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Alberto Fujimori

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Alberto Fujimori
アルベルト・フジモリ
Fujimori in 1991
54th President of Peru
In office
28 July 1990 – 22 November 2000
Prime Minister
See list
Vice President
See list
Preceded byAlan García
Succeeded byValentín Paniagua
President of the Emergency and National Reconstruction Government
In office
5 April 1992 – 9 January 1993
Preceded byPost established
Succeeded byPost abolished
Personal details
Born
Alberto Kenya Fujimori Inomoto

(1938-07-26)26 July 1938[a]
Lima, Peru
Died11 September 2024(2024-09-11) (aged 86)
Lima, Peru
Resting placeCampo Fe Huachipa Cemetery
Citizenship
  • Peru
  • Japan
Political partyChange 90 (1990–1998)
Sí Cumple (1998–2010)
People's New Party (2007–2013)
Popular Force (2024)
Other political
affiliations
New Majority (1992–1998, non-affiliated member)
Peru 2000 (1999–2001)
Alliance for the Future (2005–2010)
Change 21 (2018–2019)
Spouses
(m. 1974; div. 1995)
Satomi Kataoka
(m. 2006)
Children4, including Keiko and Kenji
RelativesSantiago Fujimori (brother)
Alma materNational Agrarian University (BS)
University of Strasbourg
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (MS)
Signature
Websitealberto.fujimori.pe
Criminal information
Criminal statusConvicted[1]
Criminal chargeHuman rights abuses, murder, kidnapping, embezzlement, abuse of power, bribery and corruption
Penalty25 years in prison (Human rights abuses, murder and kidnapping charges)
Six years in prison (Abuse of power charges)
Seven-and-a-half years in prison (Embezzlement charges)
Six years in prison (Corruption and bribery charges)

Alberto Kenya Fujimori Inomoto[b] (26 July 1938[a] – 11 September 2024) was a Peruvian politician, professor, and engineer who served as the 54th president of Peru from 1990 to 2000.[c] Of Japanese descent, Fujimori was an agronomist and university rector before entering politics. Generally recognized as a civilian-military dictatorship,[6] his government was characterized by its use of propaganda, widespread political corruption, and human rights violations.

Fujimori's tenure began with his unexpected victory in the 1990 general election. He quickly implemented neoliberal[neutrality is disputed] economic reforms to address hyperinflation and economic instability, which won him initial support from international financial institutions, the military, and the Peruvian upper class. His administration soon became known for its authoritarian practices. In 1992, he carried out a self-coup, dissolving Congress and assuming extraordinary powers. After the coup, it was revealed that his government applied the directives of the military's Plan Verde. His government was linked to forced sterilizations and the violent suppression of the Shining Path insurgency. He was re-elected in 1995 and controversially again in 2000 amid allegations of electoral fraud.

In 2000, facing mounting allegations of widespread corruption, crimes against humanity, and human rights abuses in his government, Fujimori fled to Japan. He was later arrested in Chile in 2005 and extradited to Peru, where he was tried and convicted on multiple charges, including human rights violations and embezzlement. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison but was released in December 2023 following a controversial court order. He died from cancer nine months later in September 2024. He remains a polarizing figure in Peruvian politics, with a visible legacy in his political movement called Fujimorism, and in his daughter, Keiko Fujimori, who has run three times for president.

Early life, education, and career

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According to government records, Fujimori was born in 1938, in Miraflores, a district of Lima.[2][7][8] His father was Naoichi Fujimori ( Minami), who was adopted by a childless relative. His mother was Mutsue Inomoto. Both were natives of Kumamoto, Japan, who migrated to Peru in 1934.[9][10]

In July 1997, the news magazine Caretas alleged that Fujimori was born in Japan, in his father's hometown of Kawachi, Kumamoto Prefecture.[11] Because the Constitution of Peru requires the president to have been born in Peru, this would have made Fujimori ineligible to be president.[9] The magazine, which had been sued for libel by Vladimiro Montesinos seven years earlier,[12] reported that Fujimori's birth and baptismal certificates might have been altered.[11] Caretas also alleged that Fujimori's mother declared having two children when she entered Peru;[11] Fujimori was the second of four children.[13]

Caretas's contentions were hotly contested in the Peruvian media; the magazine described the allegations as "pathetic" and "a dark page for [Peruvian] journalism".[14] Latin American scholars Cynthia McClintock and Fabián Vallas note that the issue appeared to have died down among Peruvians after the Japanese government announced in 2000 that "Fujimori's parents had registered his birth in the Japanese consulate in Lima".[9] The Japanese government determined that he was also a Japanese citizen because of his parents' registration in the koseki.[15]

Fujimori obtained his early education at the Colegio Nuestra Señora de la Merced[16] and La Rectora School.[17] Fujimori's parents were Buddhists, but he was baptized and raised Catholic.[18] Aside from Spanish, he also spoke Japanese, the primary language in his childhood home.[19][failed verification] In 1956, Fujimori graduated from La Gran Unidad Escolar Alfonso Ugarte in Lima.[20]

Fujimori pursued undergraduate studies at the Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina in 1957, graduating first in his class in 1961 with a degree in agricultural engineering. He briefly lectured in mathematics at the university before continuing his studies in physics at the University of Strasbourg in France. In 1969, he earned a master's degree in mathematics from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee through a Ford Foundation scholarship.[21]

In 1974, he married Susana Higuchi, also Japanese Peruvian. They had four children, including a daughter, Keiko, and a son, Kenji, who followed him into politics and were both elected to Congress.[22]

In recognition of his academic achievements, the sciences faculty of the National Agrarian University offered Fujimori the deanship and in 1984 appointed him to the rectorship of the university, which he held until 1989. In 1987, Fujimori also became president of the National Assembly of University Rectors [es] (Asamblea Nacional de Rectores), a position that he held twice. He also hosted a TV show called Concertando from 1988 to 1989, on Peru's state-owned network, Canal 7.[23]

Presidency (1990–2000)

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First term

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1990 general election

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During the first presidency of Alan García, the economy had entered a period of hyperinflation and the political system was in crisis due to the country's internal conflict, leaving Peru in "economic and political chaos".[24] The armed forces grew frustrated with the inability of the García administration to handle the nation's crises and began to draft Plan Verde as a plan to overthrow his government.[25][26] According to Rospigliosi, lawyer and friend of Fujimori, Vladimiro Montesinos was not initially involved with the Plan Verde, but his ability to resolve issues for the military resulted with the armed forces tasking Montesinos with implementing the plan with Fujimori,[27] while Schulte-Bockholt would say that both General Nicolás de Bari Hermoza [es] and Montesinos were responsible for the relationship between the armed forces and Fujimori.[26] Mario Vargas Llosa, Fujimori's final opponent in the election, later reported that United States Ambassador to Peru, Anthony C. E. Quainton, personally told him that allegedly leaked documents of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) purportedly being supportive of Fujimori's candidacy were authentic.[28] Rendón writes that the United States supported Fujimori because of his relationship with Montesinos, who had previously been charged with spying on the Peruvian military for the CIA.[26][28]

During the second round of elections, Fujimori originally received support from left-wing groups and those close to the García government, exploiting the popular distrust of the existing Peruvian political establishment and the uncertainty about the proposed neoliberal[neutrality is disputed] economic reforms of his opponent, novelist Mario Vargas Llosa.[29] Fujimori won the 1990 presidential election as a dark horse candidate under the banner of Cambio 90 ("cambio" means "change") defeating Vargas Llosa in a surprising upset. He capitalized on profound disenchantment with outgoing president Alan García and the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance party (APRA).[30]

During the campaign, Fujimori was nicknamed el chino, which translates to "the Chinese guy" or "the Chinaman"; it is common for people of any East Asian descent to be called chino in Peru, as elsewhere in Spanish-speaking Latin America, both derogatorily and affectionately. Although he was of Japanese heritage, Fujimori suggested that he was always pleased by the nickname, which he perceived as a term of affection.[31] With his election victory, he became the third person of East Asian descent to govern a South American state, after Arthur Chung of Guyana and Henk Chin A Sen of Suriname.[32]

Economic shock

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According to news magazine Oiga, the armed forces finalized plans on 18 June 1990 involving multiple scenarios for a coup d'état to be executed on 27 July 1990, the day prior to Fujimori's inauguration.[33] The magazine noted that in one of the scenarios, titled "Negotiation and agreement with Fujimori. Bases of negotiation: concept of directed Democracy and Market Economy", Fujimori was to be directed on accepting the military's plan at least 24 hours before his inauguration.[33] Fernando Rospigliosi states "an understanding was established between Fujimori, Montesinos and some of the military officers" involved in the Plan Verde prior to Fujimori's inauguration.[34] Montesinos and SIN officials ultimately assumed the armed forces' position in the plan, placing SIN operatives into military leadership roles.[27] Fujimori went on to adopt many of the policies outlined in the Plan Verde.[26][34] Fujimori was sworn in as president on 28 July 1990, allegedly his 52nd birthday.[35]

Fujimori (center) on the signature of the Protocol on outstanding clauses of the 1929 Treaty of Lima with Chile, 13 November 1999
Fujimori with President of the European Commission Jacques Delors in Brussels, 21 October 1991

After taking office, Fujimori abandoned the economic platform he promoted during his campaign, adopting more aggressive neoliberal[neutrality is disputed] policies than those espoused by Vargas Llosa, his opponent in the election.[36] During his first term in office, Fujimori enacted wide-ranging neoliberal[neutrality is disputed] reforms, known as the Fujishock. It was Fujimori's stated objective to pacify the nation and restore economic balance. This program bore little resemblance to his campaign platform and was in fact more drastic than anything Vargas Llosa had proposed.[37] Hernando de Soto, the founder of one of the first neoliberal[neutrality is disputed] organizations in Latin America, the Institute for Liberty and Democracy (ILD), began to receive assistance from the U.S. government under Ronald Reagan, with the National Endowment for Democracy's Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) providing his ILD with funding and education for advertising campaigns.[38][39][40] Between 1988 and 1995, de Soto and the ILD were mainly responsible for some four hundred initiatives, laws, and regulations that led to significant changes in Peru's economic system.[41][42] Under Fujimori, de Soto served as "the President's personal representative", with The New York Times describing de Soto as an "overseas salesman" for Fujimori in 1990, writing that he had represented the government when meeting with creditors and United States representatives.[41] Others dubbed de Soto as the "informal president" for Fujimori.[38] De Soto proved to be influential to Fujimori, who began to repeat de Soto's advocacy for deregulating the Peruvian economy.[43] The International Monetary Fund (IMF) was content with Peru's measures, and guaranteed loan funding for Peru.[44] Inflation rapidly began to fall and foreign investment capital flooded in.[44] Nonetheless, the Fujishock restored Peru to the global economy, though not without immediate social cost; international business participated in crony capitalism with the government.[45][46] The privatization campaign involved selling off of hundreds of state-owned enterprises, and replacing the country's troubled currency, the inti, with the nuevo sol.[24] Fujimori's initiative relaxed private sector price controls, drastically reduced government subsidies and government employment, eliminated all exchange controls, and also reduced restrictions on investment, imports, and capital.[45] Tariffs were radically simplified, the minimum wage was immediately quadrupled, and the government established a US$400 million poverty relief fund.[45] The latter seemed to anticipate the economic agony to come: the price of electricity quintupled, water prices rose eightfold, and gasoline prices 3,000%.[37][45]

Military regime

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During Fujimori's first term in office, APRA and Vargas Llosa's party, the FREDEMO, remained in control of both chambers of Congress—then composed of a Chamber of Deputies and a Senate—hampering the enactment of economic reform. Fujimori also had difficulty combatting the Maoist Shining Path (Spanish: Sendero Luminoso) guerrilla organization due largely to what he perceived as intransigence and obstructionism in Congress. By March 1992, the Congress met with the approval of only 17% of the electorate, according to one poll; in the same poll, the president's approval stood at 42%.[47]

Fujimori and his military handlers had planned for a coup during his preceding two years in office.[48][26][33] In response to the political deadlock, Fujimori, with the support of the military, carried out a self-coup on 5 April 1992,[49] also known as the autogolpe (auto-coup) or Fujigolpe (Fuji-coup) in Peru. Congress was shut down by the military, the constitution was suspended and the judiciary was dissolved.[50] Without political obstacles, the military was able to implement the objectives outlined in the Plan Verde[26][48][33] while Fujimori served as president to project an image that Peru was supporting a liberal democracy.[4][5] Vladimiro Montesinos would go on to adopt the actual function of Peru's government.[5]

According to numerous polls, the coup was welcomed by the public[51] as evidenced by favorable public opinion in several independent polls; in fact, public approval of the Fujimori administration jumped significantly in the wake of the coup.[51][52] Fujimori often cited this public support in defending the coup, which he characterized as "not a negation of real democracy, but on the contrary... a search for an authentic transformation to assure a legitimate and effective democracy".[51] Fujimori believed that Peruvian democracy had been nothing more than "a deceptive formality—a façade".[51] He claimed the coup was necessary to break with the deeply entrenched special interests that were hindering him from rescuing Peru from the chaotic state in which García had left it.[53]

Fujimori's coup was immediately met with near-unanimous condemnation from the international community.[51] The Organization of American States (OAS) denounced the coup and demanded a return to "representative democracy",[54] despite Fujimori's claim that the coup represented a "popular uprising".[51] Foreign ministers of OAS member states reiterated this condemnation of the autogolpe.[52] They proposed an urgent effort to promote the reestablishment of "the democratic institutional order" in Peru.[55] Negotiations between the OAS, the government, and opposition groups initially led Fujimori to propose a referendum to ratify the auto-coup, but the OAS rejected this. Fujimori then proposed scheduling elections for a Democratic Constituent Congress (CCD), which would draft a new constitution to be ratified by a national referendum. Despite a lack of consensus among political forces in Peru regarding this proposal, an ad hoc OAS meeting of ministers nevertheless endorsed this scenario in mid-May. Elections for the Democratic Constituent Congress were held on 22 November 1992.[52]

Various states individually condemned the coup. Venezuela broke off diplomatic relations, and Argentina withdrew its ambassador. Chile joined Argentina in requesting Peru's suspension from the Organization of American States. International lenders delayed planned or projected loans, and the United States, Germany, and Spain suspended all non-humanitarian aid to Peru.[56]

Fujimori, in turn, later received most of the participants of the November 1992 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt as political asylees, who had fled to Peru after its failure.[57]

Peru–United States relations earlier in Fujimori's presidency had been dominated by questions of coca eradication and Fujimori's initial reluctance to sign an accord to increase his military's eradication efforts in the lowlands. Fujimori's autogolpe became a major obstacle to relations, as the United States immediately suspended all military and economic aid, with exceptions for counter-narcotic and humanitarian funds.[58] Two weeks after the self-coup, the George H. W. Bush administration changed its position and officially recognized Fujimori as the legitimate leader of Peru, partly because he was willing to implement economic austerity measures, but also because of his adamant opposition to the Shining Path.[59]

With FREDEMO dissolved and APRA leader Alan García exiled to Colombia, Fujimori sought to legitimize his position. He called elections for a Democratic Constitutional Congress, to serve as a legislature and as a constituent assembly. The APRA and Popular Action attempted a boycott of this election, but the Christian People's Party (PPC) and many left-leaning parties participated in this election. Fujimori supporters won a majority of the seats in this body and drafted a new constitution in 1993. In a referendum, the coup and the Constitution of 1993 were approved by a margin of less than five percent.[60]

On 13 November 1992, General Jaime Salinas Sedó [es] led a failed military coup. Salinas asserted that his intentions were to turn Fujimori over to be tried for violating the constitution.[61]

In 1994, Fujimori separated from his wife Susana Higuchi in a noisy, public divorce. He formally stripped her of the title First Lady in August 1994, appointing their eldest daughter Keiko as first lady in her stead. Higuchi publicly denounced Fujimori as a "tyrant" and claimed that his administration was corrupt. They formally divorced in 1995.[62]

In Fujimori's first term of office, over 3,000 Peruvians were killed in politically motivated murders.[63][needs context]

Second term

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The 1993 Constitution allowed Fujimori to run for a second term, and in April 1995, at the height of his popularity, Fujimori easily won reelection with almost two-thirds of the vote. His main opponent, former UN Secretary-General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, won only 21 percent of the vote. Fujimori's supporters won comfortable majority in the new unicameral Congress. One of the first acts of the new congress was to declare an amnesty for all members of the military and police accused or convicted of human rights abuses between 1980 and 1995.[64]

During his second term, Fujimori and Ecuadorian President Sixto Durán Ballén signed a peace agreement over a border dispute that had simmered for more than a century. The treaty allowed the two countries to obtain international funds for developing the border region. Fujimori also settled some issues with Chile, Peru's southern neighbor, which had been unresolved since the 1929 Treaty of Lima.[65]

The 1995 election was the turning point in Fujimori's career. Peruvians began to be more concerned about freedom of speech and the press. Before he was sworn in for a second term, he stripped two universities of their autonomy and reshuffled the national electoral board. This led his opponents to call him "Chinochet", a reference to his previous nickname and to Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.[66] Modeling his rule after Pinochet, Fujimori reportedly enjoyed this nickname.[67]

According to a poll by the Peruvian Research and Marketing Company conducted in 1997, 40.6% of Lima residents considered President Fujimori an authoritarian.[68][69][70]

In addition to the fate of democracy under Fujimori, Peruvians were becoming increasingly interested in the myriad allegations of criminality that involved Fujimori and his chief of the National Intelligence Service (SIN), Vladimiro Montesinos. Using SIN, Fujimori gained control of the majority of the armed forces, with the Financial Times stating that "[i]n no other country in Latin America did a president have so much control over the armed forces".[63]

A 2002 report by Health Minister Fernando Carbone later suggested that Fujimori was involved in the forced sterilizations of up to 300,000 indigenous women between 1996 and 2000, as part of a population control program.[71] A 2004 World Bank publication said that in this period Montesinos's abuse of the power Fujimori granted him "led to a steady and systematic undermining of the rule of law".[72]

Third term, flight to Japan and resignation

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Fujimori in October 1998

By the arrival of the new millennium, Alberto Fujimori became increasingly authoritarian, strengthening collaboration with Vladimiro Montesinos and the National Intelligence Service. Shortly after Fujimori began his second term, his supporters in Congress passed a law of "authentic interpretation" which effectively allowed him to run for another term in 2000. A 1998 effort to repeal this law by referendum failed.[73] In late 1999, Fujimori announced that he would run for a third term. The electoral authorities, which were politically sympathetic to Fujimori, accepted his argument that the two-term restriction did not apply to him, as it was enacted while he was already in office.[74]

Exit polls showed Fujimori fell short of the 50% required to avoid an electoral runoff, but the first official results showed him with 49.6% of the vote, just short of outright victory. Eventually, Fujimori was credited with 49.9%—20,000 votes short of avoiding a runoff. Despite reports of numerous irregularities, the international observers recognized an adjusted victory of Fujimori. His primary opponent, Alejandro Toledo, called for his supporters to spoil their ballots in the runoff by writing "No to fraud!" on them (voting is mandatory in Peru). The OAS electoral observation mission pulled out of the country, saying that the process would be neither free nor fair.[75]

In the runoff, Fujimori won with 51.1% of the total votes. While votes for Toledo declined from 37.0% of the total votes cast in the first round to 17.7% of the votes in the second round, invalid votes jumped from 8.1% of the total votes cast in the first round to 31.1% of total votes in the second round.[76] The large percentage of invalid votes in the election suggests widespread dissatisfaction with the electoral process among voters.[77]

Although Fujimori won the runoff with only a bare majority (but 3/4 valid votes), rumors of irregularities led most of the international community to shun his third swearing-in on 28 July. For the next seven weeks, there were daily demonstrations in front of the presidential palace. As a conciliatory gesture, Fujimori appointed former opposition candidate Federico Salas as prime minister. Opposition parties in Congress refused to support this move, and Toledo campaigned vigorously to have the election annulled. At this point, a corruption scandal involving Vladimiro Montesinos broke out, and exploded into full force on the evening of 14 September 2000, when the cable television station Canal N broadcast footage of Montesinos apparently bribing opposition congressman Alberto Kouri to defect to Fujimori's Peru 2000 party. The video was originally presented at press conference by Fernando Olivera and Luis Iberico of the FIM (Independent Moralizing Front); many other similar videos were released in the following weeks.[78]

Fujimori's support virtually collapsed, and a few days later he announced in a nationwide address that he would shut down the SIN and call new elections, in which he would not be a candidate. On 10 November, Fujimori won approval from Congress to hold elections on 8 April 2001. On 13 November, Fujimori left Peru for a visit to Brunei to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum. On 16 November, Valentín Paniagua took over as president of Congress after the pro-Fujimori leadership lost a vote of confidence. On 17 November, Fujimori traveled from Brunei to Tokyo, where he submitted his presidential resignation via fax. Congress refused to accept his resignation, instead voting on 22 November 62–9 to remove Fujimori from office on the grounds that he was "permanently morally disabled".[79]

On 19 November, government ministers presented their resignations en bloc. Fujimori's first vice president, Francisco Tudela, had broken with Fujimori and resigned a few days earlier. This left second vice president Ricardo Márquez Flores as next in line for the presidency. Congress refused to recognize him, as he was an ardent Fujimori loyalist; Márquez resigned two days later. Paniagua was next in line, and became interim president to oversee the April 2001 elections.[79]

Corruption

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Fujimori was accused of a series of offences, including embezzlement of public funds, abuse of power, and corruption during almost 10 years as president (1990–2000), especially when he gained greater control after the self-coup. The network operated as a kleptocracy in three spheres: business, politics, and the military.[80]

With multimillion-dollar annual expenditures in 1992 (five billion dollars in public spending plus another five billion in state enterprises), part of the funds were diverted to political and military institutions. According to the National Anti-Corruption Initiative (INA) in 2001, they corresponded to 30–35% of the average budget expenditure in each year, and 4% of the average annual GDP during the same period.[81]

One of those responsible for maintaining an image of apparent honesty and government approval was Vladimiro Montesinos, head of the National Intelligence Service (SIN), who systematically bribed politicians, judges, and the media. That criminal network also involved authorities of his government; furthermore, due to privatisation and the arrival of foreign capital, companies close to the Ministry of the Economy and Finance were allowed to use state money for public works tenders, as in the cases of AeroPerú, JJC Contratistas Generales (of the Camet Dickmann family), and the Banco de Crédito.[82]

Although in 1999 the opposition made a public denunciation that ended in the resignation of five ministers, this network was later revealed in 2000, just before the president resigned, when the Swiss embassy in Peru informed the Minister of Justice Alberto Bustamante and the attorney general José Ugaz of more than US$40 million coming from Montesinos, in which he was denounced for "illicit enrichment to the detriment of the Peruvian state". Ugaz was in charge of the investigation until 2002.[82]

According to Transparency International in 2004, Fujimori was listed as the seventh most corrupt former leader in history.[83]

Counterterrorism efforts

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When Fujimori came to power, much of Peru was dominated by the Maoist insurgent group Sendero Luminoso ("Shining Path"), and the Marxist–Leninist group Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA). In 1989, 25% of Peru's district and provincial councils opted not to hold elections, owing to a persistent campaign of assassination, over the course of which over 100 officials had been killed by the Shining Path in that year alone. That same year, more than one-third of Peru's courts lacked a justice of the peace due to Shining Path intimidation. Labor union leaders and military officials were also assassinated throughout the 1980s.[84]

Areas where Shining Path was active in Peru.

By the early 1990s, some parts of the country were under the control of the insurgents, in territories known as "zonas liberadas" ("liberated zones"), where inhabitants lived under the rule of these groups and paid them taxes.[85] When the Shining Path arrived in Lima, it organized "paros armados" ("armed strikes"), which were enforced by killings and other forms of violence. The leadership of the Shining Path largely consisted of university students and teachers.[86] Two previous governments, those of Fernando Belaúnde Terry and Alan García, at first neglected the threat posed by the Shining Path, then launched an unsuccessful military campaign to eradicate it, undermining public faith in the state and precipitating an exodus of elites.[87]

According to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Shining Path guerrilla attacks claimed an estimated 12,500 lives during the organization's active phase.[88] On 16 July 1992, the Tarata bombing, in which several car bombs exploded in Miraflores, Lima's wealthiest district, killed over 40 people; the bombings were characterized by one commentator as an "offensive to challenge President Alberto Fujimori".[89] The bombing at Tarata was followed up with a "weeklong wave of car bombings ... Bombs hit banks, hotels, schools, restaurants, police stations, and shops ... [G]uerrillas bombed two rail bridges from the Andes, cutting off some of Peru's largest copper mines from coastal ports."[90]

Fujimori earned credit for ending the Shining Path insurgency.[91] As part of his anti-insurgency efforts, Fujimori granted the military broad powers to arrest suspected insurgents and try them in secret military courts with few legal rights. This measure has often been criticized for compromising the fundamental democratic and human right to an open trial wherein the accused faces the accuser. Fujimori contended that these measures were both justified and also necessary. Members of the judiciary were too afraid to charge the alleged insurgents, and judges and prosecutors had very legitimate fears of reprisals against them or their families.[92] At the same time, Fujimori's government armed rural Peruvians, organizing them into groups known as rondas campesinas ("peasant patrols").[93]

Insurgent activity was in decline by the end of 1992,[94] and Fujimori took credit for this abatement, claiming that his campaign had largely eliminated the insurgent threat. After the 1992 auto-coup, the intelligence work of the DINCOTE (National Counter-Terrorism Directorate) led to the capture of the leaders from↔ MRTA and the Shining Path, including notorious Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán. Guzmán's capture was a political coup for Fujimori, who used it to great effect in the press; in an interview with documentarian Ellen Perry, Fujimori even noted that he specially ordered Guzmán's prison jumpsuit to be white with black stripes, to enhance the image of his capture in the media.[95]

Critics charge that to achieve the defeat of the Shining Path, the military engaged in widespread human rights abuses, and that the majority of the victims were poor highland countryside inhabitants caught in a crossfire between the military and insurgents. The final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, published on 28 August 2003, noted that the armed forces were also guilty of destroying villages and murdering countryside inhabitants whom they suspected of supporting insurgents.[88][96]

Chavín de Huántar commandos rescue a Japanese hostage on 22 April 1997

The Japanese embassy hostage crisis began on 17 December 1996, when fourteen MRTA militants seized the residence of the Japanese ambassador in Lima during a party, taking hostage some four hundred diplomats, government officials, and other dignitaries. The action was partly in protest of prison conditions in Peru. During the four-month standoff, the Emerretistas gradually freed all but 72 of their hostages. The government rejected the militants' demand to release imprisoned MRTA members and secretly prepared an elaborate plan to storm the residence, while stalling by negotiating with the hostage-takers.[97]

On 22 April 1997, a team of military commandos, in the operation codenamed "Chavín de Huantar", raided the building. One hostage, two military commandos, and all 14 MRTA insurgents were killed in the operation.[98] Images of President Fujimori at the ambassador's residence during and after the military operation, surrounded by soldiers and liberated dignitaries, and walking among the corpses of the insurgents, were widely televised. The conclusion of the four-month-long standoff was used by Fujimori and his supporters to bolster his image as tough on terrorism.[99]

Human rights violations

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Several organizations criticized Fujimori's methods against the Shining Path and the MRTA. Amnesty International said "the widespread and systematic nature of human rights violations committed during the government of former head of state Alberto Fujimori (1990–2000) in Peru constitute crimes against humanity under international law".[100] The 1992 La Cantuta massacre and the 1991 Barrios Altos massacre by members of the Grupo Colina death squad, made up solely of members of the armed forces, were among the crimes that Peru cited in its request to Japan for his extradition in 2003.[101]

The success of the military operation in the Japanese embassy hostage crisis was tainted by subsequent allegations that at least three and possibly eight of the insurgents were summarily executed by the commandos after surrendering. In 2002, the case was taken up by public prosecutors, but the Supreme Court ruled that the military tribunals had jurisdiction. A military court later absolved them of guilt, and the Chavín de Huantar soldiers led the 2004 military parade. In 2003, MRTA family members lodged a complaint with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) accusing the Peruvian state of human rights violations, in that the MRTA insurgents had been denied the "right to life, the right to judicial guarantees and the right to judicial protection". Although the IACHR's ruling did not directly implicate Fujimori, it did fault the Peruvian state for its complicity in the La Cantuta massacre.[102]

Forced sterilizations

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Reportedly following socioeconomic objectives calling for the "total extermination" of "culturally backward and economically impoverished groups" determined by the Peruvian military in the Plan Verde,[33][103][104][105] from 1996 to 2000, the Fujimori government oversaw a massive forced sterilization campaign known as the National Program for Reproductive Health and Family Planning (PNSRPF).

According to Back and Zavala, the plan was an example of ethnic cleansing as it targeted indigenous and rural women.[105] The United Nations and other international aid agencies supported this campaign. USAID provided funding and training until it was exposed by objections by churches and human rights groups.[106] The Nippon Foundation, headed by Ayako Sono, a Japanese novelist and personal friend of Fujimori, supported it as well.[107][108]

In the four-year Plan Verde period, over 215,000 people, mostly women, entirely indigenous, were forced or threatened into sterilization and 16,547 men were forced to undergo vasectomies during these years, most of them without a proper anesthetist, in contrast to 80,385 sterilizations and 2,795 vasectomies over the previous three years.[71] Some scholars argue that these policies and acts were genocidal.[109]

Post-presidency (2000–2024)

[edit]

Summary

[edit]

In 2000, facing charges of corruption and human rights abuses, Fujimori fled Peru and took refuge in Japan.[110][71] He maintained a self-imposed exile until his arrest while visiting Chile in November 2005.[111] He was extradited to face criminal charges in Peru on 22 September 2007.[112] In December 2007, Fujimori was convicted of ordering an illegal search and seizure and was sentenced to six years imprisonment.[113][114][115] The Supreme Court upheld the decision on appeal.[116] In April 2009, Fujimori was convicted of human rights violations and sentenced to 25 years imprisonment for his role in kidnappings and murders by the Grupo Colina death squad during his government's battle against the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement in the 1990s. Specifically, he was found guilty of murder, bodily harm and two cases of kidnapping.[117][118][119][120][121] The verdict marked the first time that an elected head of state was tried and convicted of human rights violations.[122]

In July 2009, Fujimori was sentenced to 7+12 years imprisonment for embezzlement after he admitted to giving US$15 million from the Peruvian treasury to Montesinos.[123] Two months later, he pleaded guilty in a fourth trial to bribery and received an additional six-year term.[124] Transparency International determined the money embezzled by the Fujimori government—about US$600 million or about US$861 million in 2021—to be the seventh-most for a head of government active within 1984–2004.[125][126] Under Peruvian law, all the resultant sentences must run concurrently; thus, the maximum length of imprisonment remained 25 years.[127]

In December 2017, Fujimori was pardoned by President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, shortly after Fujimori's son, Congressman Kenji Fujimori, helped President Kuczynski survive an impeachment vote.[128][129] The pardon was overturned by the Supreme Court on 3 October 2018, and Fujimori was sent back to prison in January 2019.[130][131][132] The Constitutional Court of Peru in a 4–3 ruling on 17 March 2022 reinstated the pardon.[133] On 8 April 2022, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights overruled the Constitutional Court and ordered Peru not to release Fujimori.[134] The Constitutional Court ordered on 5 December 2023 that he be immediately released.[135]

Resignation, arrest, and trial

[edit]

Alberto Fujimori left Peru in November 2000 to attend a regional summit in Brunei. He then traveled on to Japan. Once there, he announced plans to remain in the country and faxed his resignation letter to Congress.[136]

After Congress rejected Fujimori's faxed resignation, they relieved Fujimori of his duties as president and banned him from Peruvian politics for a decade. He remained in self-imposed exile in Japan,[137] where he resided with his friend, the Catholic novelist Ayako Sono.[138] Several senior Japanese politicians supported Fujimori,[139] partly because of his decisive action in ending the 1996–97 Japanese embassy crisis.

Alejandro Toledo, who assumed the presidency in 2001, spearheaded the criminal case against Fujimori. He arranged meetings with the Supreme Court, tax authorities, and other powers in Peru to "coordinate the joint efforts to bring the criminal Fujimori from Japan". His vehemence in this matter at times compromised Peruvian law: forcing the judiciary and legislative system to keep guilty sentences without hearing Fujimori's defense; not providing Fujimori with representation when Fujimori was tried in absentia; and expelling pro-Fujimori congressmen from the parliament without proof of the accusations against them. Those expulsions were later reversed by the judiciary.[140]

Congress authorized charges against Fujimori in August 2001. Fujimori was alleged to be a coauthor, along with Vladimiro Montesinos, of the death-squad killings at Barrios Altos in 1991 and La Cantuta in 1992, respectively.[141] At the behest of Peruvian authorities, in March 2003 Interpol issued an arrest order for Fujimori on charges that included murder, kidnapping, and crimes against humanity.[142]

Meanwhile, the Peruvian government found that Japan was not amenable to the extradition of Fujimori; a protracted diplomatic debate ensued, when Japan showed itself unwilling to accede to the extradition request. Fujimori had been granted Japanese citizenship after his arrival in the country, and the Japanese government maintained that its citizens would not be extradited.[143]

In September 2003, Fujimori and several of his ministers were denounced for crimes against humanity, for allegedly having overseen forced sterilizations during his regime.[144] In November, Congress approved an investigation of Fujimori's involvement in the airdrop of Kalashnikov rifles into the Colombian jungle in 1999 and 2000 for guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).[145] Fujimori maintained he had no knowledge of the arms-trading, and blamed Montesinos.[146] By approving the charges, Congress lifted the immunity granted to Fujimori as a former president, so that he could be criminally charged and prosecuted.[147]

Congress also voted to support charges against Fujimori for the detention and disappearance of 67 students from the central Andean city of Huancayo and the disappearance of several residents from the northern coastal town of Chimbote during the 1990s. It also approved charges that Fujimori mismanaged millions of dollars from Japanese charities, suggesting that the millions of dollars in his bank account were far too much to have been accumulated legally.[148]

In 2004, the Special Prosecutor established to investigate Fujimori released a report alleging that the Fujimori administration had obtained US$2 billion though graft.[149] Most of this money came from Vladimiro Montesinos's web of corruption.[149] The Special Prosecutor's figure of two billion dollars is considerably higher than the one arrived at by Transparency International, an NGO that studies corruption. Transparency International listed Fujimori as having embezzled an estimated US$600 million or about $861 million in 2021, which would rank seventh in the list of money embezzled by heads of government active within 1984–2004.[125][126][150]

Fujimori dismissed the judicial proceedings underway against him as "politically motivated", citing Toledo's involvement. Fujimori established a new political party in Peru, Sí Cumple, working from Japan. He hoped to participate in the 2006 presidential elections, but in February 2004, the Constitutional Court dismissed this possibility, because the ex-president was specifically barred by Congress from holding any office for ten years. Fujimori saw the decision as unconstitutional, as did his supporters such as former congress members Luz Salgado, Martha Chávez and Fernán Altuve, who argued it was a "political" maneuver and that the only body with the authority to determine the matter was the National Elections Jury (JNE). Valentín Paniagua disagreed, suggesting that the Constitutional Court finding was binding and that "no further debate is possible".[151][152]

Fujimori's Sí Cumple (roughly translated, "He Keeps His Word") received more than 10% in many country-level polls, contending with APRA for the second-place slot,[153] but did not participate in the 2006 elections after its participation in the Alliance for the Future (initially thought as Alliance Sí Cumple) had not been allowed.

By March 2005, it appeared that Peru had all but abandoned its efforts to extradite Fujimori from Japan. In September of that year, Fujimori obtained a new Peruvian passport in Tokyo and announced his intention to run in the upcoming 2006 national election.[143] He arrived in Chile in November 2005, but hours after his arrival there he was arrested. Peru then requested his extradition.[136]

While under house arrest in Chile, Fujimori announced plans to run in Japan's Upper House elections in July 2007 for the far-right People's New Party.[154][155][156][157] Fujimori was extradited from Chile to Peru in September 2007.[136]

On 7 April 2009, a three-judge panel convicted Fujimori on charges of human rights abuses, declaring that the "charges against him have been proven beyond all reasonable doubt".[158] The panel found him guilty of ordering the Grupo Colina death squad to commit the November 1991 Barrios Altos massacre and the July 1992 La Cantuta massacre, which resulted in the deaths of 25 people,[159] as well as for taking part in the kidnappings of opposition journalist Gustavo Gorriti and businessman Samuel Dyer Ampudia.[160][161] As of 2009 Fujimori's conviction is the only instance of a democratically elected head of state being tried and convicted of human rights abuses in his own country.[162] Later on 7 April, the court sentenced Fujimori to 25 years in prison.[118] Likewise, the Court found him guilty of aggravated kidnapping, under the aggravating circumstance of cruel treatment, with respect to journalist Gustavo Gorriti and businessman Samuel Dyer Ampudia. The Special Criminal Chamber determined that the sentence was to expire on 10 February 2032.[163] On 2 January 2010, the sentence to 25 years in prison for human rights violations was confirmed.[164]

Further trials

[edit]

He faced a third trial in July 2009 over allegations that he illegally gave US$15 million in state funds to Vladimiro Montesinos, former head of the National Intelligence Service, during the two months prior to his fall from power. Fujimori admitted paying the money to Montesinos but claimed that he had later paid back the money to the state.[165] On 20 July, the court found him guilty of embezzlement and sentenced him to a further 7+12 years in prison.[165][166]

A fourth trial took place in September 2009 in Lima.[166] Fujimori was accused of using Montesinos to bribe and tap the phones of journalists, businessmen and opposition politicians—evidence of which led to the collapse of his government in 2000.[166][167] Fujimori admitted the charges but claimed that the charges were made to damage his daughter's presidential election campaign.[167] The prosecution asked the court to sentence Fujimori to eight years imprisonment with a fine of US$1.6 million plus US$1 million in compensation to ten people whose phones were bugged.[167] Fujimori pleaded guilty and was sentenced to six years' imprisonment on 30 September 2009.[166]

Pardon requests and release

[edit]

Press reports in late 2012 indicated that Fujimori was suffering from tongue cancer and other medical problems. His family asked President Ollanta Humala for a pardon.[168] President Humala rejected a pardon in 2013, saying that Fujimori's condition was not serious enough to warrant it.[169] In July 2016, with three days left in his term, President Humala said that there was insufficient time to evaluate a second request to pardon Fujimori, leaving the decision to his successor Pedro Pablo Kuczynski.[170][171] On 24 December 2017, President Kuczynski pardoned him on health grounds.[172] Kuczynski's office stated that the hospitalized 79-year-old Fujimori had a "progressive, degenerative and incurable disease". The pardon kicked off at least two days of protests and led at least three congressmen to resign from Kuczynski's party. A spokesman for Popular Force alleged there was a pact that, in exchange for the pardon, Popular Force members helped Kuczynski fight ongoing impeachment proceedings.[128]

On 20 February 2018, the National Criminal Chamber ruled that it did not apply the resolution that granted Fujimori the right of grace for humanitarian reasons. Therefore, the former president had to face the process for the Pativilca Case with a simple appearance.[173] On 3 October 2018, the Peruvian Supreme Court reversed Fujimori's pardon and ordered his return to prison.[130] He was rushed to a hospital and returned to prison on 23 January 2019.[131] His pardon was formally annulled on 13 February 2019.[132]

The Constitutional Court, in a 4–3 ruling on 17 March 2022, reinstated the pardon, though it was not clear if or when he might be released.[133] Those ruling in approval of Fujimori's release argued that a pardon, no matter how unconstitutional it may be, can be issued by the President of Peru and that previous rulings annulling the pardon were "subjective".[174] Constitutional Court judges ruling in favor of releasing Fujimori ignored the Inter-American Court of Human Rights' opinion that criticized Kuczynski's reported pardon pact with Fujimori's son and pointed out that the disease cited in the pardon was possibly diagnosed by Fujimori's personal doctor, not an independent physician.[174]

On 8 April 2022, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights overruled the Constitutional Court and ordered Peru not to release Fujimori.[134]

On 5 December 2023, he was ordered to be released immediately following an order by the Constitutional Court. This followed a previous order by the court that mandated the decision in the hands of a lower court in Ica, which returned the case to the Constitutional Court citing lack of authority.[175] The following day, he was released from Barbadillo Prison in Lima, after spending 16 years in prison,[176] whereupon he was met by his children Keiko and Kenji as well as a crowd of supporters.[177]

Forced sterilizations trial

[edit]

In May 2023, the Supreme Court of Chile ordered Fujimori to testify regarding forced sterilizations that occurred between 1996 and 2000 during his government, with Chile attempting to decide if they would expand extradition charges against Fujimori to include the sterilizations, which would allow him to be prosecuted in Peru.[178] On 19 May 2023, Fujimori participated in a video call from Barbadillo Prison with justice officials in Chile defending his actions regarding sterilizations.[179]

2026 general election

[edit]

Two months before his death, on 14 July 2024, Keiko Fujimori announced her father's candidacy for the 2026 Peruvian general election, despite his legal impediments and difficulties related to old age and poor health.[180][181]

Illness and death

[edit]

For some years before his death, Fujimori had gastrointestinal issues, heart problems and cancer. He was in prison for several years following his presidency and was released on humanitarian grounds in December 2023.[182] He was diagnosed with tongue cancer in early 2024.[183][184] He made his last public appearance at a hospital after undergoing a CT scan on 4 September 2024.[185]

On 11 September, the arrival of a priest and Fujimorist members of congress wearing black was reported at the home of his daughter, Keiko Fujimori, in San Borja District, Lima.[186][187] Subsequently, his doctor Alejandro Aguinaga told the press that he was "fighting" for his life and requested that visits be restricted.[186] Congressperson Luisa María Cuculiza said that Fujimori's decline in health took her by surprise and that she had spoken with him five days earlier during which she noted his lucidity.[188] Miguel Torres [es], a spokesperson for the Popular Force, added that Fujimori was going through a "difficult time."[187] Fujimori's lawyer, Elio Riera, briefly disconnected from a virtual meeting over concerns for his health.[189] The Prime Minister's office subsequently denied rumors that Fujimori died.[190]

Fujimori died at around 18:00 (UTC−05:00), according to a statement released by another doctor, José Carlos Gutiérrez. He added that Fujimori had trouble breathing on 9 September, lost consciousness on 10 September, and died from complications of tongue cancer.[191] At 18:26, Keiko Fujimori confirmed her father's death in a social media post.[192][193]

State funeral and burial

[edit]

The Peruvian government declared three days of mourning and granted him a state funeral.[191][194] The Peruvian Congress and other public buildings lowered their flags to half-mast in his honor.[191][195] Fujimori's remains were brought to lie in state at the Museo de la Nación in the Ministry of Culture on 12 September,[196] with president Dina Boluarte attending to pay her respects with other Peruvian politicians such as Gustavo Adrianzén, President of the Council of Ministers; Morgan Quero, Minister of Education; César Vásquez, Minister of Health; Juan Santiváñez, Minister of the Interior; and Congressmen Alejandro Cavero, Jorge Montoya, Patricia Juárez, Gladys Echaíz, Patricia Chirinos, José Williams, Roberto Chiabra, Maricarmen Alva, Eduardo Salhuana, Juan Carlos Lizarzaburu, among others.[196][197] Jorge del Castillo, Mauricio Mulder, Luis Galarreta, Miguel Torres, former Foreign Minister Javier Gonzáles-Olaechea and Alberto Otárola were also present at the funeral,[196][198] as well as the singer Melcochita.[199]

Thousands of Fujimori supporters arrived from various regions of the country to the wake, carrying portraits and making speeches in his honor.[200][201][202] Due to the large number of attendees, the Ministry of Culture announced that access to the wake would be extended until midnight, and that the following day, the doors of the Nasca Room would be open from 6 in the morning until midnight.[203]

From 12 to 14 September 2024, he lay in state at Peru's Ministry of Culture headquarters.[204][205] Fujimori's state funeral was then held on 14 September 2024 at Lima's National Theatre.[206][207] His funeral was attended by the incumbent president, Dina Boluarte, who offered a salute, and Keiko spoke during the funeral in front of a large portrait of her father. Fujimori was then buried at Campo Fe Cemetery in Huachipa, Lima.[205][206][207][208]

Reactions

[edit]

President Dina Boluarte did not comment directly on his death, although her administration expressed its condolences to his family.[209] Former presidents Francisco Sagasti, Manuel Merino, Martín Vizcarra and Pedro Pablo Kuczynski also conveyed their condolences,[210][211] as well as Prime Minister Gustavo Adrianzén.[212]

Supporters also gathered at Fujimori's house to mourn his death.[191] His death in his native Peru drew mixed reactions; congressperson Sigrid Bazán commented that Fujimori was a "dictator, assassin and corrupt" and that "his legacy of corruptions, violations of human rights and authoritarianism" would persist beyond his death.[213][214]

International media described him following his death as an "authoritarian" who was "divisive", and whose "heavy handed" tactics "created a negative legacy" in Peru that frustrated his eldest daughter's attempts to be elected to the presidency.[192][215][216] No international leaders officially reacted to his death,[209] but the former President of Colombia Álvaro Uribe Vélez, expressed his condolences and praised his administration, saying: "He rescued Peru from many problems".[217] Jamil Mahuad, former President of Ecuador, praised Fujimori and stated that he regretted "the loss of a friend".[218] Yoshimasa Hayashi, Chief Cabinet Secretary of Japan, expressed his condolences to Fujimori's family, citing his role in resolving the Japanese embassy hostage crisis. At the same time, he acknowledged that Fujimori had been "evaluated in various ways" in part due to his human rights abuse cases.[219]

Legacy

[edit]

Economics

[edit]

Fujimori was credited by many Peruvians with bringing stability to the country after the violence and hyperinflation during the first García administration.[136]

Neoliberal[neutrality is disputed] reforms under Fujimori took place in three distinct phases: an initial "orthodox" phase (1990–92) in which technocrats dominated the reform agenda; a "pragmatic" phase (1993–98) that saw the growing influence of business elites over government priorities; and a final "watered-down" phase (1999–2000) dominated by a clique of personal loyalists and their clientelist policies that aimed to secure Fujimori a third term as president. Business was a big winner of the reforms, with its influence increasing significantly within both the state and society.[220]

High growth during Fujimori's first term petered out during his second term. The 1997–98 El Niño event had a tremendous impact on the Peruvian economy during the late 1990s and exacerbated a recession during that time.[221] Nevertheless, total GDP growth between 1992 and 2001, inclusive, was 44.60%, that is, 3.76% per annum; total GDP per capita growth between 1991 and 2001, inclusive, was 30.78%, that is, 2.47% per annum. Also, studies by INEI, the national statistics bureau[222] show that the number of Peruvians living in poverty increased dramatically (from 41.6% to more than 70%) during Alan García's term, but decreased greatly (from more than 70% to 54%) during Fujimori's term. Furthermore, FAO reported Peru reduced undernourishment by about 29% from 1990 to 1992 to 1997–99.[223]

Peru was reintegrated into the global economic system, and began to attract foreign investment. The mass selloff of state-owned enterprises led to improvements in some service industries, notably local telephone, mobile telephone, and internet services, respectively. For example, before privatization, a consumer or business had to wait up to 10 years to get a local telephone line installed by the state-run telephone company at a cost of US$607 for a residential line.[224][225] Peru's physical land-based telephone network had a dramatic increase in telephone penetration from 2.9% in 1993 to 5.9% in 1996 and 6.2% in 2000,[226] and a dramatic decrease in the wait for a telephone line: the average wait went from 70 months in 1993 (before privatization) to two months in 1996 (after privatization).[227] Privatization also generated foreign investment in export-oriented activities such as mining and energy extraction, notably the Camisea Gas Project and the copper and zinc extraction projects at Antamina.[228]

Criticism

[edit]

Fujimori has been described as a dictator.[6][229] His government was permeated by a network of corruption organized by his associate Montesinos.[230][231][232] Fujimori's style of government has also been described as "populist authoritarianism". Numerous governments[233] and human rights organizations such as Amnesty International, welcomed the extradition of Fujimori to face human rights charges.[234] As early as 1991, Fujimori had himself vocally denounced what he called "pseudo-human rights organizations" such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, for allegedly failing to criticize the insurgencies targeting civilian populations throughout Peru against which his government was struggling.[235]

Some of the GDP growth during the Fujimori years actually reflects a greater rate of extraction of nonrenewable resources by transnational companies; these companies were attracted by Fujimori by means of near-zero royalties, and, by the same fact, little of the extracted wealth has stayed in the country.[236][237][238][239] Peru's mining legislation, they claim, has served as a role model for other countries that wish to become more mining-friendly.[240]

The sole instance of organized labor's success in impeding reforms, namely the teachers' union resistance to education reform, was based on traditional methods of organization and resistance: strikes and street demonstrations.[220]

In the 2004 Global Corruption Report, Fujimori was named one of the World's Most Corrupt Leaders. He was listed seventh and he was said to have amassed $600 million, but despite years of incarceration and investigation, none of these supposed stolen funds have ever been located in any bank account anywhere in the world.[126][241]

Support

[edit]

Fujimori did have support within Peru.[242] The Universidad de Lima March 2003 poll, taken while he was in Japan, found a 41% approval rating for his administration.[243] A poll conducted in March 2005 by the Instituto de Desarrollo e Investigación de Ciencias Económicas (IDICE) indicated that 12.1% of the respondents intended to vote for Fujimori in the 2006 presidential election.[244] A poll conducted on 25 November 2005, by the Universidad de Lima indicated a high approval (45.6%) rating of the Fujimori period between 1990 and 2000, attributed to his counterinsurgency efforts (53%).[245] In a 2007 University of Lima survey of 600 Peruvians in Lima and the port of Callao, 82.6% agreed that the former president should be extradited from Chile to stand trial in Peru.[246]

In the 2006 congressional elections, his daughter Keiko was elected to the congress with the highest vote count. She came in second place in the 2011 Peruvian presidential election with 23.2% of the vote,[247] and lost the June runoff against Ollanta Humala.[248] She again ran for president in the 2016 election, narrowly losing the runoff to Pedro Pablo Kuczynski,[249] and again in the 2021 election, losing the runoff to Pedro Castillo.[250]

Honors

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Fujimori claimed to have been born on 28 July, the anniversary of Peru's independence from Spain, but other documents have listed a birth date of 26 July; Fujimori cited the latter date in a court hearing in Japan in 2001.[2][3]
  2. ^ Latin American Spanish pronunciation: [alˈβeɾto ˈkeɲɟʝa fuxiˈmoɾi]; アルベルト・フジモリ, alternatively 藤森 謙也, Hepburn: Fujimori Ken'ya, Japanese pronunciation: [ɸɯʑiꜜmoɾi keꜜɰ̃ja]
  3. ^ Vladimiro Montesinos was widely regarded as the real power behind the throne, while Alberto Fujimori acted as a figurehead under his influence. Montesinos, who was the de facto head of the government's secret police until 2000, when it was deactivated, commented at the time that "[Fujimori] is completely malleable: he does nothing at all without my knowing it."[4][5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Released on 5 December 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Fujimori sacó DNI con fecha falsa sobre su nacimiento". La República (in Spanish). 7 March 2023. Archived from the original on 12 August 2019. Retrieved 22 June 2024.
  3. ^ Hernon, Matthew (12 September 2024). "Former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori Dies at 86". Tokyo Weekender. Archived from the original on 15 September 2024. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
  4. ^ a b
  5. ^ a b c Calderón Bentin, Sebastián (January 2018). "The Politics of Illusion: The Collapse of the Fujimori Regime in Peru". Theatre Survey. 59 (1): 84–107. doi:10.1017/S0040557417000503. S2CID 233360593.
  6. ^ a b
  7. ^ Alberto Fujimori's Birth Certificate Archived 17 March 2024 at the Wayback Machine modified by Vladimiro Montesinos to make believe that he was Peruvian and assume the presidency
  8. ^ Champion, Margaret Y. (2006). Peru and the Peruvians in the Twentieth Century: Politics and Prospects. New York: Vantage Press. p. 476. ISBN 0-533-15159-7.
  9. ^ a b c McClintock, Cynthia; Fabián Vallas (2002). The United States and Peru. New York: Routledge. p. 50. ISBN 0-415-93463-X.
  10. ^ González Manrique, Luis Esteban (1993). La encrucijada peruana: de Alan García a Fujimori (in Spanish). Madrid: Fundación CEDEAL. p. 467. ISBN 84-87258-38-7.
  11. ^ a b c Valenzuela, Cecilia (1997). "Buscando La Cuna De Fujimori". Caretas (1475): 27. Archived from the original on 30 May 2011. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
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  21. ^ Famous people major in Mathematics Archived 29 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine, University of Rochester website. Retrieved on 30 March 2007
  22. ^ Giraldo, Clara (11 September 2024). "Keiko y Kenji, los hijos de Alberto Fujimori que aspiraron a seguir con su legado político". Infobae. Archived from the original on 12 September 2024. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
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  24. ^ a b Benson, Sara and Hellander, Paul and Wlodarski, Rafael. Lonely Planet: Peru. 2007, pp. 37–38.
  25. ^ Burt, Jo-Marie (September–October 1998). "Unsettled accounts: militarization and memory in postwar Peru". NACLA Report on the Americas. 32 (2). Taylor & Francis: 35–41. doi:10.1080/10714839.1998.11725657. the military's growing frustration over the limitations placed upon its counterinsurgency operations by democratic institutions, coupled with the growing inability of civilian politicians to deal with the spiraling economic crisis and the expansion of the Shining Path, prompted a group of military officers to devise a coup plan in the late 1980s. The plan called for the dissolution of Peru's civilian government, military control over the state, and total elimination of armed opposition groups. The plan, developed in a series of documents known as the "Plan Verde," outlined a strategy for carrying out a military coup in which the armed forces would govern for 15 to 20 years and radically restructure state-society relations along neoliberal lines.
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  27. ^ a b Rospigliosi, Fernando (1996). Las Fuerzas Armadas y el 5 de abril: la percepción de la amenaza subversiva como una motivación golpista. Lima, Peru: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos. pp. 46–47.
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  30. ^ Bridge, Sarah (12 December 2007). "Alberto Fujimori: Profile of the former Peruvian president who was jailed today for abuse of authority". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  31. ^ Interview with Fujimori, in Ellen Perry's The Fall of Fujimori
  32. ^ Ignacio López-Calvo (2013). The Affinity of the Eye: Writing Nikkei in Peru. University of Arizona Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-8165-9987-5. Archived from the original on 22 January 2024. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  33. ^ a b c d e "El "Plan Verde" Historia de una traición". Oiga. 647. 12 July 1993. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  34. ^ a b Avilés, William (Spring 2009). "Despite Insurgency: Reducing Military Prerogatives in Colombia and Peru". Latin American Politics and Society. 51 (1). Cambridge University Press: 57–85. doi:10.1111/j.1548-2456.2009.00040.x. S2CID 154153310.
  35. ^ Hunter, Brian (ed.). "Peru". The Statesman's Yearbook: Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World 1994–1995. Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 1082.
  36. ^ Gouge, Thomas. Exodus from Capitalism: The End of Inflation and Debt. 2003, p. 363. [ISBN missing]
  37. ^ a b Gouge, Thomas. Exodus from Capitalism: The End of Inflation and Debt. 2003, p. 363.
  38. ^ a b Pee, Robert (2018). The Reagan Administration, the Cold War, and the Transition to Democracy Promotion. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 178–180. ISBN 978-3319963815.
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[edit]
Party political offices
New political party Cambio 90 nominee for President of Peru
1990, 1995, 2000
Vacant
Title next held by
Martha Chávez
Vamos Vecino nominee for President of Peru
2000
Succeeded by
New political alliance New Majority nominee for President of Peru
1995, 2000
Vacant
Title next held by
Martha Chávez
Peru 2000 nominee for President of Peru
2000
Alliance dissolved
Political offices
Preceded by President of Peru
1990–1992
Succeeded by
President of the Emergency and National Reconstruction Government of Peru
1992–1993
President of Peru
1993–2000