World January 25, 2026

Brazil to Represent Mexican Interests in Peru After Diplomatic Breakover Over Asylum

Brasilia will safeguard Mexican embassy premises and assets in Lima following Peru's earlier severing of ties over asylum granted to former prime minister

By Avery Klein
Brazil to Represent Mexican Interests in Peru After Diplomatic Breakover Over Asylum

Brazil has assumed responsibility for Mexico's diplomatic interests in Peru at Mexico's request and with Lima's approval, including custody of embassy premises, residence of the head of mission, assets and archives. The move follows Peru's decision in early November to cut diplomatic ties after Mexico granted asylum to former Peruvian Prime Minister Betssy Chavez, who faces conspiracy charges related to a 2022 attempt to dissolve Congress and denies the allegations.

Key Points

  • Brazil will represent Mexico’s diplomatic interests in Peru at Mexico’s request and with Lima’s approval.
  • The representation includes custodial responsibility for the Mexican embassy building, the head of mission’s residence, and the mission’s assets and archives.
  • The move follows Peru’s severing of relations with Mexico in early November after Mexico granted asylum to former Prime Minister Betssy Chavez, who faces conspiracy charges related to a 2022 attempt to dissolve Congress and denies the allegations.

On Jan 25, Brasilia announced that Brazil will act on behalf of Mexico in Peru, stepping in to manage Mexican diplomatic interests in Lima. The Brazilian Foreign Ministry said the decision came at the request of the Mexican government and with the approval of Peruvian authorities.

The representation taken on by Brazil encompasses the protection and safekeeping of the Mexican embassy's physical premises in Peru. That coverage explicitly includes the residence of the head of mission and extends to the embassy's assets and archives, according to the ministry's statement.

This development follows a diplomatic rupture earlier in the region. In early November, Peru's government severed relations with Mexico after Mexico granted asylum to Betssy Chavez at its embassy in Lima. Chavez served as the final prime minister under the ousted and now jailed former President Pedro Castillo. She faces conspiracy charges tied to Castillo's 2022 attempt to dissolve Congress; she has denied those allegations.

The Brazilian statement framed the move as a formal representation arrangement requested by Mexico and consented to by Lima. It did not include additional operational details about how long Brazil will maintain that role or the specific arrangements for custodial oversight of assets and archives.


Summary of the situation

Brazil will represent Mexico's diplomatic interests in Peru, holding responsibility for the Mexican embassy building, the head of mission's residence and the mission's assets and archives. The arrangement follows Peru's break in relations with Mexico after Mexico granted asylum to former Prime Minister Betssy Chavez, who faces legal charges related to events in 2022 and denies the allegations.


Key points

  • Brazil assumed representation of Mexico's diplomatic interests in Peru at Mexico's request and with Peru's approval.
  • The representation covers safeguarding the Mexican embassy premises, the residence of the head of mission, and the embassy's assets and archives.
  • The diplomatic shift comes after Peru severed relations with Mexico in early November following asylum granted to former Prime Minister Betssy Chavez, who faces conspiracy charges tied to a 2022 political crisis.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Ongoing diplomatic strain between Peru and Mexico - this concerns diplomatic services and government-to-government relations.
  • Legal proceedings against Betssy Chavez - the charges and her denied allegations create political uncertainty tied to Peru's domestic legal and political institutions.
  • Potential operational and custodial complexities in managing embassy premises and archives - this affects the administrative and security functions associated with diplomatic missions.

Risks

  • Continuing diplomatic tension between Peru and Mexico - impacts diplomatic services and bilateral government relations.
  • Legal and political uncertainty surrounding Betssy Chavez’s conspiracy charges - affects domestic political institutions.
  • Administrative and security challenges in safeguarding embassy premises, residence, assets and archives - impacts diplomatic mission operations.

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