Correction to This Article
This Dec. 10 article incorrectly said that former Peruvian president Alberto Fujimori could be sent to prison for life if convicted on charges of human rights abuses. He would face as much as 30 years in prison.

Peru Ambivalent As Ex-Leader Faces Trial for Massacres

Fujimori, Still Admired, Could Get Life in Prison

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By Monte Reel and Lucien Chauvin
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, December 10, 2007; Page A12

LIMA, Peru, Dec. 9 -- When Alberto Fujimori was president of Peru in the 1990s, his authoritarian methods forced the country to debate how far a leader should go in the pursuit of terrorists.

Now, as he faces a trial that could send him to prison for life, the debate for many here has shifted: How far should Peru go in pursuit of Fujimori?

An awkward sort of ambivalence is defining the trial even before it starts on Monday. Although a majority of Peruvians say they believe Fujimori is guilty of human rights abuses and corruption, he remains near the top of the list of the country's most admired political figures. According to a survey conducted recently by the University of Lima, he is more popular than Alan Garc¿a, whom Peruvians returned to the presidency last year. Nearly 55 percent said they view Fujimori's 1990-2000 presidency favorably.

Even Fujimori's political legacy survives. His daughter last year received more votes than any other candidate for Congress, where she is part of a minority bloc of his followers known as Fujimoristas.

"This trial is a very odd thing, but when Fujimori was president, it was an odd time," said Carlos Fern¿ndez, 55, who works at a car rental service in Lima. "This country was a mess when he was elected, and he did a lot of good things for it. I think he's guilty of some abuses and should be punished, but I don't know that he should be in prison."

Much of Fujimori's popularity while president rested on his liberal dispersal of public aid, his taming of inflation and his backing of an aggressive battle against the Shining Path, a Maoist revolutionary group that for years terrorized wide swaths of the countryside and killed thousands. But in targeting the group, he also targeted students, journalists and others whose main offense was criticizing his methods. He shut down Congress, purged the judiciary and suspended the constitution -- measures that were supported by much of the public at the time.

As evidence of government corruption and human rights abuses became apparent, Fujimori fled to Japan, the birthplace of his parents, and faxed his resignation to Peru in 2000. Despite a warrant for his arrest, he lived in exile in Tokyo until late 2005, when he attempted to secretly return to Peru to resurrect his political career. He was arrested in Chile, and was finally extradited to face trial here in September.

In the trial that begins Monday, Fujimori faces charges that he ordered two massacres carried out by the Colina Group, a paramilitary force that he allegedly controlled. In 1991, the group killed 15 people at a party in the Barrios Altos neighborhood of Lima; the following year, its members killed nine students and a professor at La Cantuta teacher's college, in what was said to be a purge of rebels affiliated with the Shining Path.

The victims of La Cantuta were buried on the outskirts of Lima. When investigators began probing the incident, the bodies were unearthed, burned and reburied. The families were given only partial remains.

Dora Oyague, a 20-year-old student at La Cantuta, was among the victims. Her mother, Carmen, is among those eagerly awaiting the trial in hopes that it might provide more answers about what happened to her daughter, who she said was not involved in any political movements.

"All I want is justice and to know why they did this to Dora," said Oyague, 63. "They took her away, murdered her and we never even got her body. They only found part of her remains. I want to know why they killed her, the real reason."

The trial is to take place at a police center on the outskirts of Lima on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Testimony is expected to stretch for months, if not years.


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