Keiko Fujimori Holds Lead in Peru’s Election With 50% of Ballots Counted

LIMA, April 13 (Reuters) – Delays ⁠at ⁠polling stations and ⁠lingering uncertainty over who will reach ​a runoff marked a second day of voting ‌and vote counting in ‌Peru on Monday, with conservative Keiko ⁠Fujimori clinging ⁠to a narrow lead in a crowded presidential ​race.

Logistical problems tied to the distribution of voting materials prompted officials to extend voting into ​Monday for tens of thousands of voters who ⁠were ⁠unable to cast ballots ⁠on ​Sunday nL6N40V04I after the opening of some polling ​stations was ⁠delayed.

The official count from Peru’s electoral authority, ONPE, showed in early morning hours former congresswoman Fujimori leading with about 17% of ⁠the vote, followed by right‑wing former Lima mayor Rafael ⁠Lopez Aliaga on roughly 15%, and center‑left candidate Jorge Nieto in third place with around 13%, with 50% of votes counted.

Exit polls on Sunday had placed Fujimori – daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, who was imprisoned for human rights ⁠abuses – in the lead, although Lopez Aliaga briefly moved ahead earlier in the official count, underscoring how tight and fluid ​the race remains.

(Reporting by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez; Editing by Cassandra Garrison)

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