The Philippine Star

Peru elects Fujimori daughter in chaotic election

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LIMA ( AFP) — Peruvians voted yesterday on whether Keiko Fujimori, daughter of an ex- president jailed for massacres, should become their first female head of state in an election marred by alleged vote- buying and guerrilla attacks that killed four.

Half of the candidates have dropped out or been excluded from running under a tough new electoral law that saw Fujimori and other leading candidates accused of wooing voters with gifts.

The 40-year-old daughter of former leader Alberto Fujimori survived the charges and is likely to win about a third of the vote, according to three opinion polls published on Friday.

That would send her to a runoff vote in June against whoever finishes second.

Fighting it out for second place are ex- prime minister and Wall Street banker Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, 77, and left-wing lawmaker Veronika Mendoza, 35.

Nine other candidates have either been excluded for irregulari­ties or dropped out for lack of support.

One, Gregorio Santos, is running for office from a jail cell where he is detained on corruption charges.

The leader of the Organizati­on of American States, Luis Almagro, said the January electoral reform that allowed the candidates to be excluded risked turning it into a “semidemocr­atic election.”

Alberto Fujimori’s dark decade in power from 19902000 lives in the memory of many Peruvians, but that has not stopped his daughter from rising to top the opinion polls at the head of her Popular Force party.

“I have a firm conviction that with God’s help I will become the first woman president of Peru,” she told thousands of supporters waving orange flags at her closing rally.

The Fujimoris are among thousands of families of Japanese descent who immigrated to Peru in search of a better economic future.

Alberto Fujimori, now 77, is in jail for crimes against humanity. The courts held him responsibl­e for the massacre of 25 people he said were terrorists in 1991 and 1992.

“Politics is dirty. I find it incredible that Keiko could be president,” said Diego Ramirez, 25, a Lima bank worker.

“Her father was corrupt and a killer. She didn’t do anything as a congresswo­man. All she has is her family name.”

But many voters praise Alberto Fujimori for crushing the Shining Path communist guerrilla group that carried out attacks and kidnapping­s.

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