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Extortion, Killings, And A City On Edge: Why Lima Is Now Under Emergency Rule
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Peru's interim president José Jerí has declared a 30-day state of emergency across Metropolitan Lima and neighboring Callao, in force from midnight Wednesday.
The National Police remains in charge of public order, backed by the Armed Forces. Jerí's message was blunt-“wars are won with actions, not words”-and the decree temporarily narrows freedoms of movement, assembly, and home inviolability while security forces intensify operations.
What changes on the ground is concrete and immediate. There is no curfew. Large public events must obtain prior authorization. Two adults riding together on standard motorcycles are barred.
Joint patrols will expand ID checks and security sweeps in high-incidence districts. Inside prisons, visits will be limited, nighttime power cut in cells, and illegal telecoms dismantled to disrupt extortion networks thought to be orchestrated from behind bars.
The story behind the story is a capital on edge. Jerí took office on October 10 after the removal of Dina Boluarte and has moved to project firmness-touring prisons, joining police operations, even walking through protests that demanded his resignation.
Previous states of emergency under the prior government did little to dent crime. Public frustration is acute: official surveys earlier this year found a majority of Peruvians naming insecurity as the nation's most serious problem.
How Lima's Crime Fight Could Ripple Beyond Peru
Extortion has become routine pressure on bus drivers, conductors, and nightlife workers; an attack on the cumbia band Agua Marina rattled the country, and two members of a timba group were shot dead days later in Callao.
Supporters say the new approach shifts from defensive policing to offensive disruption of criminal logistics. Critics warn it also equips authorities to contain demonstrations, not just gangs. Both can be true at once-and that tension is the heart of this story.
Why this matters beyond Peru: Lima is the country's political and economic hub. Tighter controls will shape how millions move, work, and gather-and whether emergency powers can reduce extortion and targeted killings without eroding civic freedoms.
Over the next month, success will look like fewer shakedowns on transport routes, safer nights for performers and patrons, and security forces that police criminals, not dissent.
The National Police remains in charge of public order, backed by the Armed Forces. Jerí's message was blunt-“wars are won with actions, not words”-and the decree temporarily narrows freedoms of movement, assembly, and home inviolability while security forces intensify operations.
What changes on the ground is concrete and immediate. There is no curfew. Large public events must obtain prior authorization. Two adults riding together on standard motorcycles are barred.
Joint patrols will expand ID checks and security sweeps in high-incidence districts. Inside prisons, visits will be limited, nighttime power cut in cells, and illegal telecoms dismantled to disrupt extortion networks thought to be orchestrated from behind bars.
The story behind the story is a capital on edge. Jerí took office on October 10 after the removal of Dina Boluarte and has moved to project firmness-touring prisons, joining police operations, even walking through protests that demanded his resignation.
Previous states of emergency under the prior government did little to dent crime. Public frustration is acute: official surveys earlier this year found a majority of Peruvians naming insecurity as the nation's most serious problem.
How Lima's Crime Fight Could Ripple Beyond Peru
Extortion has become routine pressure on bus drivers, conductors, and nightlife workers; an attack on the cumbia band Agua Marina rattled the country, and two members of a timba group were shot dead days later in Callao.
Supporters say the new approach shifts from defensive policing to offensive disruption of criminal logistics. Critics warn it also equips authorities to contain demonstrations, not just gangs. Both can be true at once-and that tension is the heart of this story.
Why this matters beyond Peru: Lima is the country's political and economic hub. Tighter controls will shape how millions move, work, and gather-and whether emergency powers can reduce extortion and targeted killings without eroding civic freedoms.
Over the next month, success will look like fewer shakedowns on transport routes, safer nights for performers and patrons, and security forces that police criminals, not dissent.
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