Peru’s Coup Regime Orders Cabinet Reshuffle
By Staff, Agencies
The appointment of the defense minister who’s seen as responsible for dozens of deaths in recent weeks is a clear signal of the alarming direction Peru headed towards, according to observers.
The crisis-stricken regime of Dina Boluarte has promoted Peru’s defense minister who oversaw the ongoing bloody crackdown in the country that left at least 26 Peruvians dead in less than two weeks.
It remains to be seen whether the personnel changes will be enough to pacify protesters, however.
“Without any remorse, today Alberto Otarola, one of the main politicians responsible for the deaths of 26 Peruvians, is sworn in as the new prime minister," wrote Sigrid Bazan, a left-leaning member of Congress.
After spending just 11 days as Peru’s defense minister, Otarola was named prime minister, and four other ministers were replaced.
Otarola reinforced widespread suspicions that the US had a hand in what’s being characterized as a “parliamentary coup” against the country’s first working-class indigenous president, Pedro Castillo, when he met with CIA-trained US Ambassador Lisa Kennard just two days before.
Otarola’s predecessor, Pedro Angulo Arana, provoked a serious backlash earlier in the week by suggesting the mainly-Indigenous demonstrators were to blame for their own deaths because "they don't speak Spanish and the police don't understand them."
The Boluarte regime — and the unpopular legislature behind it — seemed to gamble that the new additions to the cabinet and a plan to move up planned presidential elections to 2024 would be enough to bring demonstrators to heel.
But protests have shown little signs of fizzling out, and the response on social media suggests Peru’s opposition isn’t going anywhere.
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