Even though he Congress launched a preliminary investigation, Popular Force has not yet provided further details about the use of a congressional chamber at the rally where Keiko Fujimori announced his candidacy. To date, the party has not officially reported the name of the responsible area or those allegedly involved. The only thing they have assured is that there is only one person responsible and that he has already resigned.
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However, Congressional sources indicated that the chamber would presumably belong to the Citizen Participation area, whose head is a Fuerza Popular militant.
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Interview with Canal N, the Congressman Arturo Alegría I don’t rule it out. “The sources we have in Congress tell us that this camera did not come from communications but from the citizen participation office. The head is Edwin Lévano, a member of Fuerza Popular who was at the rally. Why was he there?” asked the interviewer.
In response, the legislator did not discard the information and only explained that anyone who wanted to participate in a party activity only had to request a license without pay.
“Well, anyone who wants to attend, like me, presents their unpaid license to be able to participate in a proselytizing activity,” he said.
Congress announces investigation into use of State camera at Keiko Fujimori rally
He Congress of the Republic started a preliminary investigation to punish those who are involved in the use of a recording camera during the announcement of Keiko Fujimori’s candidacy. The fact, described as misuse of state property to cover a proselytizing event by the leader of Fuerza Popular, caused the resignation of a parliamentary group workerHowever, I do not know who it is or what office it belongs to.
The complaint that began with the opening of an administrative sanctioning procedure, focuses on a possible violation of the rules that regulate the use of public resources for partisan or personal purposes, which represents a serious offense that violates the principle of neutrality that should govern public administration.
The investigation was made known through a statement signed by the Mayor’s Office and released by parliamentarian Fernando Rospigliosi. This process, which began on October 31, will seek to establish who authorized the transfer and use of the state equipment, what the exact participation of public personnel was, and whether Keiko Fujimori or her campaign team requested or had knowledge of this alleged irregular service.
