‘Takeover of Lima’: thousands march on Peru’s capital as unrest spreads
- Protesters massed in downtown Lima to try to topple the fragile government of President Dina Boluarte
- Peru has been rocked by protests since the ouster of leftist former President Pedro Castillo in early December
Thousands of protesters in Peru, many from the country’s heavily indigenous south, descended on Lima, the capital, on Thursday, angered by a mounting death toll since unrest erupted last month and calling for sweeping change.
Police estimated the march, dubbed by some protesters as the “takeover of Lima”, at around 3,500 people. Others speculated it attracted more than double that.
Rows of police in riot gear faced off against rock-hurling protesters on some streets, and one historic building in the city’s historic centre caught fire late on Thursday.
The building, on San Martin Plaza, was empty when the massive blaze ignited from unknown causes, a firefighter commander told local radio.
Canada-based miner Hudbay said in a statement that protesters had entered the site of its Peru unit, damaging and burning key machinery and vehicles.
“This has not been a protest; this has been a sabotage of the rule of law,” Prime Minister Alberto Otarola said Thursday evening alongside President Dina Boluarte and other government ministers.