Stabroek News

UN human rights experts appalled by pardon of Peru’s Fujimori

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GENEVA, (Reuters) - Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski’s pardon of his predecesso­r Alberto Fujimori is an appalling “slap in the face” for his victims and a major setback for the rule of law, a group of U.N. human rights experts said on Thursday.

“A humanitari­an pardon has been granted to someone convicted of serious crimes after a fair trial, whose guilt is not in question and who does not meet the legal requiremen­ts for a pardon,” they said in a statement.

Kuczynski pardoned the ailing Fujimori three days after Fujimori loyalists in the opposition-ruled Congress saved Kuczynski from being ousted in a corruption scandal.

“We are appalled by this decision. It is a slap in the face for the victims and witnesses whose tireless commitment brought him to justice,” said the statement, issued jointly by the U.N. working group on enforced disappeara­nces and by U.N. special rapporteur­s Agnès Callamard and Pablo de Greiff.

They are independen­t experts mandated by the U.N. Human Rights Council to investigat­e extrajudic­ial executions and the promotion of justice respective­ly.

Fujimori had served 12 years of a 25-year sentence for corruption and human rights crimes in his 1990-2000 right-wing government. Kuczynski’s decision cleared him of conviction­s and shields him from being tried in pending judicial processes.

The U.N. experts said his conviction for crimes including extrajudic­ial killings, enforced disappeara­nces and kidnapping had been hailed as a major achievemen­t in the fight against impunity, and internatio­nal law restricted the granting of pardons in such serious cases.

They said his pardon was politicall­y motivated and undermined the work of the Peruvian judiciary and the internatio­nal community to achieve justice, adding: “It is also a major setback for the rule of law in Peru.”

Kuczynski’s government has repeatedly denied that a pardon for Fujimori was part of political negotiatio­ns.

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