Marco Gonzales ventured to the Andean city of Cusco from his home in the Peruvian Amazon in 2007 with little more than $20, a smidgeon of English and a change of clothes poorly suited for the icy mountain air. He started offering walking tours of the former Incan Empire capital in exchange for tips. Along…
CUSCO, Peru (AP) Marco Gonzales ventured to the Andean city of Cusco from his home in the Peruvian Amazon in 2007 with little more than $20, a smidgeon of…
<div class="at-above-post addthis tool" data-url="http://www.metro.us/turmoil-risks-financial-stability-peru-long-took-for-granted/"></div>CUSCO, Peru (AP) Marco Gonzales ventured to the Andean city of Cusco from his home in the Peruvian Amazon in 2007 with little more than $20, a smidgeon of English and a change of clothes poorly suited for the icy mountain air. He started offering walking tours of the former Incan Empire capital in […]<! AddThis Advanced Settings above via filter on get the excerpt ><! AddThis Advanced Settings below via filter on get the excerpt ><! AddThis Advanced Settings generic via filter on get the excerpt ><! AddThis Share Buttons above via filter on get the excerpt ><! AddThis Share Buttons below via filter on get the excerpt ><div class="at-below-post addthis tool" data-url="http://www.metro.us/turmoil-risks-financial-stability-peru-long-took-for-granted/"
The violence following President Pedro Castillo’s Dec. 7 impeachment and arrest has revived class and racial divisions and has many Peruvians wondering whether the country's long period of uneasy economic stability has run its course.
The scale of violence following President Pedro Castillo’s impeachment and arrest for a clumsy effort to shutter Congress has revived class and racial divisions and has many wondering whether the long period of uneasy stability has run its course