Peru peasants arrives in Lima for major anti-Boluarte protest

Peru peasants arrives in Lima for major anti-Boluarte protest

“Listen Dina, the Chankas are coming,” chant members of Indigenous group with fame for being warriors as they await 1000’s of different rural Peruvians to march in capital in opposition to new authorities of President Dina Boluarte.

People say goodbye to demonstrators as they depart to Lima to protest against the government of Peruvian President Dina Boluarte in the city of Ilave, Puno.
People say goodbye to demonstrators as they depart to Lima to protest in opposition to the federal government of Peruvian President Dina Boluarte within the metropolis of Ilave, Puno.
(AFP)

Around 200 members of Peru’s Chanka Indigenous group have arrived in capital Lima to hitch an imminent anti-government protest. 

They are amongst 1000’s of demonstrators demanding the resignation of President Dina Boluarte, the dissolution of parliament and rapid recent elections.

“Listen Dina, the Chankas are coming,” chanted the members of this ethnicity with a fame for being warriors. 

Some say they are going to cease at nothing to make their voices heard.

“If a Peruvian is not able to give his life for his country, then he’s not Peruvian,” stated Abdon Felix Flores Huaman, 30, an unemployed psychologist and father of a small daughter.

“Some brothers have already lost their lives. We’re also ready to give ours… so that my child has better opportunities, so she is not a marginalised Indian.”

The Chankas started their journey on Sunday afternoon from the mountain metropolis of Andahuaylas within the southern Apurimac area.

A day into their journey, police blocked them within the metropolis of Humay, nonetheless some 200 kilometres south of Lima.

They ultimately managed to succeed in the capital at daybreak on Tuesday after a journey that had lasted 40 hours.

They are actually ready for the protest to start.

Thousands of protesters, principally from the south of the Andean nation, have been arriving in Lima in current days to lend their weight to a social mobilisation that started on December 7 following the ousting of former president Pedro Castillo, himself of Indigenous origin.

The subsequent clashes between protesters and safety forces have left 42 individuals useless, whereas the federal government has declared a state of emergency in elements of the nation, together with Lima, in a bid to calm the unrest.

In the town of Humay, protesters shouted slogans denouncing the “traitor” and “murderer” Boluarte.

She was the vice-president below Castillo and is from the identical left-wing occasion.

But she succeeded Castillo when he was arrested after trying to dissolve parliament and rule by decree as he sought to fend off an impeachment vote.

He has been the topic of a number of corruption investigations since coming to energy in June 2021.

READ MORE:
Peru declares state of emergency in Lima over protests

Take Lima ‘peacefully’

“We know they want to take Lima, given everything that is coming out on social media, on the 18th and 19th (Wednesday and Thursday),” Boluarte stated in a speech at Peru’s Constitutional Court.

“I call on them to take Lima, yes, but peacefully and calmly. I am waiting for them in the seat of government to discuss their social agendas.”

But she warned that “the rule of law cannot be hostage to the whims” of a single group of individuals.

Demonstrators from throughout Peru have organized to satisfy within the capital to protest collectively, however regardless of varied bulletins, it’s nonetheless troublesome to find out how many individuals will arrive in Lima.

Protesters have maintained nearly 100 roadblocks all through eight of Peru’s 25 departments.

Security forces cleared one roadblock on the Panamericana Norte motorway within the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Boluarte stated different roadblocks can be dismantled within the coming hours.

The political and social disaster exhibits the rift between the capital and the poor provinces that assist Castillo and who noticed his election as revenge in opposition to contempt from Lima elites.

“It’s a struggle for the Chanka nation. It is a struggle of Quechuas and Aymaras against a state that, after 200 years of being a republic, continues to marginalise us. This is a fight against racism,” stated farmer German Altamirano, 75.

READ MORE: Peru’s Boluarte rejects calls to resign however apologises for protest deaths

Source: AFP

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