Protests are expected to continue as public discontent with Peru's President Dina Boluarte's administration grows.
Hundreds of anti-government demonstrators in Peru's capital Lima took to the streets again on Sunday following clashes that injured at least 18 people, including police officers and journalists.
Unrest has been brewing for months, fuelled by a wave of organised crime and extortion cases as several opinion polls show that many view the government and conservative-majority congress as corrupt ...
Hundreds of anti-government protesters clashed with police in Peru’s capital, Lima, on September 21. The clashes erupted as ...
The Incas built well. Though they never invented the wheel, they contrived to haul huge blocks of stone, often weighing 20 tons or more, to the mountain peaks they favored for their citadels. The ...
LIMA: Hundreds of anti-government protesters clashed with police in the Peruvian capital Lima, throwing stones and sticks as ...
More than 1,300 domestic and foreign tourists affected by the protests in Machu Picchu Pueblo district, Urubamba province (Cusco region), were evacuated on "humanitarian trains" from Aguas Calientes, ...
At least 18 people, including police officers and journalists, were injured in clashes that broke out during anti-government ...
Some 4,500 years ago, a great lord who dominated the interior of the Moche River valley lived in what is now known as the ...
In Lima, clashes broke out after protesters tried to reach the executive and Congress buildings. According to the police, at ...
Sept 10 (Reuters) - A bus carrying Argentina's national soccer team was pelted by stones in Lima on Monday on the eve of their 2014 World Cup qualifier against Peru, according to media reports.
Hundreds of anti-government protesters clashed with police in the Peruvian capital Lima on Saturday, throwing stones and ...