The Borneo Post

Thousands of Peruvians march against Fujimori pardon

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LIMA: Thousands of Peruvians marched on Thursday to protest the president’s recent pardoning of former authoritar­ian leader Alberto Fujimori, calling for new general elections as a graft scandal ensnares establishe­d politician­s.

The demonstrat­ions capped a head- spinning week in which President Pedro Pablo Kuczysnki warned about a new rise of Fujimori’s authoritar­ian movement, only to pardon him three days later after Fujimori’s loyalists in Congress saved him from an impeachmen­t bid.

Waving Peruvian flags and chanting ‘down with the corrupt’, protesters called the pardon payback for keeping Kuczynski in power.

“I’m marching against this outrage, this insult that we feel now that the dictator Fujimori has been pardoned,” said Milagros Reboyo, a 26-year- old university student at a march in Lima.

The Christmas Eve pardon cleared Fujimori’s conviction­s for graft and human rights abuses 12 years into a 25-year prison sentence, and shields him from a pending trial for a 1992 death squad massacre.

Fujimori’s 2009 sentencing had earned Peru internatio­nal plaudits in efforts to fight impunity.

United Nations human rights experts called the pardon an appalling “slap in the face” for his victims and a major setback for the rule of law.

Fujimori, who remained in a hospital with blood pressure and heart problems on Thursday, governed Peru with an iron fist from 1990-2000 after being swept to power by a populist wave in 1990 elections.

While many consider him a corrupt and ruthless dictator, others credit Fujimori with pulling Peru from economic ruin and quashing a leftist insurgency.

On Thursday, Kuczynski said the pardon was fundamenta­lly about forgivenes­s.

“The country can’t remain divided by political struggles that only hold the country back from continuing to make progress,” Kuczynski’s office said in a statement.

In Lima, the march was largely peaceful. But police fired tear gas at protesters who veered from the permitted route to march in front of Kuczynski’s house in the financial district.

Four people were arrested, the interior ministry said.

It declined to estimate the size of the protests, saying “we don’t want to get into that debate.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? People holding pictures of victims of the guerrilla conflict in the 80s and 90s march against Kuczynski’s pardon for Fujimori in Lima, Peru. — Reuters photo
People holding pictures of victims of the guerrilla conflict in the 80s and 90s march against Kuczynski’s pardon for Fujimori in Lima, Peru. — Reuters photo

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