Peru’s caretaker president admits he met a Chinese businessman twice off the books, triggering impeachment bids that could derail the April 12 national vote and extend the country’s seven-year presidential churn.
What Happened: Two Undisclosed Meetings, One Political Firestorm
President Jose Jeri acknowledged before a congressional oversight committee that he met Zhihua Yang—a Chinese entrepreneur with retail interests in Lima—on December 26 and January 6 without registering the encounters in his public agenda. The omission, discovered by opposition lawmakers, ignited accusations of opacity and possible influence-peddling just 102 days before Peruvians elect a new president and 190-member legislature.
Why It Matters: Elections at Risk in Latin America’s Most Volatile Democracy
Peru has already sworn in seven presidents since 2018; any forced exit of Jeri would extend that streak and postpone the April 12 ballot, plunging the copper-rich nation into constitutional limbo. Opposition blocs have filed impeachment and censure motions, arguing that hiding the meetings violates both transparency laws and public-trust doctrine. The public prosecutor’s office has opened a parallel probe, raising the specter of criminal charges.
Jeri’s Defense: “A Shopping Trip, Not a Scandal”
In sworn testimony, Jeri apologized for the “hidden” calendar entries but insisted the conversations were innocuous: the first meeting discussed preparations for the 52nd anniversary of diplomatic ties with Beijing; the second, he claimed, was a spontaneous stop at Yang’s discount store to buy “candies and paintings.” He portrayed the backlash as a “deliberate distortion” designed to “generate instability and alter an ongoing electoral process.”
Historical Context: China’s Footprint and Peru’s Fragile Institutions
Chinese state firms control two of Peru’s largest copper mines and are financing a $1.3-billion expansion of the Port of Chancay near Lima. Previous governments have faced scrutiny over opaque Chinese donations—most notably the 2019 Chinchero airport deal that cost a vice-president his job. Jeri’s unlogged meetings revive memories of those episodes, feeding public suspicion that Beijing’s commercial interests overlap with domestic political leverage.
Next 72 Hours: Congress Decides Whether to Fast-Track Impeachment
- Friday, Jan 23: Oversight committee votes on a preliminary report that could recommend impeachment to the full chamber.
- Monday, Jan 26: If 52 of 130 deputies endorse the motion, Jeri must face an impeachment trial that could remove him within 15 days.
- April 12: Ballot deadline looms; electoral authorities warn any leadership vacuum after Feb. 12 would force a postponed vote.
Market Pulse: Sol and Mining Stocks Wobble
The Peruvian sol slid 0.8% against the dollar on Jeri’s testimony day, while shares in Southern Copper and Hochschild Mining dipped 1.4% as investors priced in higher political risk. A prolonged crisis could delay $10 billion in pending mining investments at a time when global copper supply is already tight.
Global Ripple: Another China-Linked Leader in the Dock
Jeri joins a growing list of Latin American leaders—Ecuador’s Daniel Noboa and Chile’s Gabriel Boric among them—grappling with domestic fallout from closer China ties. The difference: Peru’s institutions are weaker, making the electoral calendar itself the casualty.
Stay with onlytrustedinfo.com for instant briefings as Peru’s Congress decides whether to sack another president and throw the region’s most volatile democracy into renewed turmoil.