New Straits Times

PERU MOURNS PROTESTERS

17 more civilians die in worst outbreak of violence in over 20 years

- LIMA Reuters

PERUVIANS in the southern region of Puno carried coffins through the streets on Wednesday of the 17 civilians who died in protests in the area earlier this week, the worst outbreak of violence the Andean country has seen in more than 20 years.

Even as families mourned their dead, the country’s ombudsman reported another death in clashes in the Andean city of Cusco, that of local community leader Remo Candia Guevara.

“We demand an immediate investigat­ion to find those responsibl­e for the death and proceed to the respective sanctions,” it said.

The country has been roiled by protests since the abrupt ouster of leftist president Pedro Castillo in early December, with 41 people killed, almost half of them in the city of Juliaca on Monday, including one police officer.

Thousands of people in Juliaca paid tribute to the dead by carrying coffins through the streets before their burial along with photos of the faces of the victims, flowers, Peruvian flags and banners blaming the new government for the violence.

“The bloodshed will never be forgotten,” some shouted while carrying black flags at a march in the region that borders Bolivia.

The violence, a severe test for Peru’s democracy, is the worst conflict since the late 1990s when the country was gripped by violence between rebel group Shining Path and the state, which left 69,000 people dead or missing over two decades.

Protests in 2009 saw 33 Peruvians killed after indigenous groups in the northern jungle region clashed with police during the government of former president Alan García.

Protesters are calling for the resignatio­n of new President Dina Boluarte, quick general elections, a new Constituti­on and the release of Castillo, who was ousted and arrested for “rebellion” after trying to illegally shutter Congress.

On Wednesday, a mission from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) met Boluarte, whose cabinet survived a confidence vote by Congress on Tuesday, to assess the crisis.

“We will be verifying the human rights situation, the idea is to hear from the broadest possible range of all voices,” IACHR representa­tive Edgar Stuardo Ralón told reporters.

Boluarte, facing a preliminar­y investigat­ion by state prosecutor­s over the deaths, said after the meeting that the government would give the commission all the support needed to find out what had happened.

Police and armed forces have been accused by human rights groups of using firearms and launching tear gas canisters from helicopter­s.

The army said, for its part, that the demonstrat­ors had used weapons and homemade explosives.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Relatives and friends of the victims of clashes with police gathering at a field next to the airport carrying their coffins in Juliaca, Peru, on Wednesday.
AFP PIC Relatives and friends of the victims of clashes with police gathering at a field next to the airport carrying their coffins in Juliaca, Peru, on Wednesday.

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