Peru’s Former President Vizcarra Faces Prison in Country’s Endless Battle With Corruption

On August 13, 2025, Peru’s judiciary ordered five months of pre-trial detention for former president Martín Vizcarra.
The country’s official court ruling called him a flight risk after prosecutors accused him of accepting $640,000 in bribes while governor of Moquegua between 2011 and 2014.
The funds allegedly came from construction firms seeking government contracts for public projects in Vizcarra’s region. The story, confirmed by official judicial statements and government reports, exposes Peru’s struggles against corruption and political instability.
Vizcarra presided over Peru from 2018 to 2020. Prosecutors now seek a 15-year sentence for him, citing evidence of payments tied to major infrastructure deals. They claim the money moved in percentages of contract values and included the cost of services such as private flights.
These details come directly from courtroom records and statements by Judge Jorge Chavez, who found Vizcarra lacked the family and professional roots needed to guarantee he would remain available for trial.
Vizcarra denies wrongdoing and argues he faces political persecution. Regardless, officials transferred him to a special facility in Lima that already houses three other ex-presidents: Toledo, Humala, and Castillo.
Since 2018, Peru’s presidency has changed hands six times, driven by corruption scandals, impeachments, and resignations. This rapid turnover undermines investor confidence and complicates business planning.
Political instability disrupts projects, contracts, and regulatory enforcement, raising the cost of doing business. For the business community, Vizcarra’s case is part of a pattern that damages Peru’s reputation in international markets.
High-profile corruption cases create uncertainty for investors, contractors, and suppliers. The risk of sudden changes in leadership makes long-term planning difficult.
Many companies face delays as investigations stall approvals or freeze payments. Public trust drops, making reforms tough to pass and infrastructure problems harder to solve.
The roots of this crisis run deep. Since the 2000s, Peru’s political system has endured scandals connected to big construction firms, most notably in the fallout of the Odebrecht bribery scheme.
Courts, police, and regulators often work at cross purposes, reflecting splits within the state. Nevertheless, prosecutors have stepped up, investigating senior officials, raiding homes, and issuing charges in high-profile cases, according to recent OECD and U.S. State Department reports.
The result is a business environment full of surprises—and few guarantees. Vizcarra’s preventive detention underlines a hard truth: accountability is slow to emerge, even when evidence mounts.
Official documents show he ascended to the presidency after his predecessor resigned, only to be removed by Congress two years later.
Vizcarra wanted to run again in 2026, but today he waits in jail for a verdict. Peru’s ongoing drama signals the price of corruption—lost time, wasted investment, and shattered trust.
The latest chapter strikes at the heart of business and governance, reminding all parties that continuity and clean contracting remain hard to secure. The risks and the lessons are clear for anyone working or trading in Peru.
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