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Fourth Peruvian PM Resigns In One Year

Peru's Prime Minister Anibal Torres resigned on Wednesday, becoming the fourth to step down in a year under embattled President Pedro Castillo.


In this file handout picture taken on March 8, 2022, and released by the Peruvian Presidency the head of the Council of Ministers Anibal Torres speaking during a plenary session where lawmakers debate the approval of President Pedro Castillo’s fourth cabinet, in Lima. Peru’s Prime Minister Anibal Torres resigned on August 3, 2022, becoming the fourth to step down in a year under embattled President Pedro Castillo. In a letter sent to Castillo, who has survived two impeachment votes in 12 months and is the target of five criminal investigations, Torres said he was stepping down “for personal reasons.” (Photo by Victor GONZALES / Peruvian Presidency / AFP)
In this file handout picture taken on March 8, 2022, and released by the Peruvian Presidency the head of the Council of Ministers Anibal Torres speaking during a plenary session where lawmakers debate the approval of President Pedro Castillo’s fourth cabinet, in Lima. (Photo by Victor GONZALES / Peruvian Presidency / AFP)

 

Peru’s Prime Minister Anibal Torres resigned on Wednesday, becoming the fourth to step down in a year under embattled President Pedro Castillo.

In a letter sent to Castillo, who has survived two impeachment votes in 12 months and is the target of five criminal investigations, Torres said he was stepping down “for personal reasons.”

Torres posted a copy of the letter, in which he wished Castillo success, on Twitter.

His resignation will trigger an automatic cabinet reshuffle.

Torres, 79, first served as Castillo’s justice minister, and then took over the prime ministerial portfolio in February after three previous prime ministers had come and gone.

The country has had seven interior ministers since Castillo took over in July 2021 — a high turnover even for a country that is no stranger to political upheaval.

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In five days of 2020, Peru had three different presidents.

Leftist Castillo — a rural school teacher who unexpectedly took power from Peru’s traditional political elite in elections last year — has been under nonstop fire from his right-wing rivals.

He also finds himself in the crosshairs of the attorney general’s office, with investigations into alleged public tender corruption and claims that Castillo plagiarized his university thesis.

Opinion polls show that three-quarters of Peruvians disapprove of Castillo’s management of the country.

AFP