Unrest in Peru: 418 tourists stranded in Machu Picchu evacuated


Tourists had been stranded for several days as protesters damaged the tracks. In Lima, the capital, the situation remains tense.

Peru continues to be rocked by unrest. “This afternoon, 418 national (Peruvian) and foreign tourists were transferred from the village of Machu Picchu to Cuzco“, the Inca imperial and tourist capital of the country, announced the Ministry of Tourism on twitter. The ministry published a photo of the train that connects the two cities and another of the tourists, previously stranded at the foot of the famous Inca site, inside it.

Apart from walking, the train is the only way to reach this tourist gem. Tourists had been stranded for several days as protesters damaged the tracks. Tourists, of all nationalities, had registered on Friday lists in Aguas Calientes to be evacuated.

On Saturday morning, authorities announced “the closure of the network of Inca trails (land access, Inca Trail) and the Llaqta (citadel) of Machu Picchu (…) due to the social situation and to preserve the safety of visitors“, According to a press release from the Ministry of Culture.

In December, some 300 tourists had already been stranded in Machu Picchu before being evacuated by a special train with railway workers to repair the track, supervised by law enforcement. Tourism, vital for the economy, represents between 3 and 4% of the GDP and provides employment to all strata of the population.

The morning was bereaved by a new death, a demonstrator who died of his injuries received Friday during clashes between police and protesters in Ilave in the Puno region (south, near Bolivia).

This brings to 46 the number of dead since December 7 and the start of protests demanding the resignation of President Dina Boluarte, the dissolution of Parliament and the constitution of a Constituent Assembly. The unrest began after the dismissal and arrest of left-wing president Pedro Castillo, accused of having attempted a coup d’etat by wanting to dissolve the Parliament which was preparing to oust him from power.

Tensions in Lima

In Lima, the day after two days of mobilization, with the arrival in the capital of demonstrators from the poor Andean regions, the situation remained tense. The police invaded San Marcos University in the city center in the morning to expel many demonstrators who had been staying there for several days.

SEE ALSO – Crisis in Peru: two dead in violent demonstrations against the president

They shot down the gate with an armored vehicle, then searched the occupants of the premises, sometimes forcing them to lie on the ground in front of the university, AFP journalists noted, before arresting some.

I have relatives who are there. I’m worried. We don’t know what can happen. I don’t know what they are accused of“Said Luz Maria Ramirez, 62, who came from Andahuaylsas (south), epicenter of the demonstrations in December. Several hundred people gathered in the afternoon near the police to demand their release, some waving signs “dina murders“. The police dispersed them in the early evening, with tear gas fire.



Source link -94