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Peruvians demand extradition of ex-president Fujimori
By Cesar Uco
26 November 2005
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Thousands of angry workers, students and human rights advocates
marched in Lima last week demanding the extradition of former
president Alberto Fujimori from Chile. If returned to Perú,
Fujimori would face trial on 22 criminal charges of corruption
and human rights abuses. The charges carry sentences of up to
30 years in jail and $29 million in fines.
Fujimori arrived in Santiago, Chile on November 7 and was arrested
soon after as the Chilean courts yielded to the Peruvian governments
demands for his detention.
After a decade in power, Fujimori deserted the Peruvian presidency
in October 2000 amid accusations of corruption and abuse of power.
He fled to Japan, where he was granted citizenship and lived under
the protection of right-wing politicians.
In March 2003, Interpol issued an international warrant for
his arrest on charges of murder and kidnapping in Perú.
Included in the charges were the ex-presidents leading role
in the activities of the death squad known as Grupo Colina, responsible
for the massacres of La Cantuta and Barrios Altos at the beginning
of his presidency in 1991-92.
Relatives of death squad victims have traveled to Chile to
pressure the Chilean government to extradite Fujimori to Perú.
We want the victims voice to be heard, said
Alejandro Silva, a representative of the Lima-based National Coordinator
of Human Rights, which organized the trip.
Immediately after Fujimoris arrest, Peruvian President
Alejandro Toledo promised on national television that his government
would not allow the ex-president to escape. Toledo has sent a
high level delegation to Chile led by Interior Minister Rómulo
Pizarro to work on Fujimoris extradition. The Peruvian government
has 60 days to present its case.
It remains unclear why Fujimori ended his voluntary exile in
Japan.
His partisans say that Fujimori decided to fly to Chile to
be close to Perú and begin preparations to run for president
in 2006despite being banned from running until 2011 under
current Peruvian law.
After his arrest, Fujimori declared: It is my aim to
temporarily stay in Chile as part of a return to Perú to
keep a promise to a large part of the people of Perú.
Even at the end, when his regime was besieged by charges of corruption,
he retained a base of support for his policies of authoritarianism
and right-wing populism. There were also pro-Fujimori demonstrations
in Lima after he arrived in Chile.
Some, however, think Japan pressured him to leave. According
to Ernesto Velit, an independent political analyst in Lima, Fujimoris
had become a liability to his protectors.
I believe hes been forced to by the Japanese government
because Japan doesnt want to be criticized by an international
court for not handing him over, Velit said. After several
years of Japan denying calls for extradition, the Peruvian government
was about to move the case to the International Court in The Hague.
Fujimoris spokesman Carlos Raffo said: His detention
has been a calculated risk. That is why he is taking it so calmly.
According to the BBC, it is not clear if arrest warrants
issued by Interpol are legally binding in Chile. His attorney,
César Nakasaki, said Fujimori was counting on Chiles
Supreme Court to block his extradition, as it had done for other
leaders, such as former president of Argentina, Carlos Menem.
On Monday, the Chilean Supreme Court denied an appeal for Fujimoris
release from prison. At the same time the Supreme Court in Perú
approved a set of charges based on corruption and abuse of power
upon which to seek extradition.
Analysts believe that Fujimori may have chosen this moment
to go to Chile in order to exploit a heated sovereignty dispute
between Perú and Chile over territorial waters in the Pacific
Ocean.
As part of his calculated risk, Fujimori must also
have weighed the delicate political situation in Perú itself.
With a president in disgrace, an angry population unhappy with
the high unemployment and collapsing wages, and an army increasingly
disquieted by human rights trials, Fujimori may have believed
that his presence in Chile could turn the political tide in his
favor.
Perús political life is presently dominated by
several trials against former army generals and the head of national
intelligence, Vladimiro Montesinos, for assassinations and massacres
committed during Fujimoris presidency.
In April 1992, nearly two years after his election as president,
Fujimori disbanded Congress, suspended the constitution and assumed
dictatorial powers. With the help of his right-hand man, Montesinos,
he quickly moved to build a police state.
By means of bribes and intimidation, he exercised full control
over the judiciary and the media. At the same time, he gave the
army a free hand in repressing the Maoist guerrilla organization,
Shining Path.
This inaugurated one of the bloodiest phases of the 20-year
armed conflict between the army and Shining Path, which saw the
killing of nearly 70,000 people, most of them Quechua-speaking
Inca peasants living in the poorest regions of the country.
The trials threaten to expose the mass killings and the systematic
violation of human rights committed during the protracted dirty
war between the army and Shining Path.
The most prominent legal proceeding, known as the mega-trial,
began against the death squad Grupo Colina last August.
The main accused are Montesinos, former general Nicolás
Hermoza Ríos, who headed the army when the crimes were
committed, and Santiago Martín Rivas, a lower-ranking officer
responsible for carrying out kidnappings, torture and murder against
those suspected of being Shining Path members or sympathizers.
Following the defeat of Shining Path, a triumphant Fujimori
wanted to give Hermoza Ríos the rank of field marshal,
calling him the victorious general.
Fujimori implicated in massacres
A total of 57 officers and members of Fujimoris regime
are accused of machine-gunning 15 people, including an 8-year
old girl, at a party in Barrios Altos near downtown Lima (November
1991); the kidnapping and disappearance of 10 peasants in the
Santa valley located in the Andes north of Lima (May 1992); the
kidnapping and disappearance of journalist Pedro Yauri in Huacho,
a coastal town 100 miles north of the capital (July 1992); and
the cold-blooded kidnapping, torture and assassination of nine
students and a professor at La Cantuta University (July 1992).
Several indicted members of Grupo Colina have named Fujimori
and Montesinos as having approved at least two of these crimesthe
massacres at Barrios Altos and La Cantuta.
Evidence is piling up implicating the Fujimori government in
organizing the killings. The courts are in possession of 37 documents
demonstrating that the Grupo Colina was part of the National Intelligence
System under Montesinos and was formed by putting together the
most experienced army personnel. Members of Grupo Colina, who
spoke in exchange for lesser sentences, corroborated this evidence.
Fujimoris return to Perú would certainly exacerbate
the growing tensions between the government and a military that
is showing signs of growing distress over how far the revelations
of its crimes may go.
Last August, the Supreme Council of Military Justice (SCMJ)
declared the Grupo Colina trial illegal on the grounds that the
accused had already been tried and found guilty by a court martial
in 1994. The sentences were subsequently commuted by Fujimori
himself under the General Amnesty Law passed in 1995, absolving
the military of all culpability in the war against Shining Path.
In a further act of defiance, the army recently announced the
promotion to colonel of Máximo Humberto Cáceda Pedemonte,
an officer accused of having participated in the Barrios Altos
massacre.
The pressure on the military command is expected to intensify
with a new trial against former general Luis Pérez Documet
that began on October 26 in the Huancayo Court. Pérez,
who Hermoza Ríos named head of the Political-Military Front
(PMF) in the Mantaro region in the central Andes, is accused of
having kidnapped and tortured Luis Ramírez, a student at
the Universidad del Centro, in 1992.
Also, Pérez Documet and other officers of Mantaros
PMF are being investigated for the detention and disappearance
of 62 college students between 1990 and 1993. Forty-two cases
of kidnapping were reported while Pérez Document was the
PMF commander in the region.
The importance of the Luis Ramírez case is that he is
the only student who survived the torture and managed to escape
from the army garrison where he and others were held.
Institute of Legal Defense lawyer, Carlos Rivera, said the
trial against Documet will prove that the kidnapping of his client
(Ramírez) was part of a systematic practice carried out
by the military under orders of Pérez Documet.
Ramirez has received four threats against his life to dissuade
him from testifying against Pérez Document. It is widely
believe that the threats came from military circles.
In another act of defiance, Pérez Document disregarded
the courts order to show up for questioning, preferring
instead to go into hiding. The court issued an order for his arrest.
Meanwhile, President Toledos popularity is less than
20 percent, and no political party has managed to come up with
a viable candidate for the April 2006 presidential election.
In recent years, accusations of corruption, illegal use of
funds and abuse of power have been leveled against leading members
of virtually every party contemplating a run for the presidency.
Given the growing tension within the military over these trials
and the profound crisis of democratic rule under the Toledo regime,
Fujimori could put himself forward as the only alternative to
the political crisis and even a potential military coup.
As a virtually unknown candidate in the 1990 presidential election,
Fujimori exploited the populations resentment against the
upper crust of Peruvian society and postured as a representative
of the common man.
Memories of his victory in 1990 over the favored candidate
of the Peruvian oligarchy, well-known novelist Mario Vargas Llosa,
based on a right-wing populist campaign that exploited the bitter
resentment of the Peruvian cholos and Indians towards
the mainly white ruling class, are still fresh in the minds of
many Peruvians.
For many of these people, the economic situation under President
Toledo has become unbearable. Throughout his term in office, Toledos
government has been besieged by massive protest marches of industrial
workers, municipal workers, bus drivers, schoolteachers and doctors.
The growing wave of strikes and 24-hour stoppages that paralyzed
major cities in the past years, are an expression of the anger
and desperation of large sectors of the Peruvian middle and working
class.
In addition to the generals who ran the army and the bankers
and industrialists who benefited from the massive privatizations
of Fujimoris regime, there are more politically backward
sections of the middle class and even more oppressed layers who
think that life was better with El Chino, as Fujimori
was called (though he is of Japanese descent) and credit him with
putting an end to terrorism.
For many more Peruvians, however, he is remembered for implementing
the International Monetary Fund-inspired structural adjustment
programs that led to sweeping privatizations of state industries
and the destruction of jobs. Many are also conscious of the brutal
crimes carried out in the name of repressing terrorism.
One recent poll showed that if Fujimori were allowed to run
in the 2006 election, he would make it into a run-off against
the candidate of the right-wing National Unity Party, Lourdes
Flores. The poll gave Flores 25 percent of the vote and Fujimori
17 percent.
At the same time, the poll showed that 65 percent of Peruvians
opposed allowing Fujimori to stand as a candidate, and 70 percent
believed the ex-president guilty of the crimes with which he has
been charged.
See Also:
Peru: the disintegration
of the Fujimori regime
[21 September 2000]
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