Peru opposition leader Fujimori detained in corruption probe

AP  |  Lima 

Former Peruvian has been detained as part of a money-laundering investigation, the latest in the Andean nation to face scrutiny over alleged corruption.

The was taken into custody on Wednesday after she showed up at the chief prosecutor's office to provide testimony into an ongoing probe into dubious financial contributions to her 2011 presidential campaign. She will initially be held for 10 days.

"They've persecuted me for 18 years and have so far not shown a single proof," Fujimori, 43, said in a defiant handwritten letter written from inside a police station and later posted on her account.

"They aren't going to cut off our political project.....we must raise our voices!" The handling the case also ordered the arrest of 19 other people, including several former ministers in her father's government and senior officials in her own

According to the arrest order, Fujimori is suspected of leading a within her party that received USD 1.2 million in illegal payments from Brazilian Odebrecht, which has admitted in the US to paying USD 788 million in bribes to politicians throughout

The 184-page document, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, cites testimony from the former of Odebrecht's operations in

The Peruvian probe was launched in 2016, amid another presidential run by Keiko Fujimori, and was immediately by her many supporters as politically motivated.

"This isn't justice. It's and it's abusive," Fujimori's American husband, Mark Villanella, who had also been under investigation in the same case, told reporters outside the prosecutor's office.

But many Peruvians, including current Martin Vizcarra, have been cheering on the house cleaning, fed up with decades of entrenched corruption behind convictions or investigations against all five living former presidents.

The investigating Fujimori has also ordered the arrest of two former presidents, and Alejandro Toledo, for receiving money from Both have denied any wrongdoing.

Fujimori lost to by fewer than 50,000 votes in the 2016 presidential runoff. But her party emerged in a kingmaking role with a majority of seats in congress as many Peruvians were nostalgic for the economic boom that coincided with her father's iron-fisted rule between 1990 and 2000.

However, the younger Fujimori's power has waned under Vizcarra, who stepped into the presidency after Kuczynski resigned earlier this year.

Last week, a ordered the elder Fujimori return to jail to finish a 25-year sentence for human rights abuses. Kuczynski had pardoned the former strongman last on humanitarian grounds in what was widely seen as a closed-door deal to stave off threats of impeachment.

Vizcarra, despite having little representation in congress, has also managed to outmaneuver by pushing through congress plans for a December referendum to impose term limits on lawmakers amid other anti-corruption measures.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 11 2018. 13:35 IST