The Manila Times

Fujimori walks after controvers­ial pardon

- AFP

LIMA: Peru’s ex-president Alberto Fujimori was wheeled out of a Lima hospital late Thursday a free man following a controvers­ial pardon by President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski.

A frail- looking Fujimori, 79, held up a hand to wave to supporters as aides rolled him out the main entrance of Lima’s Centenario Clinic in a wheelchair, before he was whisked away in a convoy of vehicles accompanie­d by his lawmaker son Kenji.

A woman repeatedly shouted “We love you, we love you!” as she tried to reach Fujimori’s vehicle

“With my dad,” wrote Kenji Fujimori on Twitter, publishing a back of their SUV.

Fujimori, who wore a dark coat over a blue shirt, looked tired in the photo, while the son who orchestrat­ed his release seemed euphoric. Later, he published a video in which both wave to the camera.

Alberto Fujimori in freedom,” the family’s doctor Alejandro Aguinaga told Agence France-Presse.

He said Fujimori would meet later with his four children in what would be “an emotional family reunion.”

Analysts said the ailing ex-lead his rival children, Kenji and his sister Keiko, amid fears of a lasting split in the opposition Fuerza Popular party whose leadership Keiko inherited from her father. The Fujimori party is the main political group in the country and controls Congress.

“What will happen now is a sort of attempt by the father to soothe the family trouble,” political analyst Fernando Tuesta told Agence France-Presse.

Kuczynski, a 79-year-old businessma­n turned center- right politician who beat Keiko to the presidency in 2016 by capitalizi­ng on the anti- Fujimorist vote, said he had pardoned the ex- president for humanitari­an reasons - reneging on an election pledge never to do so.

Fujimori was pardoned days after Kenji and a raft of Fujimorist lawmakers abstained from voting on Kuczynski’s impeachmen­t in what was seen by many as a backroom deal to save the president from corruption charges.

The December 24 announceme­nt prompted a wave of protest in Peru. Fujimori was released after serving less than half of a 25-year sentence for human rights abuses.

UN human rights experts condemned the pardon as politicall­y motivated and said it was a slap in the face to victims of his brutal rule from 1990-2000.

A court held him responsibl­e for the killings of 25 supposed guerrillas and sympathize­rs in 1991 and 1992. It sentenced him in 2009 to 25 years in jail.

Relatives of victims have condemned the pardon, but many Peruvians admire him for his ruthless campaign to put down uprisings by leftist guerrillas, and supporters have hailed the decision to free him.

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