Peruvian presidential candidate Rafael López Aliaga during a campaign in Lima on April 4, 2026 Angela Ponce/Reuters The ultra-conservative candidate for Peruvian president, Rafael López Aliaga, offered this Thursday (16), a reward of 20 thousand Peruvian soles (around R$29 thousand) to electoral officials who present “true and verifiable” information about irregularities in the elections. Former mayor of Lima and admirer of Donald Trump, Lopéz is competing vote by vote for a place in the second round, scheduled for June. López Aliaga, who demands the “nullity” of the election, was overtaken on Wednesday by the leftist Roberto Sánchez. The difference between the two is small: 11.97% against 11.91%, less than 10 thousand votes. Right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori, daughter of former autocrat president Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000), won the first round with 17% of the votes. In a publication on the social network He also promised “absolute confidentiality.” “Peru needs the truth. This is the time to act,” he wrote. Problems in voting and delay in the opening of polls Sunday’s presidential elections, with a record 35 candidates, were marked by problems in the distribution of ballot boxes and ballots, which delayed the opening of voting in several electoral centers in Lima. During the process, police and prosecutors even intervened in Onpe facilities. The head of the body, Piero Corvetto, was denounced along with three other employees for alleged crimes against suffrage. Around 50 thousand voters were left without voting and had the deadline extended until Monday. See the videos that are trending on g1 Pressure to annul the election In a speech to supporters, López Aliaga gave “24 hours” for electoral authorities to declare the “absolute nullity” of the election. A European Union observer mission stated, however, that it found no “objective elements” of fraud. Most of the minutes not yet accounted for were contested. The National Elections Jury must analyze around 5,200 documents, which bring together hundreds of thousands of votes. “It may take a few weeks to know the final results,” Álvaro Henzler told RPP radio.
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Ultraconservative candidate offers reward of R$29,000 for evidence of electoral fraud in Peru
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