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Peru’s President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski addresses the nation as he resigns on Wednesday at the Presidential Palace in Lima, with his cabinet looking on. Photo: Reuters

Peru’s embattled president Kuczynski announces resignation, denying bribery but admitting he looks guilty

‘Faced with this difficult situation that unfairly makes me appear guilty, I think the best thing for the country is for me to resign’

Peru

Peru’s President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski announced his resignation Wednesday in an address to the nation, the day before he was to face an impeachment vote in Congress.

The 79-year-old former Wall Street banker, under fire over his links to Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht, denied allegations of bribe-taking but said his resignation was “the best thing for the country.”

Kuczynski is the first president to lose his job over the scandal in which the Brazilian company admitted paying out millions of dollars in bribes and gifts to Latin American politicians and businessmen to secure public works contracts.

His resignation comes a few weeks before Kuczynski was due to host the Summit of the Americas in Lima, where US President Donald Trump and others leaders of the Western Hemisphere are expected April 13-14.
Peruvian former President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski waves before leaving the Palace of Government in Lima after recording his resignation announcement on Wednesday. Photo: Agence France-Presse

“Faced with this difficult situation that unfairly makes me appear guilty, I think the best thing for the country is for me to resign the presidency of the republic,” he said in the televised address, which showed him seated at a polished conference table with his cabinet standing grim-faced behind him.

“I do not want to be an obstacle, for the country to continue suffering with the uncertainty of these recent times,” said the president, who survived a previous impeachment vote in December.

The Congress said it would debate the resignation on Thursday and vote on Friday on whether to accept it.

I do not want to be an obstacle, for the country to continue suffering with the uncertainty of these recent times
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

Vice-President Martin Vizcarra, who is currently serving as Peru’s ambassador to Canada, is likely to replace Kuczynski to avoid early elections at a time of widespread voter discontent with political parties.

Vizcarra, who is expected in Lima on Thursday, would hold the post until July 2021, when Kuczynski’s mandate was due to end.

Pressure built on Kuczynski to resign throughout Wednesday after the opposition alleged the embattled president was trying to buy votes ahead of the impeachment ballot.

Lawmakers from Keiko Fujimori’s Popular Force party released recordings of her brother Kenji and others apparently negotiating public works contracts in return for votes, and said it was proof that Kuczynski was trying to buy votes.

“This government thought it could buy everything. There will always be brave and worthy Peruvians who are not for sale. It’s time to tell Mr PPK that he’s leaving, and NOW!” Keiko Fujimori tweeted, using the president’s initials.

The videos, dating from December, were filmed ahead of the previous impeachment vote, which Kuczynski survived with Kenji Fujimori’s help.

Days later, Kuczynski pardoned the Fujimoris’ imprisoned father, ex-president Alberto Fujimori, in what was widely seen as a payoff for support.

The government denied vote-buying.

The bitter feud between the Fujimori siblings – on opposite sides for the first impeachment vote – is likely to continue to be a feature of Peruvian politics.

Vizcarra will have the same challenges as Kuczynski, posed by an opposition-dominated Congress bent on undermining the government.

One compromising video purported to show Kenji trying to convince another Fujimori lawmaker to vote against impeachment in December, in exchange for political favours.

“With deep disappointment and pain, Peru is once again witnessing negotiations for the purchase of Congressmen, and I regret even more that my own brother is involved in these practices that hurt us so much as Peruvians and as a family,” Keiko wrote on Twitter.

Her brother snapped back with a Tweet that attacked “the baseness and criminal attitudes of Popular Force and my sister Keiko” accusing them of “distorting information.”

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