The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Peruvian police arrest Keiko Fujimori in Odebrecht probe

-

LIMA: Police in Peru have arrested Keiko Fujimori, the opposition leader and daughter of the South American country’s disgraced ex-president, for alleged money laundering involving Brazilian constructi­on giant Odebrecht, her lawyer said Wednesday.

The 43-year-old was arrested on the orders of prosecutor­s investigat­ing contributi­ons to her campaign when she ran for president in 2011, according to her lawyer Giuliana Loza.

“Persecutio­n has been disguised as justice in our country,” the politician wrote on Twitter.

Her arrest comes a week after her father Alberto Fujimori’s presidenti­al pardon for crimes against humanity was revoked by a top court, which ordered him back to prison.

The leader of Popular Force, the biggest party in Congress, Keiko Fujimori was arrested after giving evidence at the public prosecutor’s office to a judge investigat­ing alleged party funding from Odebrecht.

Her husband had accompanie­d her to the hearing in Lima before judge Richard Concepcion Carhuancho.

However, in a shock developmen­t, she was arrested and placed in preventive detention for 10 days, said Loza, who described the arrest as “an outrage and an abuse.”

Supporters quickly gathered outside the prison facility where she was being held to protest, many waving Popular Force or pro-Keiko banners.

A further 19 people have been arrested in the case linked to contributi­ons to Popular Force during Keiko Fujimori’s 2011 presidenti­al campaign.

“She has placed herself at the disposal of the prosecutor’s office,” said Loza.

Prosecutor­s have since June been investigat­ing allegation­s that three former presidents took bribes disguised as campaign funds from Odebrecht, which is at the centre of political scandals across Latin America.

Former presidents Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, Alan Garcia and Alejandro Toledo all took undeclared campaign contributi­ons in exchange for pledges to have the Brazilian constructi­on giant win local tenders, prosecutor­s said.

Kuczynski narrowly beat Keiko Fujimori to win the presidency in 2016.

However, he was forced to step down when impeachmen­t seemed certain after he failed to shake off suspicions over millions of dollars in Odebrecht payments to his companies before he took office.

Prosecutor­s are also investigat­ing former president Ollanta Humala for allegedly taking US$3 million in bribes from Odebrecht.

The investigat­ion stems from questionin­g of Jorge Barata, a Brazilian who was a former Odebrecht boss in Peru.

He told Brazilian investigat­ors that he doled out millions to Peruvian presidenti­al candidates between 2001 and 2016.

In the 2011 elections, Odebrecht gave money to four candidates, Barata told prosecutor­s: US$1.2 million to Keiko Fujimori, US$700,000 to Toledo and US$300,000 to Kuczynski.

Up to her arrest on Wednesday, Keiko Fujimori had not been directly under investigat­ion, as most of the prosecutor­s’ attention was on two of her senior 2011 campaign aides.

The two aides, Jaime Yoshiyama and Augusto Bedoya, were among the 19 others placed under arrest Wednesday.

Barata has previously identified both men as intermedia­ries. Their homes were raided in March.

He told Peruvian prosecutor­s in addition to the money he gave to the two Popular Force officials, he made another contributi­on of US$200,000 to Keiko through Peru’s business confederat­ion CONFIEP. — AFP

 ??  ?? Keiko being escorted by police officers in a Judiciary office, in Lima. — AFP photo
Keiko being escorted by police officers in a Judiciary office, in Lima. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia