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Peru’s president removed from office amid soaring crime

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Lawmakers have voted overwhelmingly to oust President Dina Boluarte [BBC]

Peru’s Congress has voted to remove President Dina Boluarte from office, hours after a late-night session was called to debate her impeachment.

An overwhelming majority of lawmakers from across the political spectrum approved her ousting on grounds of “permanent moral incapacity”.

In an address on national television following the vote, Boluarte questioned the implications it would have on the stability of Peru’s democracy.

One of the world’s most unpopular leaders, with an approval rating of 2-4%, Boluarte’s tenure has been plagued by frequent protests, scandals and investigations, as well as a surge in gang violence.

Anti-government protests have escalated in recent months amid soaring crime. There was renewed anger earlier on Thursday following a shooting at a concert in the capital, Lima.

A total of 122 out of 130 lawmakers voted for Boluarte’s removal early on Friday, following votes resoundingly in favour of four motions of impeachment.

Congress leader Jose Jeri was sworn in as interim president early on Friday. Peru does not currently have a vice-president.

Boluarte did not appear before Congress for the overnight hearing. A crowd of protesters brandishing Peruvian flags outside the Congress building erupted in cheers after the vote was declared.

“At all times I have called for unity,” she told Peruvians after being removed, adding: “In this context, I had not thought of myself but of the more than 34 million Peruvians who deserve better.”

Protests have punctuated the 63-year-old leader’s less than three years in office, which followed the impeachment and imprisonment of her predecessor, Pedro Castillo.

Her presidency was overshadowed by several investigations, including a corruption inquiry dubbed “Rolexgate” over allegations she accepted Rolex watches as bribes.

Another probed whether she abandoned her post when she failed to appoint a caretaker president during an absence for nose surgery. She has denied any wrongdoing.

In July, her decision to double her salary to almost 35 times that of the monthly minimum wage in Peru was met with scorn and derision. Her economy minister noted at the time her salary had been the second lowest of 12 countries in South America.

Reuters People react after Peru’s Congress voted unanimously to remove President Dina Boluarte from office in Lima, Peru.
A crowd of protesters outside the Congress building erupted in cheers after the vote was declared [Aljazeera]

Thursday night’s successful impeachment bid was the latest in a series of attempts to remove Boluarte from office ahead of elections next April.

“The only way of moving forward is Dina Boluarte’s impeachment,” Congresswoman Susel Paredes said in a post on X on Thursday.

Among the lawmakers who voted to remove Boluarte from office were factions once loyal to the president, including conservative parties that had previously supported her.

Boluarte rose to power in December 2022, when former President Castillo was impeached after attempting to dissolve Congress to avert his removal. She was elevated to the post as she was vice-president at the time.

Peru’s first female president, Boluarte was the Andean nation’s sixth leader since 2018. Three former leaders are behind bars.

In January 2023, weeks after taking office, an inquiry was launched into Boluarte and some of her key ministers on charges of “genocide, qualified homicide and serious injuries”.

It followed the death of more than 50 Castillo supporters in a government crackdown on demonstrations calling for her resignation and fresh elections.

In the first three months of her presidency, there were more than 500 protests over her rule.

[BBC]



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Two dead and several missing in New Zealand landslides

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Rescue work will continue through the night, officials say [BBC]

Two people have died and several are feared buried after landslides in New Zealand’s North Island.

The deaths were reported at Welcome Bay, while rescue workers are still searching through rubble at a different site in a popular campground on Mount Maunganui.

There are no “signs of life”, authorities said, adding that they have a “rough idea” of how many people are missing but are waiting for an exact figure. They provided no other details except that the group includes “at least one young girl”.

The landslides were triggered by heavy rains over the last few days, which led to flooding and power outages across the North Island. One minister said the east coast resembled “a war zone”.

Map showing the Mount Maunganui area in New Zealand’s Bay of Plenty. A marker indicates a campsite where people are missing after a landslide. Another labelled area shows a second landslide in the Welcome Bay area to the south. Roads, waterways and coastal features are visible, with a scale bar showing distances. An inset map shows New Zealand with Wellington marked for location context.

New Zealand is “heavy with grief” after the “profound tragedy” caused by recent weather, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said on X.

Footage from the campsite on Mount Maunganui, an extinct volcano, shows a huge slip near the base of the volcanic dome, as rescuers and sniffer dogs comb through crushed caravans and flattened tents.

Authorities said that the search would continue through the night. “This is a complex and high-risk environment, and our teams are working to achieve the best possible outcome while keeping everyone safe,” said Megan Stiffler, the deputy national commander for the Urban Search and Rescue team,

The extinct volcano is a sacred Māori site and one of the most popular campgrounds in New Zealand, with a local holiday website describing it as a “slice of paradise”. But it has been repeatedly hit by landslides in recent years.

“I heard this huge tree crack and all this dirt come off, and then I looked behind me and there’s this huge landslide coming down,” Australian tourist Sonny Worrall told local broadcaster TVNZ.

“I’m still shaking from it now… I turned around and had to jump out of my seat and just run,”he added. He saw it happen while swimming in a hot pool.

Hiker Mark Tangney told the New Zealand Herald he heard people screaming from under the rubble. “So I just parked up and ran to help… We could hear people screaming: ‘Help us, help us, get us out of here’,” he said.

Those calls persisted for about half an hour and then went silent, Tangney said.

A surf club in another part of Mount Maunganui has been evacuated following fears of more landslides.

A state of emergency has been declared in the Bay of Plenty where Mount Maunganui sits, and various parts of the North Island, including Northland, Coromandel, Tairāwhiti and Hauraki.

Several areas reported their wettest days on record on Thursday. Tauranga in the Bay of Plenty, for example, received three months worth of rain within a day, according to local media.

Some 8,000 people were without power as of Thursday morning, Radio New Zealand (RNZ) reported.

The wife of a man who was swept away in the Mahurangi River is holding out hope that he will survive.

“I know his personality is strong, wise,” she told RNZ, adding that he was a fisherman back home in Kiribati and knew how to swim and dive.

The man, 47, was driving to work with their nephew when the car they were in fell into the river.

He had pushed the nephew towards a branch so the nephew could hoist himself onto land; but the older man did not manage get back up himself, according to the report.

“It’s been a very big event for us as a country, really hitting almost our entire eastern seaboard of the North Island,” said Minister for Emergency Management Mark Mitchell.

“The good news is that everyone responded really quickly, and there was time to get prepared. That helps to mitigate and create a very strong response,” he told RNZ.

December to February are typically the sunnier months in New Zealand but in recent years heavy rains and storms have become more frequent.

In February 2023, parts of the island were devastated by Cyclone Gabrielle,  which is to date the costliest cyclone to hit the Southern Hemisphere, with damage amounting to NZ$13.5bn ($7.9bn; £5.9bn).

This week’s flooding has added to the toll for the local communities that are still rebuilding.

[BBC]

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Second lady Usha Vance announces she is pregnant with fourth child

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Usha Vance, the wife of Vice-President JD Vance, has announced she is pregnant with her fourth child.

In a post on X, the second lady said she is looking forward to welcoming a boy in late July.

“Usha and the baby are doing well,” a statement posted on Tuesday to the second lady’s social media account read.

Vance and his wife, Usha, 40, have three young children: Ewan, Vivek and Mirabel.

Usha Vance (née Chilukuri) was born and raised in the working-class suburbs of San Diego, California, to a mechanical engineer father and a molecular biologist mother who had moved to the US from Andhra Pradesh, India.

She met JD Vance as a student at Yale Law School in 2010, when they joined a discussion group on “social decline in white America”.

Before becoming second lady, Usha Vance had a legal career, including a job as a corporate litigator at firm Munger, Tolles & Olson in San Francisco. She also worked for conservative judges, Chief Justice John Roberts on the Supreme Court and appeals court judge Brett Kavanaugh, before he was appointed by Trump to the Supreme Court.

Usha Vance is the first to have a baby as second lady, though other first ladies have had children while their husbands were in office.

First lady Frances Cleveland, wife of President Grover Cleveland, gave birth to daughter Esther in the White House in 1893, followed by a second child, Marion, who was born outside the White House.

JD Vance has been one of the most vocal members of the Trump administration in calling for higher birth rates in the US.

“Let me say very simply: I want more babies in the United States of America,” he said in 2025.

(BBC)

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Italian fashion designer Valentino dies aged 93

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Gwyneth Paltrow and Valentino Garavani pose at the West Coast premiere of the documentary Valentino: The Last Emperor in 2009 (BBC)

Italian fashion designer Valentino Garavani, known as Valentino, has died at the age of 93.

One of the giants of 20th Century fashion, Valentino’s creations were worn by celebrities and well-known figures including Elizabeth Taylor, Nancy Reagan, Sharon Stone, Julia Roberts and Gwyneth Paltrow.

He co-founded the Valentino fashion house in 1960 and ranked alongside Giorgio Armani and Karl Lagerfeld at the top of the profession.

In a statement posted on Instagram, the Valentino Garavani and Giancarlo Giammetti Foundation said: “He passed away peacefully in his Roman home, surrounded by the love of his family.”

The foundation said Valentino will be lying in state at Rome’s Piazza Mignanelli between 21 and 22 January.

Valentino’s funeral service will be held the following day at the Basilica of Saint Mary of the Angels and Martyrs, the foundation said.

Born in Lombardy in May 1932, Valentino was known for his collections that displayed luxury, wealth and opulence.

He moved to Paris to study at the ​​Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne when he was just 17, and went on to work with designers Jacques Fath, Balenciaga, Jean Dessès and Guy Laroche.

His adoption of his signature colour “Valentino red”, inspired by a trip to Spain, helped elevate the brand to global fame with the debut of the iconic fiesta dress.

It became so meaningful for the house that for Valentino’s last collection in 2008 all the models wore red dresses for the finale.

Valentino designed the wedding dress of Princess Madeleine of Sweden when she married British-American financier Christopher O’Neill in June 2013.

In December 2023, he was honoured with the outstanding achievement award at the British Fashion Awards which were held at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

AFP via Getty Images English model and actress Elizabeth Hurley with Italian fashion designer Valentino Garavani at the Four Seasons Restaurant, New York City, circa 1997
Valentino pictured with English model and actress Elizabeth Hurley at a New York restaurant in 1997 (BBC)

(BBC)

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