Peru's ex-president faced bigotry for impoverished past

FILE - A woman holds up a sign with a message that reads in Spanish; "I am a teacher, not a terrorist" in a march in support of presidential candidate Pedro Castillo, weeks after the presidential runoff election, in Lima, Peru, June 19, 2021. Castillo defeated by just 44,000 votes one of the most recognizable names among Peru’s political class: Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of former strongman Alberto Fujimori, who is serving a 25-year prison sentence for the murder of Peruvians executed during his government by a clandestine military squad. Keiko Fujimori's supporters have often called Castillo “terruco,†or terrorist, a term often used by the right to attack the left, poor and rural residents. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia, File)

LIMA, Peru (AP) — When Pedro Castillo won Peru’s presidency last year, it was celebrated as a victory by the country’s poor — the peasants and Indigenous people who live deep in the Andes and whose struggles had long been ignored.

His supporters hoped Castillo, a populist outsider of humble roots, would redress their plight — or at least end their invisibility.

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