The Argentine Government, together with those of Bolivia, Ecuador and Mexico, “in the face of political tension in Peru” made this Saturday a “call to all the institutions” and “political forces” of that country to “strengthen political dialogue” as a tool to overcome “the current situation it is going through”.
“The Governments of Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador and Mexico, faced with the political tension in Peru, call on all the institutions and political forces of that sister Republic to strengthen political dialogue, as a tool to overcome the current situation that the country is going through. country,” the Argentine Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Along these lines, he stated that “We trust that all national actors will favor the construction of broad, inclusive and participatory consensus” that “allow the strengthening of the functioning of the political system established by the Constitution and the validity of the Rule of Law”.
“We highlight the enormous respect and friendship that unites us with the people of Peru and we reiterate our solidarity with the legitimately constituted authorities,” he said.
“We highlight the enormous respect and friendship that unites us with the people of Peru and we reiterate our solidarity with the legitimately constituted authorities”
Likewise, he expressed that “we hope that Peruvians manage to find formulas that strengthen democratic coexistence in the diversity and plurality of visions about their own development.”
The statement from the Argentine Foreign Ministry It became known when days ago an unprecedented raid on the Government Palace and another on the family home of the President of Peru, Pedro Castillo, in Cajamarca, as well as a new attempt in Congress to remove him from office for “treason against the country” further complicated the situation of the head of that state, whom the opposition seeks to remove from office.
Situation in Peru
Pedro Castillo, who since taking office a year ago has faced opposition actions to evict him from the presidency, experienced the trespassing shortly after the delivery of a report that proposes to suspend him for five years of public functions for the case of Bolivia was made official in Congress.
The report, signed by a center-right congressman, Wilson Soto, and two from the radical right, Norma Yarrow and José Cueto, refers to an interview granted to CNN in January in which Castillo, instead of outright rejecting any possibility of giving territory to the neighboring country, opened, according to its detractors, a window on that road.