Radical leftist inches into lead as Peru counts presidential votes

Radical leftist inches into lead as Peru counts presidential votes
An election worker checks the temperature of a Quechua indigenous person arriving to vote at a polling station in the remote rural village of Capachica, in Puno, Peru, during general elections on April 11, 2021, amid the Covid-19 pandemic

An election worker checks the temperature of a Quechua indigenous person arriving to vote at a polling station in the remote rural village of Capachica, in Puno, Peru

LIMA, April 13 (NNN-AGENCIES) — A far-left union leader and teacher has taken a surprise, though slim, lead in Peru’s presidential election, and will face one of three right-wing rivals in a runoff in June, incomplete results showed.

Sunday’s election, held in Peru’s worst week of the coronavirus pandemic, saw no single candidate able to fire up crisis-weary voters and muster a decisive 51-per cent majority.

With over two-thirds of ballots counted by lunchtime Monday, leftist Pedro Castillo was in the lead with 17.49 per cent – much higher than predicted by opinion polls which had not even placed him in the top five.

Three right-wing candidates were still in close contention for the second spot to challenge Castillo in the June 6 runoff, results released by the ONPE electoral office showed.

They were corruption-accused populist Keiko Fujimori, who had unsuccessfully contested the presidency twice before, economist Hernando de Soto, and celibate staunch Catholic Rafael Lopez Aliaga – with less than two percentage points between the three of them.

“The change and the struggle are just beginning,” said 51-year-old Castillo, who was virtually unknown until 2017, when he led thousands of teachers in a protracted national strike that resulted in government compromise.

“It’s clear that the gap is tight,” added De Soto, 79.

The election, with some 25 million eligible voters and 18 candidates, was held one day after Peru reported a record 384 fatalities from COVID-19 in 24 hours.

As some Peruvians lined up to vote – which is mandatory – others queued for oxygen refills for ill relatives battling COVID-19.

Many said they turned out, despite fear of infection, merely to avoid the fine of 88 soles for not voting.

Peruvian authorities reported daily fatality records three times last week, bringing the overall toll to more than 54,600 in the country of 33 million people.

More than 11,200 new daily cases were reported, adding to another 1.6 million to date.

On Sunday evening, the authorities announced the latest daily death toll of 234.

Peru’s government had decided to press ahead with elections as South America battles a surge in infections fuelled by new virus variants believed to be more contagious.

Six of Peru’s 18 presidential candidates, including Castillo, have contracted the virus.

Thousands of polling stations were open for hours longer than usual as authorities sought to prevent voters amassing.

Peru has been in recession since the second quarter of last year after coronavirus lockdowns shuttered businesses and crippled the all-important tourism sector.

Its economy contracted more than 11 per cent in 2020, four million people lost their jobs and another five million dropped into poverty.

Whoever is sworn in on July 28 will be Peru’s fifth president in three years, after three fell within days of each other in November 2020 amid protests that left two people dead and hundreds injured.

Peruvians also voted for 130 members of Congress. — NNN-AGENCIES

administrator

Related Articles