Peru’s Fujimori leaves clinic as free man, reigniting anger over pardon

Peru’s Fujimori leaves clinic as free man, reigniting anger over pardon

LIMA - Reuters
Peru’s Fujimori leaves clinic as free man, reigniting anger over pardon

Peru’s former authoritarian leader Alberto Fujimori left hospital as a free man on Jan. 4, waving to supporters from a wheelchair and reigniting anger over a pardon he secured from President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski on Christmas Eve.

The pardon has polarized Peru, triggering anti-government protests and political resignations that have shaken Kuczynski’s already-weak government. Kuczynski said last week he would unveil a new cabinet soon, but has announced no details yet.

A corrupt dictator to some and a misunderstood hero to others, Fujimori had been serving a 25-year sentence for graft and human rights crimes during his 1990-2000 rightwing populist government.

“To the joy of many Peruvians, today Alberto Fujimori is free,” his doctor, and former health minister, Alejandro Aguinaga, said on television channel Canal N, adding that Fujimori was still recovering from heart troubles.

Fujimori, 79, was trailed by police escorts and news cameras as he arrived at a sprawling house in the upscale district of La Molina in Lima, the Peruvian capital.

Kuczynski, a former investment banker who is 79, like Fujimori, cited the latter’s ailing health when he pardoned him nearly two weeks ago. But the decision has been widely seen in Peru as payback after Fujimori enlisted his loyalists to help Kucyznski survive an impeachment bid following a graft scandal.

“You may have benefited improperly from an illegal pardon, but that does not take away your responsibility for the death and corruption of the 1990s,” said human rights activist Gisela Ortiz, whose brother, a university student, was killed in a 1992 death squad massacre Fujimori had been convicted of commanding.

Earlier on Jan. 4, Fujimori’s supporters rallied in front of Kuczynski’s house to show support for the pardon, as critics warned Kuczynski that he would be beholden to Fujimori and the rightwing party led by his children Keiko and Kenji that has an absolute majority in Congress.

Fujimori signaled from his hospital bed last week that he would not use his freedom to return to politics, but his loyalists have called for him to become an adviser to Popular Force, which controls a majority of seats in Congress.

“There’s nothing wrong with receiving advice from him, or counting on his support or counsel for a future presidential candidate,” Popular Force lawmaker Maritza Garcia told Reuters last week.

“Because of his health he can’t lead the party, but he can direct it from his bed or wheelchair.”