CSMONITOR  |  The Monitor's View

Peru’s pillars for a civic rebuild

秘鲁公民重建的支柱

A shoe shiner in Lima, Peru, passed a newspaper to a client on Feb. 18, the day after interim President José Jerí was removed from office for alleged corruption. (Jose Balcázar was named to the post later that evening.)

A shoe shiner in Lima, Peru, passed a newspaper to a client on Feb. 18, the day after interim President José Jerí was removed from office for alleged corruption. (Jose Balcázar was named to the post later that evening.)

2026-02-19  480  简单
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Despite these pressures, according to regional analyst Sara Benítez-Mongelós, 78% of Latin American countries score high on fair election processes. Even with a long history of multiple coups and repressive military rule in the 20th century, the region’s armed forces have not directly stepped back into politics. In this context, Ms. Benítez-Mongelós wrote on the Global Campus of Human Rights site, Latin Americans see elections as “not only a procedural necessity but a hard-won symbol of political renewal.”

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