Keiko Fujimori, presidential candidate for the Popular Force party, waves after voting during general elections in Lima, Peru on April 12, 2026. © Gerardo Marin, AP

Fujimori and Sanchez lead Peru's presidential runoff as count enters final stretch

· France 24

Conservative ​Keiko Fujimori and leftist Roberto Sanchez ​are leading the vote count in the final stretch of Peru's first round April ​presidential ‌election, with 99.76% of ⁠ballots tallied as of Tuesday, according to electoral authorities.

Peru's ‌National Jury of Elections said the ⁠final result will be announced by May 15, after weeks of ​delays due to logistical failures ‌and allegations of fraud.

With 99.76% of ballots counted, Fujimori, the daughter of ‌late former president Alberto Fujimori who is on her ​fourth run for the job, maintained a comfortable lead with 17.17% of the ​vote.

Sanchez, who is running with ​the backing of jailed ​former leftist president Pedro Castillo, stood at 12.00%, narrowly ahead ​of ultra-conservative former Lima mayor Rafael Lopez Aliaga with 11.91%. Sanchez has a near 15,000-vote lead over Lopez Aliaga ⁠as results continue to trickle in through Peru's ONPE ⁠electoral ​office.

The country's prolonged count has triggered fraud ​allegations, notably from Lopez Aliaga, and prompted the resignation of the country's top ​electoral official, who is now under investigation by the ​public prosecutor.

European Union observers have said they found no concrete evidence of fraud.

ONPE said several thousand ​ballots, representing roughly 50,000 votes, remain uncounted, though voting trends in recent days indicate the final result is unlikely to shift.

No candidate won enough support to avoid a runoff election scheduled for June 7 between the top ⁠two contenders.

Together, the right-wing parties of Fujimori and Lopez Aliaga would command a majority in ⁠both the Senate ​and the lower house, after Peru reinstated a bicameral legislature during April's general election.

(FRANCE 24 with Reuters)