Fujimoro not guilty of abuses carried out by army hit squad, defence claims

What seems to be a fair and open trial marks a welcome break in a country where impunity used to be the norm, writes JOSHUA PARTLOW…

What seems to be a fair and open trial marks a welcome break in a country where impunity used to be the norm, writes JOSHUA PARTLOWin Lima

IT STARTED with a former president red-faced and bellowing his innocence, and it is ending amid worry over whether his health may be enough to derail the whole show.

After more than 15 months and more than 70 witnesses, the often tedious, sometimes riveting and always live-televised judicial proceeding that is known here as the “mega-trial” has entered its final stages. Lawyers for former president Alberto Fujimori, accused of human rights violations involving state-sponsored killings and kidnappings, plan to present concluding arguments this week.

Then comes Fujimori’s closing statement. If he is convicted, his sentencing – he could face up to 30 years in prison – is expected by mid-April.

READ MORE

The trial, taking place at a special forces police base on the outskirts of this seaside capital, has been delayed in recent days because of concerns over Fujimori’s health. His lawyer says he suffers from hypertension, while others describe it variously as a throat infection, diarrhoea or simply a stalling tactic. If the proceedings are delayed for more than 12 days, a mistrial can result, prosecutor José Antonio Pelaez said, and the proceedings could start over again.

But for the most part, lawyers involved in the case and observers say the process is notable for its fairness, thoroughness and transparency, especially for such a politically volatile case.

“This is a major step forward,” said Jo-Marie Burt, a Latin American studies professor at George Mason University who has been an observer of Fujimori’s trial. “Peru is a country in which impunity has been the norm. Powerful people have routinely gotten away with all sorts of things, ranging from massive corruption to grave violations of human rights.”

Across Latin America, the political abuses of earlier generations – the Argentine military’s “dirty war” against its people or Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet’s state-sponsored killings – still regularly reverberate in trials, public debates about memorials, books and documentaries.

The prosecution describes this case as the first time that a former head of state has been extradited back to his own country for trial on charges of human rights violations. For Peru, the case not only represents a rare high-level reckoning with the past but is also wrapped up in current politics.

Fujimori (70) is still the figurehead of a strong political movement, with 13 seats in the 120-member Congress and support among parts of the population that see his decade-long rule, ending in 2000, as a time when Peru defeated the Shining Path insurgency and set the country on a course of economic growth.

His daughter, congresswoman Keiko Fujimori (33), has presidential aspirations of her own and has vowed to set her father free if he is convicted. Some also speculate that a guilty verdict could set a precedent under which Peru’s current president, Alan García, could face prosecution for alleged state abuses during his first administration in the 1980s, when he also fought the Shining Path.

The human rights case against Fujimori centres on four incidents. The first was the 1991 killings of 15 people, including an eight-year-old boy, by soldiers from a special army intelligence unit which raided a barbecue in an inner-city neighbourhood of the capital; it became known as the Barrios Altos massacre. The second was the 1992 killings of nine students and a teacher from Cantuta University, also by the Colina Group, a death squad operating out of the Army Intelligence Service.

Fujimori is also accused of orchestrating the kidnappings of journalist Gustavo Gorriti and businessman Samuel Dyer in the wake of the 1992 episode, when he shut down Congress and the judiciary.

The trial opened with Fujimori defiantly rejecting the charges.

Although the prosecution does not have documents showing he specifically ordered these acts, it says it does not need them for a conviction. Ronald Gamarra, a lawyer representing victims of the Colina Group, described Fujimori as “the author behind the author”. “He created the Colina Group, which was used to kill. Fujimori gave the order,” Gamarra said.

The prosecution is trying to build the case that Fujimori created the intelligence apparatus – run by his close adviser Vladimiro Montesinos, who is in prison – that fought its own dirty war against Peruvians while cracking down on the Maoist insurgency.

Fujimori’s lawyer, Cesar Nakazaki, says there is no evidence Fujimori was responsible for the actions of the Colina Group and that when he eventually learned of the unit’s existence in 1993 he called for its prosecution. Several Colina leaders have been found guilty over the years and sentenced to prison terms.

Nakazaki argues that rather than fighting a dirty war, Fujimori implemented a legal policy of “pacification”, which involved developing rural areas and local defence forces, building up the intelligence service and imprisoning Shining Path leaders. Responsibility for the massacres, he says, lies with members of the Colina Group and their immediate supervisors, who could not control them. Blaming Fujimori for the massacres would be like blaming President George Bush for the financial crisis, Nakazaki insists.

“The system failed. This doesn’t mean that President Bush said, ‘I want the bankers to be robbers’,” he says. “The president of the republic is only responsible for the policy, not for the defects in its implementation.”

Fujimori was found guilty in 2007 and sentenced to six years in prison for ordering an illegal raid on the home of Montesinos’s estranged wife.

After the human rights case, which will almost certainly be appealed no matter what the result, Fujimori faces corruption charges, including wiretapping opposition figures, bribing members of Congress and giving $15 million in government money to Montesinos.

Fujimori fled Peru in 2000 amid a corruption scandal set off by a videotape of Montesinos bribing a congressman. He moved to Japan, where his parents were from, and lived there until 2005, when he secretly travelled to Chile and was arrested. He was extradited to Peru in September 2007 to stand trial. – ( LA Times/Washington Postservice)