Friday, January 27, 2023

'Love hormone'? Not so fast, new study suggests


A new study has raised questions about the role played by the so-called 'love horomone' oxytocin in mating behavior

Issued on: 27/01/2023 

Tokyo (AFP) – The "love hormone" oxytocin has long been thought key to behaviours including pairing up with a partner and nurturing offspring, but a new study in prairie voles is raising doubts.

The research found that voles bred to lack functioning receptors for oxytocin were still able to form strong pairs, produce young and nurse -- all behaviours previously believed to depend on the hormone.

Prairie voles are one of the few mammals that mate for life, and are often used to study social behaviours like pair-forming in animals.

In past studies, voles given drugs that stopped oxytocin being processed no longer formed pairs, and mothers failed to produce milk for their young.

Psychiatrist Devanand Manoli and neurobiologist Nirao Shah produced genetically altered prairie voles without working oxytocin receptors, and then observed how the mutant male and female voles behaved.

To their shock, the mutant voles appeared to have no difficulty pairing up with non-genetically altered partners, and mutant females could still deliver and nurse young, unlike those in the drug-driven studies.

"We were certainly surprised," said Manoli, an assistant professor at the University of California, San Francisco.

The results suggest that oxytocin is not the main, or only, driver of activities like partnering or nursing, he said.

"What the genetics reveals is that there isn't a 'single point of failure' for behaviours that are so critical to the survival of the species," he told AFP.
'Very complex behaviours'

That didn't mean there were no differences, however.

Some male mutant voles that paired with ordinary female partners didn't show the aggression towards interloping females that would normally be expected.

And while mutant females produced and nursed litters, some had fewer pups per litter than their counterparts, and fewer of their offspring survived to weaning, the paper published Friday in the journal Neuron explains.

Pups born to mutant mothers also tended to weigh less, suggesting that they were not able to nurse as effectively.

The study only involved pairing of mutant voles with "wild-type" partners, and the researchers said pairings with two mutant partners could produce different results.

Still, as a whole, the findings suggest a different picture of oxytocin's role in several important behaviours.

That could be because animals bred without the receptors developed "other compensatory pathways" that helped them pair up and nurse, said Shah, a professor at Stanford University.

But the researchers suggest it likely means oxytocin is only part of a set of genetic factors that control social behaviour.

"What I think our studies reveal is that there are multiple pathways that regulate these very complex behaviours," said Manoli.

Oxytocin has sometimes been suggested as a way to treat attachment disorders and other neuropsychiatric issues, but there is little settled science on how effective it is.

Now the researchers hope to investigate what other hormones and receptors may be involved in behaviours like pairing and nursing.

"These other pathways might serve as new therapeutic targets," Manoli said.
Palestinian anger spreads after deadly Israel raid

Issued on: 27/01/2023 - 

Palestinians hurl rocks at an Israeli army bulldozer during clashes on Thursday in the flashpoint West Bank city of Jenin © Zain Jaafar / AFP

Jenin (Palestinian Territories) (AFP) – Before carrying out one of the deadliest West Bank raids in recent memory, Israeli soldiers reportedly snuck into Jenin refugee camp hiding in the back of a milk truck.

The operation, which Israel said targeted Islamists planning an attack, killed nine people and for Palestinians recalled the bloodshed of the second intifada or uprising between 2000 and 2005, when Jenin was plagued by fighting.

Analysts have warned of more violence to come, after the deadliest year in the West Bank since the UN started tracking the death toll in the occupied territory in 2005.

According to Jihad Abu Kamal, a Jenin resident and self-described member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades armed group, a dairy truck enters Jenin refugee camp at the same time every morning to deliver milk.

"They tried to surprise us with it," the 35-year-old told AFP, referring to multiple accounts from witnesses who said Israeli forces entered undercover in the back of the vehicle.

A local armed group released video purportedly showing the truck used by the Israelis.

Israel has said the target of the raid was a group of Islamic Jihad fighters hiding in a house near a hospital, some of whom shot at troops during the raid.

Among those killed, according to Palestinian officials, was a 61-year-woman named Majeda Obeid.

Her daughter, Kefiyat Obeid, told AFP that after morning prayers her mother looked out her window as gunfire rang through the street when she was shot in the neck.

The Israeli army has said it was looking into reports of additional casualties beyond "armed suspects."

'Bodies on fire'


Israeli forces withdrew from the camp before midday.


Demonstrators hurl rocks at Israeli troops in the West Bank town of Al-Ram as Palestinians vent their anger over Thursday's deadly raid in Jenin © AHMAD GHARABLI / AFP

When the fighting ended, 23-year-old Fadi Sabbarini said he ran into the targeted house to see if he could help.

"There were two bodies on fire, I put out the first one, but they both were badly charred," he told AFP.

"A third man's brains were spread across the wall," he added, pointing to bloody smears inside the front entrance.

Such scenes are not new to residents of Jenin. The camp has long been home to Palestinian fighters from various armed groups, and a frequent target of Israeli raids.

Following a series of deadly attacks inside Israel last year, Israeli forces raided Jenin before dawn on a near daily basis.
'Broader strategy'

Fighters are increasingly trying to draw Israelis into combat inside the camp, said Tahani Mustafa, West Bank analyst at the International Crisis Group think-tank.

"It's part of a broader strategy we are seeing with these armed groups," she told AFP.

"They are luring Israel into these sorts of battle grounds. Now you're actually seeing Israel having to confront these groups on their own turf."

She forecast that the violence would continue to escalate, as Palestinian anger over the repeated Israeli raids deepens and frustrations mounts with the Palestinian Authority, seen by many as an Israeli pawn.

Supporters of Islamic Jihad, the Palestinian militant group targeted in Thursday's deadly Israeli raid on Jenin camp, demonstrate their support in Gaza City 
© MOHAMMED ABED / AFP

The raid "is going to fuel the frustration and anger they are already feeling towards the PA and the Israelis."

The PA announced late Thursday that it was severing security coordination with Israel for the first time since 2020, a move condemned by Washington days before Secretary of State Antony Blinken is due in the region.

Abu Kamal told AFP Jenin felt like a community under siege.

"The atmosphere is very tense, there is resentment against the occupation, and the crimes it has committed," he said.

"It is as if every household in the camp has been targeted."

Israeli security officials have said the army's incursions into West Bank towns and cities are essential to averting attacks on Israeli civilians.

Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said the group targeted in Thursday's raid "planned to conduct a terror attack in Israel".

© 2023 AFP
Film academy reviewing Oscar campaigns after surprise nomination

By - AFP
Updated: Jan 28, 2023


The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said Friday it was launching a review of Oscars campaigning, days after a small indie film surprised industry-watchers with a shock nomination to Hollywood's most prestigious awards.

"To Leslie" had taken just $27,000 at the box office when star Andrea Riseborough's name appeared on the shortlist of nominees for Best Actress.

Riseborough, who plays a Texas single mother struggling with alcoholism, beat out presumed frontrunners Viola Davis ("The Woman King") and Danielle Deadwyler ("Till").

The nod came after an intense, last-minute social media campaign mounted on her behalf by celebrity friends including Edward Norton, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Sarah Paulson.

Movie industry magazine Variety said the Academy had received multiple calls and emails in the wake of the nomination, and there was a raging debate among moviemakers over whether rules had been broken.

On Friday, the Academy said it would be examining its processes, although it did not mention the film by name.

"It is the Academy's goal to ensure that the Awards competition is conducted in a fair and ethical manner, and we are committed to ensuring an inclusive awards process," a statement said.

"We are conducting a review of the campaign procedures around this year's nominees, to ensure that no guidelines were violated, and to inform us whether changes to the guidelines may be needed in a new era of social media and digital communication.

"We have confidence in the integrity of our nomination and voting procedures, and support genuine grassroots campaigns for outstanding performances."

The Oscars are awarded based on the votes of the 9,500 members of the Academy -- many of them previous winners.

Academy membership is divided into 17 branches -- actors, directors, producers, costume designers and so on -- with each branch picking the nominees in their area of expertise.

With around 1,300 members of the actors' branch, a nominee in this category needs just over 200 votes to make the shortlist.

In the months ahead of the Oscars, which this year will be held on March 12, billboards in Los Angeles are plastered with advertisements for films as studios seek to persuade voting members.

There are also a host of parties and events aimed at generating a buzz.

Campaigns are often organised by professional companies and generally don't come cheap, so are usually the preserve of large studios.

But "To Leslie" was absent from this circuit.

Variety reported Friday that "Titanic" star Frances Fisher had posted on social media encouraging her fellow Academy members to nominate Riseborough.

"To my fellow Actors in The Academy - According to Pete Hammond writing for Deadline, Andrea Riseborough can secure an Oscar nomination if 218 (out of 1,302) actors in the Actors Branch nominated her in first position for Best Actress," she wrote on Instagram, according to Variety.
France's shrinking footprint in Africa

Adam PLOWRIGHT with Pierre DONADIEU in Abidjan and Boureima HAMA in Niamey
Fri, January 27, 2023 


With anti-France feelings running high in many of its former colonies in West Africa, Paris is being forced to retreat ever further from the increasingly unstable region and re-think its presence, experts say.

After the ruling junta in Mali forced French troops out last year, the army officers running neighbouring Burkina Faso followed suit this week, asking Paris to empty its garrison in the next month.

Under President Emmanuel Macron, France was already drawing down its troops across the Sahel region, who just a few years ago numbered more than 5,000, backed up with fighter jets, helicopters and infantry fighting vehicles.

Around 3,000 remain, but the forced departures from Mali and Burkina Faso -- as well as the Central African Republic to the south last year -- underline how anti-French winds are gathering force.

"France is paying for its desire to maintain a very significant political and military presence in its former dominions," said Jean-Herve Jezequel, a region specialist from the International Crisis Group (ICG), a conflict-focused think tank.

After the independence movement in the 1950s and 60s, Paris still intervened regularly in the domestic affairs of its former colonies and for decades retained sway through business and political ties under an unofficial policy known as "Francafrique".

Today its influence has shrunk and it faces growing competition from Russia, but its permanent military presence and the existence of common regional currencies underpinned by the French central bank are targets for populist politicians.

"The idea that the former colonial power can retain such a strong military presence is hard to stomach for many people," Jezequel told AFP, adding that there remained a "post-colonial hangover that has not been resolved".

Gilles Yabi, founder of the Senegal-based WATHI think-tank, told AFP there was a "desire from some sections of society to enter a new phase, to grasp a 'new independence'."
















- Popular France-bashing -

The biggest source of anti-French feeling is Paris's military intervention in Mali in 2013 to beat back jihadists who were advancing from the north and threatening to overrun the government in the capital Bamako.

Though the operation was a success and the elected government saved, any credit has long since disappeared.

A heavy French presence afterwards failed to stop the insurgency spreading, with the violence spilling over into neighbouring countries and now threatening communities all over the Sahel region beneath the Sahara desert.

"It is clear that it (France) has not managed to stop the continued worsening of the security crisis, which has many, many different causes," said Paul Melly, an expert on the Sahel and consulting fellow at the Chatham House, a London-based think tank.

"People say 'if they're here, what use are they?'", he said.

Social media posts and deliberate disinformation campaigns -- for which Paris blames Russia -- have also fanned exaggerated or false stories about French exploitation of minerals and gold in the region, or even French support for jihadist groups.

Politicians, particularly army figures with no democratic legitimacy, are quick to see an opportunity.

"When you're a fragile military regime that has taken power quite recently, standing up to the French or telling them to get out is one way of keeping a bit of the base on side," Melly added.

But France-bashing is not limited to coup leaders in Mali or Burkino Faso.

In Senegal, President Macky Sall is regularly accused by his opponents of taking instructions from his "master" in Paris ahead of elections next year, with top rival Ousmane Sonko backing a reset in relations.

- Allies under pressure -

For the time being, France can still count on support in the region -- in Senegal, Ivory Coast, Niger and Chad -- where leaders still welcome the low-key presence of French troops and their firepower.

Poverty-wracked and centrally located Niger, where the United States also has a major base for special forces and drones, is likely to play an increasingly important role in hosting French troops for anti-terror operations.

But Niger President Mohamed Bazoum faces a delicate balancing act, needing to sell the benefits of French support to his sometimes sceptical population.

Melly from Chatham House said Bazoum and his ministers were "constantly giving media interviews and making local visits to say to people 'just to the northwest is Mali and to the west is Burkina Faso and both of these are bandit country now'."

"Mohamed Bazoum is taking a political risk," said Amadou Bounty Diallo, a professor at the University of Niamey in Niger's capital.

"You have to be extremely careful when people are very concerned about their own sovereignty. They won't accept everything."

adp-pid-bh/ah/ri
UK under fire over retreat from Windrush scandal reforms

Fri, January 27, 2023 


Britain's government came under withering criticism Friday after retreating from reforms it had promised to prevent a repeat of the "Windrush" scandal affecting black immigrants.

Right-wing interior minister Suella Braverman said Thursday that three of the changes previously promised were unnecessary.

Baroness Floella Benjamin, a former TV presenter who chairs the government's Windrush Commemoration Committee, said Braverman's announcement was "cruel" and would cause "even more pain and hurt".

The MV Empire Windrush ship was one of the vessels that brought workers from Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and other Caribbean islands to help fill UK labour shortages after World War II.

From 2017, campaigners revealed that thousands of the legitimate British citizens had been wrongly detained or deported under the Conservative government's hardline immigration policies.

Many lost homes and jobs, and were denied access to healthcare and benefits. Some died before their names could be cleared.

Among 30 recommendations, a subsequent inquiry suggested a commissioner to safeguard migrants' interests; more powers for an independent chief inspector of borders; and the holding of reconciliation events.

Braverman's predecessor agreed to all 30 reforms. But the minister said she was dropping those three recommendations, prompting the lawyer who oversaw the inquiry, Wendy Williams, to say she was "disappointed".

Braverman, however, argued that she wanted to "shift culture and subject ourselves to scrutiny" rather than relying on external overseers.

"Homeland" actor David Harewood described the home secretary’s backtracking as "awful", and said "we're dangerously flirting with ideologues".

Braverman, who is of Indian heritage, is an unabashed campaigner against "woke" culture who says it is her "dream" to see illegal immigrants flown to Rwanda for resettlement under one UK government plan.

Harewood told LBC radio that Braverman's ethnic background was "very convenient" for the government to pursue illiberal policies against migrants.

At the unveiling last June of a commemorative statue in London's Waterloo station, Prince William praised the Windrush migrants' "immense contribution" to UK life.

"Every part of British life is better for the half a million men and women of the Windrush generation," he said

jit/jwp/jj

IMPERIALISM'S EXCUSE TO INVADE
Haiti gang violence: 'Daily violence affecting Haitians has reached unprecedented levels'

Issued on: 27/01/2023 -



05:55 Haiti gang violence 

Renata Segura, Deputy Latin Director at International Crisis Group, spoke to France 24’s François Picard about "unprecedented levels" of Haitian gang violence, and the political and economic turmoil plaguing the country. This, as police take to the streets blaming Prime Minister Ariel Henry for the carnage, while lawmakers and citizens appeal to the international community for help.

THIS IS OF COURSE THE SAME EXCUSE USED DURING THE AGE OF PIRATES

https://colinwoodard.com/books/republic-of-pirates

For a brief, glorious period the pirate republic was enormously successful. At its height it cut off trade routes, sacked slave ships, and severed Britain, ...


As the world's first Black sovereign State, 'now is the time for a new chapter in Haitian history'

Civilian protesters and police marched through Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince on Thursday to demonstrate against a slew of killings of police officers by armed gangs in worsening violence in the Caribbean nation. Streets were blocked with barricades the day after gangs, who control much of Haiti and regularly kidnap people for ransom, attacked police headquarters in Liancourt, a town in the north of Haiti, killing six officers. For more on the gang violence that has ripped through the country, FRANCE 24 is joined by Rosa Freedman, Professor of Law Conflict and Global Development at the University of Reading. She says that "when the police force are rioting and protesting against their own government, it gives you an indication of just how bad it really is." Yet rather than sending in foreign troops, she believes we should be supporting Haitians to have "independent and democratic elections" and to develop "justice systems" that will take on corruption and gang violence tearing at the fabric of the country. Professor Freedman asserts that it is up to the Haitians to determine their fate and build their future: As the world's first Black sovereign State, "now is the time for a new chapter in Haitian history."




France minister 'shocked' after train runs over cat

Issued on: 27/01/2023 














An animal rights group has filed a complaint against French railway operator SNCF after a train ran over a cat
© Sameer Al-DOUMY / AFP

Paris (AFP) – France's Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said Friday he was "particularly shocked" after a train departing a busy Paris station appeared to deliberately run over a domestic cat.

He spoke after an animal rights group this week filed a complaint against national railway operator SNCF over the pet's death at the Montparnasse station on January 2.

Passengers Georgia and her 15-year-old daughter Melaina said their pet Neko escaped from its travel bag and disappeared under a high-speed train as they prepared to travel to Bordeaux.

After 20 minutes of trying to persuade staff to rescue it, the train departed, killing the cat.

"We saw him sliced in half," Melaina told animal rights association 30 Million Friends.

"They told us it wasn't their problem, that it was just a cat and that we should have had it on a leash."

Afterwards, the train company offered them a free ticket to Bordeaux, they said.


30 Million Friends said it had filed a complaint for "grave abuse and cruelty that led to the death of an animal".

That could lead to a fine of up to 75,000 euros (more than $80,000) and a five-year jail sentence if the case goes to court.

Starting the train was "a deliberate act... an informed decision -- and that is criminally reprehensible," the group's lawyer Xavier Bacquet told BFMTV.

SNCF said it regretted the "tragic" incident, but that descending onto the tracks was strictly forbidden due to the risk of electrocution.

Darmanin on Friday said he was "particularly shocked by the way SNCF unfortunately managed the terrible affair".

"The investigation will determine who is criminally responsible," he told BFMTV.

Darmanin announced that police officers in 4,000 stations across the country would be trained to respond to animal trafficking and abuse.

30 Million Friends welcomed the announcement.

But it must "imperatively come with proper awareness raising among magistrates and adapted penal repression," it said.

© 2023 AFP

Beasts of burden - Antagonism and Practical History


An attempt to rethink the separation between animal liberationist and communist politics.
Actor Alan Cumming hands back UK medal in anti-empire protest



Fri, January 27, 2023 


Scottish actor Alan Cumming said on Friday he had returned a UK state honour in protest at the "toxicity" of the British Empire, 14 years after receiving the award.

Cumming, who is largely US-based, was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2009 in recognition of his acting and his work for LGBTQ+ rights in the United States.

But he said he had reflected further on the role of the monarchy after the death last year of Queen Elizabeth II.

That refection, "and especially the way the British Empire profited at the expense (and death) of indigenous peoples across the world really opened my eyes", Cumming said in an Instagram post marking his 58th birthday.

Gay rights had advanced meanwhile in the United States, and any benefit from the award was "now less potent than the misgivings I have being associated with the toxicity of empire", Cumming said.

"So, I returned my award, explained my reasons and reiterated my great gratitude for being given it in the first place. I'm now back to being plain old Alan Cumming again. Happy birthday to me!"

The queen's death also forced a reckoning for Welsh actor Michael Sheen, who handed back his OBE late last year and urged an end to the heir to the British crown being named prince of Wales.

Further back, Beatles songwriter John Lennon returned his MBE medal -- which ranks below an OBE -- in 1969 in protest at UK involvement in a Nigerian civil war and its support for the US war in Vietnam.

jit/jwp
‘Robin Hood’ power strikers provide free power to French schools, hospitals and low-income homes

By The Bharat Express News
-January 27, 2023


Issued on: 27/01/2023 – 

Amid national strikes in the energy sector, some workers in France have found a new way to protest. On Thursday, “Robin Hood” operations — without government authorization — provided free gas and electricity to schools, universities and low-income households across the country.

Unapproved power supplies also included public sports facilities, day care centers, universities, public libraries, some small businesses, and homes that were cut off from power.


The ‘Robin des Bois’ operations – named after English folklore hero Robin Hood – were part of a wider effort to force the government to abandon plans to raise the retirement age in France.

Free energy supplies were intended to “reinforce the balance of power” in favor of striking workers, said Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the GGT, one of France’s largest confederations of trade unions. “[It’s about] returning energy to those who don’t have it at all because they can’t afford it, and make it free for hospitals and schools.”

The reference to the Englishman, known for stealing from the rich to give to the poor, was “appropriate,” Martinez told FranceInfo on Wednesday.

The unconventional protest comes amid an ongoing cost-of-living crisis in Europe that will see gas and electricity prices in France rise another 15% by 2023, exacerbating long-standing problems. In 2021, a quarter of households in France were already struggling to pay their energy bills.

‘We could paralyze the country’


Meanwhile, strikes by energy workers at power plants, refineries, ports and docks on Thursday reduced France’s power availability by 2 gigawatts (GW) at three nuclear reactors, state-controlled nuclear group EDF’s breakdown table showed on Friday morning.

Strikes also took place in almost every French port and many came to a complete standstill, according to the CGT’s national federation for ports and docks. While TotalEnergies workers broke their strike on Thursday night, other energy strikes continued on Friday.

The energy strike follows a national strike on January 19 over pension reforms proposed by President Emmanuel Macron’s government, including plans to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.

The changes would also end specific pension plans at national energy companies EDF and Engie, which would allow some workers to retire early.

While Macron has promised to push ahead with the reforms, which will be presented to parliament on Monday, strikers have also said they will not back down.

>> French government pushes pension reform to parliament


“The purpose of today’s protests is to show that the balance of power has shifted up a notch and that, if we wanted to, we could paralyze the country,” said Gwenaël Plagne, CGT representative at a thermal power station in Cordemais, western France. .

A second national strike including teachers, civil servants and transportation workers is scheduled for Tuesday, January 31.
‘We will continue’

More “Robin des Bois” surgeries are also likely. “If the government does not withdraw its pension reforms, we will go ahead and make energy free for anyone who does not have access to regulated tariffs, be it public institutions or companies,” said Frédéric Probel, secretary general of the CGT. in Bagneux, in the Parisian suburbs, FranceInfo told Friday.

He said that in Paris and the city’s suburbs, free energy was supplied on Thursday for hospitals, clinics, ice rinks, swimming pools, high schools, public buildings, street lighting and heating. “At least it makes sense and it helps the public,” he added.

Plans to supply or shut down power can also become more targeted. GCT Secretary General Martinez denied on Wednesday that elected officials or specific individuals could have their power cut off — with few exceptions. “I would suggest that some billionaires who think we don’t need to raise salaries and that all is well in this country can pretend to live the experience of millions of households facing energy uncertainty,” he said.

Leading politicians have spoken out against unauthorized free energy supply.

Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire described them on Wednesday as “unacceptable. It’s not up to the CGT determine prices”, he told Europe 1. “It is not for the CGT to decide who should pay and how much. It is the state, the public interest, the French people through them [elected] representatives.”

Energy Transition Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher told France 2 on Friday morning that it was likely taxpayers would eventually have to foot the bill for unauthorized electricity consumption.

DEJA VU
Peru's president asks Congress to bring vote forward amid deadly protests

Story by NEWS WIRES • 5h ago

Embattled Peru President Dina Boluarte on Friday urged Congress to advance elections slated for April 2024 to December 2023 as protests against her leadership that have left dozens dead continue.


Peru's president asks Congress to bring vote forward amid deadly protests© Angela Ponce, Reuters

Peru has been embroiled in a political crisis with near-daily protests since December 7 when former president Pedro Castillo was arrested after attempting to dissolve parliament and rule by decree.

His supporters are demanding that Boluarte resign and call fresh elections.

Boluarte said she had asked her Cabinet to support the bill before it is taken up by Congress.

"We put this bill to advance elections to December 2023 to the ministers for consideration," said Boluarte during a ceremony at a military airport in Lima.

Related video: Peru's bitter divide: How far will anti-Boluarte protests go?
(France 24) Duration 43:59 View on Watch

Congress previously voted on December 21 in favor of a Boluarte bill to bring forward elections from 2026 to 2024.


"Congress voted once and we are waiting for them to vote again. However, the protests continue. There are more roadblocks and violence," added Boluarte, describing the current political crisis as a "quagmire."

But protesters are demanding immediate elections, as well as Boluarte's removal, the dissolution of parliament and a new constitution.

In seven weeks of protests since Castillo's arrest, at least 46 people have been killed in clashes between security forces and protesters.

Some of the worst violence and highest death tolls have come when protesters tried to storm airports in the country's south.

Those southern regions with large indigenous populations have been the epicenter of the protest movement that has affected Peru's vital tourism industry.

As well as blocking dozens of roads and forcing the temporary closure of several airports, protesters have placed rocks on the train tracks that act as the only transport access to Machu Picchu, the former Inca citadel and jewel of Peruvian tourism.

That resulted in hundreds of tourists being left stranded at the archeological ruins and many of them were evacuated by helicopter.

(AFP)



Peru’s president urges Congress to bring forward general elections amid protests
This article is more than 1 month old

Dina Boluarte assumed the presidency after Pedro Castillo tried to illegally dissolve Congress and was arrested


Dina Boluarte’s government has announced a state of emergency and granted police special powers.
 Photograph: Lucas Aguayo/AFP/Getty Images

Reuters in Lima
Sat 17 Dec 2022


The Peruvian president, Dina Boluarte, who has said she is leading a transitional government, urged the country’s Congress to pass a proposal to bring forward general elections in a news conference from the presidential palace on Saturday.

Boluarte, formerly Peru’s vice-president, assumed the presidency earlier this month after ex-president Pedro Castillo tried to illegally dissolve Congress and was arrested.

Since then, protests have broken out across the country, and at least 17 people have been killed. Another five have died as an indirect consequence of the protests, according to authorities.

Boluarte also countered protesters asking for her to step down, saying “that does not solve the problem” and that she had done her part by sending the bill to Congress.

On Friday, Peru’s Congress rejected the proposed constitutional reform to move elections forward to December 2023. Some members of Congress have called for the legislature to reconsider the proposal.

“I demand that the vote to bring elections up be reconsidered,” Boluarte said, criticising Congress members who had previously abstained from voting.


What is happening in Peru and why are people so angry?


Protests since the arrest of the former president Castillo, who is in pre-trial detention while facing charges of rebellion and conspiracy, have crippled Peru’s transport system, shuttering airports and blocking highways.

On Wednesday, Boluarte’s government announced a state of emergency, granting police special powers and limiting citizens’ rights, including the right to assembly.

Protesters have also blockaded Peru’s borders, leaving tourists stranded and strangling trade.

“We want the immediate closure of Congress; we want the resignation of Dina Boluarte,” said Rene Mendoza, a protester at the border with Bolivia. “Today, the Peruvian people are in mourning … The whole of Peru is in a struggle.”


Boluarte Calls for Peru 'Truce' as Protesters Mass Again in Lima

January 24, 2023 
Agence France-Presse
Riot police fire tear gas at demonstrators during a protest against the government of Dina Boluarte asking for her resignation and the closure of Congress, in Lima on Jan. 24, 2023.

LIMA, PERU —

Peru's President Dina Boluarte called Tuesday for a "national truce" to end weeks of nationwide unrest as protesters again clashed with police in the capital to press for her resignation and fresh elections.

Thousands of Peruvians from Andean regions, many in traditional dress, marched in central Lima chanting "Dina assassin," blaming her for the deaths of 46 people, mainly demonstrators, since protests broke out last month.

Violent clashes erupted in central Lima Tuesday evening as protesters threw stones and police responded with tear gas, according to an AFP journalist on the scene.

Demonstrators swing makeshift slingshots during clashes with riot police within a protest against the government of Dina Boluarte asking for her resignation and the closure of Congress, in Lima on Jan. 24, 2023.

Many Peruvians remain angry at the December 7 ouster of then-president Pedro Castillo, who was arrested after attempting to dissolve Congress and rule by decree.

Boluarte, the vice president under Castillo, immediately assumed power.


SEE ALSO:
Families of Detained Protesters in Peru Clamor for News


Protests quickly broke out, largely fueled by anger in poor rural regions in the south where inhabitants – mainly Indigenous – felt that Castillo, who has Indigenous roots himself, represented their interests rather than those of the Lima elite.

Demonstrators have kept up weeks of protests and roadblocks and are also demanding the dissolution of Congress and the rewriting of the constitution.

"I call on my dear country to a national truce to allow for the establishment of dialogue, to fix the agenda for each region and develop our towns," Boluarte said in a news conference with foreign media. "I will not tire from calling for dialogue, peace and unity."

SEE ALSO:
Peru Closes Machu Picchu Amid Deadly Protests in Lima


A visibly emotional Boluarte apologized several times for those killed in the protests but ruled out resigning.

"I will go once we have called a general election ... I have no intention of remaining in power."

Under Peru's current constitution, the president cannot run for immediate reelection.

'We don't believe her'

Boluarte said she was sure Congress would agree in February to advance elections, currently scheduled for April 2024.

Asked about her possible resignation, Boluarte scoffed at the idea that it would "solve the crisis and the violence."

"We don't believe her words anymore," said protester Rosa Soncco, a 37-year-old hailing from the mountain town of Acomayo, in the southern Cusco region.

"We will stay here until the end, until she leaves," she said.

Aerial view of demonstrators holding a protest against the government of Peru's President Dina Boluarte asking for her resignation and the closure of Congress, at a centric plaza in Lima on Jan. 24, 2023.

On Tuesday, police fired tear gas to repel demonstrators heading in the direction of Congress, AFP journalists saw. At least one person was bleeding from their head and an injured woman was heard screaming near an ambulance.

One protester carried a big doll with a bloody knife in its hand and a picture of Boluarte attached.

Boluarte is due to have a video meeting with the Organization of American States (OAS) on Wednesday to discuss the situation in Peru.

Her government has come under fire from rights groups over alleged repression of protests and the disproportionate use of force by security forces.

Castillo 'no victim'


Boluarte has called a state of emergency in Peru, allowing the army to assist police in maintaining order.

Riot police takes position during a protest against the government of Dina Boluarte asking for her resignation and the closure of Congress, in Lima on Jan. 24, 2023.

"I will appear before the OAS to tell the truth. The Peruvian government and especially Dina Boluarte have nothing to hide," she said.

Boluarte claims some of the protesters were killed by ammunition that is not used by the police.

The president said the deaths "hurt me, as a woman, a mother and a daughter."

She also hit out at her predecessor Castillo, saying he sparked unrest by trying to broaden his powers in a bid to avoid an impeachment vote and stave off corruption investigations.

"It suited him to stage a coup d'etat so he could play the victim and mobilize all this paramilitary apparatus so as not to answer before the public prosecutor for the acts of corruption that he is accused of," said Boluarte.

"There is no victim here, Mr. Castillo. There is a bleeding country because of your irresponsibility."

Boluarte is from the same left-wing party as Castillo and was his running mate during his successful 2021 election campaign. She served as his vice president before replacing him.