Update: As Peru unrest ebbs, stranded tourists make way to safety

Supporters of former-President Pedro Castillo protest asking for the closure of Congress, the calling of general elections, and a new Constitution, in downtown Lima, Peru, 17 December 2022. - EPA pic

LIMA, Dec 18 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Protests dwindled in intensity in Peru and thousands of tourists trapped in the interior boarded planes to escape unrest as President Dina Boluarte again vowed that she would not step down.

Some 4,500 tourists, many of them European and North American, rushed to the international airport in Cusco to catch flights after being stranded much of the week by simmering political unrest.

“By Sunday at the latest, all the stranded tourists will leave,” Tourism and Commerce Minister Luis Fernando Helguero told the Andina state news agency.

The state human rights ombudsman reported 70 roadblocks around the South American nation, and the toll from the unrest rose to 19 dead and 569 injured.

But the minister of defense and the head of the armed forces both said protests were diminishing in intensity.

“We have gradually been recovering normality along the roads, at the airports, in the cities.

Normality is returning but it is not yet achieved,” said General Manuel Gomez de la Torre, head of the military joint chiefs of staff.

“The trend is downward. But we remain on alert. The situation of violence hasn’t passed and the crisis goes on,” Defense Minister Alberto Otarola said.

Several airports have been closed, but the international terminal in Cusco, the gateway city to the jewel of Peruvian tourism, the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu, managed to reopen on Friday, allowing for some 4,500 stranded tourists to begin boarding outbound flights.

Cusco’s airport is the third largest in Peru, and armed soldiers were seen Saturday standing guard outside.

Good news also came Saturday to some 200 tourists stranded in a town in the deep valley below Machu Picchu. They were able to board a train and travel as far as Piscacucho, where a boulder blocked the railway.

The tourists, many from Europe and North America, then walked two kilometers to where waiting vehicles took them on to Cusco.

Rail service to Machu Picchu had been suspended since Tuesday. — NNN-AGENCIES

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