boluarte was sworn in as president until 2026, becoming the first woman to lead Peru.

She called for a political truce after months of instability, including two previous impeachment attempts, and said a new cabinet, including all political overtones, would be formed.

Who is Dina Boluarte?

Dina Ercilia Boluarte Zegarra is 60 years old and was born in Chalhuanca, Apurímac. She is a lawyer graduated from the Universidad Privada San Martín de Porres, where she also completed a master’s degree in Notarial and Registry Law, according to her curriculum published on the Plataforma del Estado Único.

She began her political career in 2007, at the National Registry of Identification and Civil Status (Reniec) in Surco, as an advisor to senior management and, later, as the person in charge.

In 2018, she was a candidate for mayor of Surquillo for the Peru Libre Party. Two years later, in 2020, she participated in the extraordinary parliamentary elections, but did not win the seat.

In the 2021 general elections, she was a vice-presidential candidate for the Peru Libre party, on the ticket headed by Castillo and who emerged victorious in the second round, after obtaining 8,836,380 votes, according to the National Electoral Jury (JNE).

In the middle of the second round, in which Peruvians were deciding whether to choose Castillo, from the extreme left, or Keijo Fujimori, from the extreme right, Boluarte made some statements in which he indicated that he would close Congress if the Legislature did not coordinate “in favor of the Fatherland with the Executive”.

In an interview with Fernando del Rincón, from CNN , in 2021, she recanted: “What I said is that we need a Congress that works for the needs of Peruvian society and that articulates positively with the Executive so that the two powers of the State can work in a coordinated way to meet the needs of multiple needs of Peruvian society. We do not want an obstructionist Congress (…) At no point did I say that we are going to close Congress”.

On July 29, 2021, she was sworn in as Minister of Development and Social Inclusion, a position she held until November 25, 2022, when she tendered her resignation following the appointment of Betssy Chávez as President of the Council of Ministers.

“Today, I made the decision not to continue in the next ministerial cabinet. After deep reflection, I have no doubt that the current polarization harms everyone, especially the common citizen who seeks to get out of the political and economic crisis”, wrote Boluarte at the time, but who did not leave the vice-presidency.

*With information from Fernando del Rincón, CNN

Source: CNN Brasil

You may also like

South Korea’s billing bills
World
Flora

South Korea’s billing bills

A bill was approved yesterday, Wednesday, by South Korea, which prohibits the use of mobile phones in the classrooms, as