 Hello and welcome to the International Daily Roundup by People's Dispatch, where we bring you major news elements from around the world. Our headlines – Pedro Castillo is set to win Peru's presidential elections as vote count ends. Israeli forces killed 15-year-old child during anti-settlement protests in Reina. G7 members announced vaccine donations as summit can be extended. And in our video section, we take a look at the economic decline caused by Operation Car Wash in Brazil's Caillou area. In our first story, left-wing teacher and trade unionist Pedro Castillo is set to win Peru's presidential elections. With all world votes counted, Castillo has won 50.17% of the votes and far-right candidate K.K. Fujimori has won 49.82%. Castillo from the Free Peru Party has won by a narrow margin of at least just over 60,000 votes. However, the results have not been officially declared. Fujimori has refused to concede this election and has raised unsubstantiated allegations of fraud. She has asked election authorities to review 300,000 votes. She has also initiated an appeal to anal proceed votes from 802 polling stations. In total, Fujimori is contesting 500,000 votes. As per reports, her team will target areas in the south and central Peru where Castillo has secured major victories. He has won up to 90% of the votes in some regions and has received major support from the poor and rural areas. Fujimori is supposed to use a large team of attorneys with the whole process costing over 882,000 soles. However, she has not provided any solid evidence to back her claims of fraud and regularities. Minor and isolated incidents and even fake photos and videos have been preceded as proof of systematic fraud. The entire appeals process and a final ruling could take up to two weeks. Fujimori's supporters held protests on Thursday saying that they would not accept Castillo's presidency. They previously had also called for an intervention by the armed forces, an action which was condemned by the Defense Ministry. Fujimori herself is facing charges of money laundering and could face up to 30 years in prison if convicted. A prosecutor has now requested that her bail be revoked and that she be returned to custody pending trial. If Fujimori wins the election, her case will be suspended until the end of her term. In our next story, Israeli forces shot and killed a child during an anti-settlement protest in the occupied West Bank on Friday. 15-year-old Muhammad Hamayel was killed after Israeli forces opened fire in the village of Betah. The Red Crescent reported that under 33 people were injured and 62 suffer kitted due to tear gas inhalation. Palestinians from Betah and surrounding villages have been protesting the expansion of illegal Israeli outposts. Hundreds of people also held a demonstration outside Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem in the afternoon. Given that the neighborhood continues to be blockaded, people gather outside the barriers. Activists are intensified protests against the ethnic cleansing of families from Sheikh Jarrah and Sinwan. Meanwhile, Israel's Attorney General has stated that he will not comment on the Sheikh Jarrah cases. The Israeli Supreme Court had given him until June 8 to recite after four Palestinian families asked him to weigh him on the case. In the meantime, the court postponed the hearing to decide that the families could appeal the eviction, ordered by two lower courts. The court has now ordered a hearing and possibly a ruling on the case before the judicial year ends on July 20th. Palestinians have argued that the Attorney General's decision is an attempt to frame the issue as a property dispute, when in reality it is a case of ethnic cleansing through forced displacement. In our next story, the 2021 G7 summit will be convened on June 11th in the country county of Cornwall in the higher kingdom. Heads of government from the U.S., U.K., Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan will be in attendance. The three-day summit is being hosted by the U.K. which currently holds the presidency of the G7. Leaders from South Africa, South Korea, Australia and India will also be attending. The theme of the summit is Build Back Better with a focus on four policy areas. These include global recovery from COVID-19, promoting free and fair trade, climate change and championing shared values. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has announced that the G7 is expected to agree to donate 1 billion COVID vaccine doses to poorer countries. The U.K. will also donate 100 million of its surplus doses within the next year. Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden has stated that the U.S. will donate 500 million Pfizer doses with, quote, no strings attached. However, organizations such as Oxfam have argued that these donations may fall way short of the actual need. Health Policy Manager Anna Marriott has stated that 11 billion doses will be needed to end the pandemic. An estimated 4 billion people continue to rely on WHO's COVAX initiative. Only around 0.4% of all COVID jabs have been administered in poorer countries. The WHO stated on June 10 that the inoculation coverage in the entire continent of Africa is about 2%. Meanwhile, 61% of the U.K.'s population, 52% of the U.S. population, is at least partly vaccinated. Advocacy groups and medical experts have been continuously pushing for patent waivers to boost production. However, several countries, including the G7, have repeatedly blocked these efforts at the WTO. As per reports, the Trips Council has finally agreed to text-based negotiations on a joint proposal. Submitted by India and South Africa and 60 other countries, this proposal calls for patent waivers on vaccines and medical products. A conclusion is expected sometime in July. And for our final story, we go to the Port District of Caillou in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The area is the largest concentration of shipyards in the country. The naval sector has become the flagship of national development under the government of Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff. However, with the launch of Operation Car Wash, the sector witnessed a sharp decline in employment in production. This was after Judge Sergio Moro recommended the prohibition of Petrobras contracts with companies under investigation. At least one million people directly employed by these companies lost their jobs. Production has now been shifted abroad, with local workers being left with cleaning and maintenance jobs. Here is a video from Brazil de Fato on the impact of Operation Car Wash on the people in the region. Leading to a wave of unemployment. The companies shouldn't be punished. Their directors should. If they stole, if they misappropriated funds, these guys have to be punished. They haven't been punished to this day. The employee was punished. The Lula and Dilma administration put Petrobras at the forefront of the national industrial development. The entire mobilization strategy of the local industry was linked to Petrobras, the oil, gas, and heavy construction sectors. In the two years between 2014 and 2016, the number of jobs in the naval sector dropped from 71,500 to 40,000. According to data from the labor registry. I have been out of the job market since 2016. I'm a naval mechanics technician. Today, a worker's in Uber. On the docks, sometimes my salary was 9,000 reais. Today, there are amounts in which I don't even take 800 reais home. So the jobs come back to the region. Former employees joined forces with businessmen and created a project to revamp the naval industry. Working the docks is in their blood. For us, it's the workers. Yes, we dream of going back. It's what I enjoy working with most in my life. Docks and ships.