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Peru’s pardon of Fujimori condemned by U.N. rights experts

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NEW YORK TIMES

Former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori in the garden at the Okura Hotel in Tokyo in 2005.

LIMA, Peru — U.N. human rights experts today condemned the decision to grant a medical pardon to Alberto Fujimori, the former president of Peru who had been serving a 25-year sentence for extrajudicial killings and other grave crimes.

The pardon, announced Sunday by President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, set off an outcry that has roiled this Andean nation. Fujimori, who was in office from 1990 to 2000, remains deeply divisive, respected in some quarters for his economic reforms and his crackdown on two violent insurgencies, but reviled by others for his strongman tactics and for military-backed atrocities during his tenure.

“The presidential pardon granted to Alberto Fujimori on politically motivated grounds undermines the work of the Peruvian judiciary and the international community to achieve justice,” the experts said in a statement released by the office of the U.N. high commissioner for human rights. “We are appalled by this decision. It is a slap in the face for the victims and witnesses whose tireless commitment brought him to justice.”

The experts — Agnès Callamard, special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings; Pablo de Greiff, special rapporteur on truth, justice and reparations; and a working group on enforced or involuntary disappearances — added: “It is also a major setback for the rule of law in Peru: A humanitarian pardon has been granted to someone convicted of serious crimes after a fair trial, whose guilt is not in question and who does not meet the legal requirements for a pardon.”

Kuczynski has portrayed his decision as an act of compassion and a gesture toward reconciliation — a move that Fujimori welcomed in a video recorded from his hospital bed, in which he asked critics for forgiveness — but the president’s critics see a more cynical motive. Kuczynski survived an impeachment vote last week with help from a faction of lawmakers led by Kenji Fujimori, a congressman and the younger son of Alberto Fujimori, and critics see the pardon as the reward.

The pardon has touched off a wave of resignations, including those of several members of Congress and senior civil servants. On Wednesday, the resignations continued, with the departures of the culture minister, Salvador del Solar; a presidential adviser, Máximo San Román; and the executive in charge of Peru’s public radio and television stations, Hugo Coya.

Daniel Sánchez Velásquez, a Justice Ministry official who resigned earlier in the week, said there was “an essential incompatibility” in Kuczynski’s wish to provide reparations to victims of violence while “freeing, through a questionable procedure, he who in the context of that terrorist insanity responded with terrible crimes that contributed to the suffering of Peruvian society.”

At a news conference Wednesday, Mercedes Aráoz, Peru’s prime minister, struck a conciliatory note.

“It is a decision of conscience, and I understand their points of view and we must respect their decisions,” she said of the officials who had resigned.

“We want a peaceful country and one that honestly can cure the wounds from a painful past,” she said. “We are going to work together those who feel cheated by this decision, which was a difficult and painful decision for the president. We are going to insist on having a conversation with the families of the victims. Our doors are open to continue talking about a total reconciliation of our country.”

Fujimori, who fled to Japan in 2000 as his presidency crumbled under the weight of corruption allegations, tried to mount a political comeback in 2005, traveling to neighboring Chile. Instead he was immediately arrested, and in 2007 he was extradited to Peru. In 2009, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison for his role in two military atrocities committed early in his presidency.

Human rights advocates said this week that they would work to overturn the pardon, both in Peruvian and international courts, though the prospects for such appeals seemed deeply uncertain.

Christian Huaylinos, a coordinator at Aprodeh, a human rights group, cited a precedent in which a court invalidated the pardon of José Enrique Crousillat, a former media baron, after finding that his medical condition was not as severe as he had maintained. (Crousillat had been recorded taking bribes to run favorable news about Fujimori.)

But César Nakazaki, a former lawyer for Fujimori, said the challenge was unlikely to succeed because there was nothing bogus about Fujimori’s medical conditions.

“All the medical information is consistent and his medical history is in the public domain,” Nakazaki said.

The international challenge involves the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, of which Peru is a member.

Carlos Rivera, director of the Institute for Legal Defense, said it had asked the court to intervene based on two court precedents. One demanded that Peru not offer amnesty to those convicted in the La Cantuta massacre of 1992, one of two atrocities for which Fujimori was convicted. The other said that states should not offer pardons or amnesties in cases of serious rights violations.

“We want the court to see that their rulings are not being followed,” Rivera said.

Diego García Sayán, a former president of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, said the petition raised novel questions. “This is the first time that someone is presenting a case to the court directly related to pardons,” he said. “There’s more precedent when it comes to amnesties.”

However, Enrique Bernales, a constitutional law scholar at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru and a former U.N. special rapporteur on the use of mercenaries, was skeptical.

“Given that there is no precedent, that it is a prerogative of the president of the republic and not subject to judicial procedures of any kind, I see it quite difficult and problematic,” he said of the effort to get the international court to reverse the pardon.

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