Peru presidential run-off looms as Fujimori leads troubled vote
Election day marred by delays and irregularities that sparked unproven accusations of foul play and cast a shadow over results

Right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori led exit polls following Peru’s troubled presidential election Sunday, but failed to avoid a run-off after a tight vote marred by irregularities and a police raid on the country’s election authority.
Fujimori, the 50-year-old daughter of a disgraced former president, led with about 16 per cent of the vote, according to pollsters at Ipsos and Datum.
A string of candidates followed in a statistical tie for second place and the final spot in a June run-off.
About 27 million Peruvians were choosing between 35 presidential candidates in a race dominated by concerns over crime and corruption.
But election day was marred by delays and irregularities that sparked unproven accusations of foul play and cast a shadow over results.
Police and prosecutors moved into the election authority headquarters as polls were still open, probing the failure to deliver voting materials that left about 63,000 people unable to cast ballots.