One day before the national mobilization of October 15convened by youth groups and social organizations, the prime minister of José Jerí, Ernesto Alvarezjoined the speech that seeks to discredit the citizen protest. From their social networks, Alvarez He hinted that the day would not have a democratic character, but rather a destabilizing one. Minutes before being sworn in as head, he deleted his X account.
“Even the mayor of Pataz realizes that the ‘mobilization’ of the 15th is not a social protest but a subversive attempt to end democracy and force a ‘Bolivarian’ constituent assembly,” Álvarez wrote on October 13 on his X (formerly Twitter) account.
Three days before, he had already posted a message along the same lines, where he posed a scenario of confrontation and violence. “Two possibilities: Jerí appoints a caviar cabinet with people from NGOs and Vizcarra, or he is overthrown by violent marches to install a Sagasti 2.0.”
And not only that. Álvarez also described Generation Z as a “MRTA heir band”, reinforcing their narrative of criminalization against the young people who call for the great march on October 15. “Heir to the MRTA, the gang that wants to take democracy by storm to control the April elections,” she wrote in her now deleted personal and verified account.
And to top it off. The prime minister also attacked the transport sector, who have been victims of murders due to extortion. “The continuous strikes by radicalized transporters have political objectives in favor of the left that has destroyed security and justice in the country,” he wrote in another message.
Given this, those who will attend the march on October 15 have maintained that their objective is to demand greater citizen security and the resignation of José Jerí, questioned for his complaint of alleged sexual rape and the tweets that went viral after his swearing-in.
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Ernesto Álvarez is the new prime minister of José Jerí’s cabinet
Ernesto Álvarez Miranda has been appointed as the new president of the Council of Ministers in José Jerí’s cabinet, replacing Eduardo Arana after the vacancy of Dina Boluarte. A lawyer by profession and a member of the Popular Christian Party (PPC) since 1984, Álvarez requested a license from his militancy hours before taking office, with the aim of playing a prominent role in the provisional government.
In a letter addressed to the president of the PPC, Carlos Neuhaus, He expressed that he faces a “difficult challenge” in which he has “nothing to gain”, but considers that he cannot “step aside.”
