On Thursday, Peru's Supreme Court ordered that deposed Pres. Pedro Castillo, who has been accused of rebellion and conspiracy, remain in pretrial detention for 18 months, with Judge Juan Carlos Checkley citing the complexity of the case and a possible flight risk.
This comes a week after Castillo's attempt to dissolve Congress and allegedly flee to Mexico, ending with his arrest and detention, which triggered nationwide unrest.
Castillo was never a good fit for the office. He was an accidental president with no political experience and governed without any discernible ideology. His reign was characterized by chaos, corruption, and incompetence. His presidency may be over, but Peru is not out of the woods yet — it needs structural and political reforms to stop a toxic desperate man from seizing power again.
Castillo is a victim of anti-democratic persecution. There is evidence that anti-left forces colluded with the US to dethrone a democratically-elected president in Peru. The 2021 election loser Keiko Fujimori, whose father Alberto Fujimori was backed by the oligarchy when he conducted a self-coup in 1992, has close ties with the US government and its intelligence agencies. It's not Castillo's attempted coup but a nation driven by social, economic, and geographical differences that propelled his illegal oust.