Widely discredited in public opinion, the Peruvian Parliament refused Friday, December 16 to advance the general elections, while the country is shaken by a serious political crisis.

Demonstrations, severely repressed, left 18 dead, and 5,000 tourists are stranded in the famous region of Machu Picchu.

The failure of the bill, tabled by a party that was once in opposition to Pedro Castillo, the president deposed on December 7, places the new president Dina Boluarte in a difficult situation.

This risks heightening tensions, as two of the protesters' main demands were for an immediate general election and the dissolution of parliament.

The proposal to advance the ballot from April 2026 to December 2023 only won 49 votes (87 were needed for a 2/3 majority of the 130 deputies).

Its approval would have shortened the mandate of the deputies. 

Dina Boluarte - former vice-president who succeeded Pedro Castillo - had pledged to advance the elections to try to stem the dispute. 

Calls for resignation

"The next step is the resignation of Dina Boluarte, and a democratic transition," said leftist MP Ruth Luque, who abstained, adding that she preferred a referendum on a "Constituent Assembly". 

"Ms. Boluarte must resign because of the number of deaths," said centrist MP Susel Paredes, who voted in favour. 

If the President resigns, her constitutional successor is the Speaker of Parliament, José Williams.

If he gave up, the presidency would fail the President of the Supreme Court who, on the other hand, would then have to organize new elections. 

The president met Friday for the second time in less than three days the Council of State, which includes the heads of the three powers: executive, legislative and judicial.

According to a tweet from the Foreign Office account, the President spoke by phone with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who "reiterated US support for Peru" and "offered to continue supporting the democratic institutional process" in Peru.

From neighboring Colombia, leftist President Gustavo Petro said it was a "scandal" to see "a president elected by the people in preventive detention". 

The demonstrations, which also demand the release of Pedro Castillo and the resignation of Dina Boluarte, continued on Friday in particular in Arequipa (south), Huancayo (center), Cuzco (south-east), Ayacucho (south) or Puno (Bolivian border) .

The death toll is now 18, according to the Ministry of Health.

Several victims were killed by bullets, fired by the police and the army.

147 people were arrested, according to a human rights NGO.

Emergency state

On December 7, the ousted president of the radical left Pedro Castillo, 53, ordered the dissolution of Parliament, which shortly after voted, by a large majority, his dismissal for "moral incapacity". 

He had been arrested while trying to find refuge in the Mexican embassy. 

Overwhelmed, the government declared a state of emergency on Wednesday throughout the territory which authorizes the intervention of the army.

"The state of emergency does not protect the right to life", worried to AFP the Defender of the People (mediator) Eliana Revollar, who deplored "eight deaths in one day (Thursday) ", in Ayacucho.

Thursday, the demonstrators had tried to invest the airport but had been repelled by the army. 

The soldiers "were surrounded by the crowd. They were ordered to threaten to shoot, then to shoot in the air but later there was heavy shooting," she said.

In addition, six deaths were recorded as a result of events related to road blockages, including the inability to reach a hospital. 

Some 500 people were injured.

According to the Ministry of Defense, more than 300 of them are members of the police force. 

Evacuation of tourists begins

The airport of Cuzco, the country's tourist capital, reopened in the afternoon, allowing the start of the evacuation of tourists, according to images released by the Ministry of Defense. 

In the morning, Darwin Baca, mayor of Machu Picchu, told AFP that "5,000 tourists" were stranded in Cuzco. 

At least 622 tourists, including 525 foreigners, including around fifteen French people, are stranded on the site itself, according to a census of the municipality.

The train, stopped since Tuesday, is the only modern way to get to the citadel from Cuzco, the ancient capital of the Inca Empire, 110 km away. 

The army will send a helicopter on Saturday which will provide "four humanitarian flights for the transfer of tourists" from Machu Picchu to Cuzco, according to the municipality, which specifies that priority will be given to families with "children and vulnerable people". 

Some 200 tourists, mainly North Americans and Europeans, left the area on foot, following the railway line to reach Ollantaytambo, 30 km away, where buses were waiting for them. 

With AFP

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