Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
Frente Externo  
 
15/04/2011 | In Peru, two weak choices

Los Angeles Times Staff

Peru's politics have long been ailing. The likely choice between populist Ollanta Humala and Keiko Fujimori, daughter of a jailed president who abused human rights, could further imperil its health.

 

Peru's political system has been ailing for decades. Corruption, violence and deep economic inequalities have left it weakened. Now, the first round of voting in the presidential race, which took place Sunday, threatens to leave the country in critical condition.

From a field of five candidates, two emerged as front-runners likely to move on to a runoff election June 5. Both appear wanting in experience, and concerns about their commitment to democracy prompted Peruvian writer and Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa to say the decision will be like "choosing between AIDS and terminal cancer."

The top vote-getter, Ollanta Humala, is a former military officer turned fiery populist who promises to redistribute the country's wealth and rewrite the constitution, raising concerns that he might try to extend his term in office. Once a vocal admirer of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, he has tried in recent years to tone down the anti-capitalistic rhetoric that had prompted comparisons to Bolivia and Ecuador's leaders and to position himself nearer the center.

His closest rival is expected to be Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of a jailed president convicted of human rights abuses and rampant corruption. A congresswoman, she has relied on Alberto Fujimori's former cohorts to steer her campaign and has promised to pardon him if elected. Like Humala, she has pledged to help the poor but has offered few other details of her program beyond declaring her support for the death penalty in cases of the rape of minors.

Peru can't afford either candidate. Too much is at stake.

The Andean country is only starting to clean up after the pinata of corruption that was the Fujimori era. The faceless military courts that imprisoned untold numbers of innocent Peruvians as terrorists have been dismantled, but the judicial system remains weak. The brutal Maoist guerrilla group Sendero Luminoso, or Shining Path, has largely been defeated, but new threats have surfaced. Last year, Peru produced more coca leaves than Colombia, according to a United Nations report, prompting fears of violence and further corruption. (Although coca is grown legally in some areas of Peru, the vast majority of coca fields are illegal.) And even though Peru's economy grew by about 9% last year, the benefits of the boom have yet to reach the poor, the majority of whom live outside Lima, where social and public services are scarce.

With less than two months to go before the runoff, Peruvians have few choices. Luckily, neither candidate has a strong majority and both still need to woo voters, who can withhold support and demand that both Humala and Fujimori pledge to respect the nascent democratic institutions and to maintain the current presidential term limits.

 

Los Angeles Times (Estados Unidos)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 11 to 20 of 926 )
fecha titulo
10/11/2013 Peru - Plan Nacional de Seguridad Ciudadana - Acuerdo Nacional por la Seguridad Ciudadana
10/11/2013 Peru's Cocaine Air Bridge
31/10/2013 Perú avanza sin grandes discursos
31/10/2013 Peru and India sign pact to strengthen relations between the two nations
19/10/2013 Perú: la corrupción golpea más a los pobres y frena el desarrollo
18/10/2013 Perú: Más congresistas, menos estupidez
15/09/2013 La corrupción ensombrece la política peruana
28/08/2013 Plan Nacional de Seguridad Ciudadana 2013-2018
27/08/2013 Perú: Higiene policial
26/08/2013 Las empresas brasileñas en el Perú


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
28/04/2014|
22/05/2012|
07/03/2012|
07/03/2012|
24/09/2011|
20/08/2011|
13/09/2010|
23/05/2010|
20/10/2007|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House