Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Outlawing The Opposition? Peru's Prosecutor Seeks To Erase Fujimorism From Politics


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Peru's Prosecutor General Delia Espinoza has asked the Supreme Court to outlaw Fuerza Popular, the party led by Keiko Fujimori, daughter of former president Alberto Fujimori.

The prosecutor accuses the party of violating democratic norms, persecuting opponents and journalists, and even legitimizing violence by downplaying atrocities from the country's internal conflict between 1980 and 2000.

If accepted, the ruling would bar Fuerza Popular from next year's general elections. Keiko Fujimori, who has already lost three presidential races but remains one of Peru 's most influential politicians, called the move“openly antidemocratic” and warned it was a deliberate attempt to silence her party ahead of the vote.

The 4,000-page case was built partly on a citizen complaint filed earlier this year, which the Prosecutor's Office expanded into a sweeping indictment of the party's internal practices and public positions.

The battle does not occur in a vacuum. Peru's institutions are already under heavy strain after years of corruption scandals, repeated presidential impeachments, and clashes between branches of government.



Espinoza herself faces possible suspension by the National Justice Board over earlier controversies, which has fueled suspicion that the judiciary and prosecutorial system are being used as weapons in political wars rather than neutral guardians of the law.
Peru's Democracy Tested as Fujimori Party Faces Ban
On social media , the case has divided Peruvians. Some see it as long-overdue accountability for a party tied to the authoritarian legacy of the Fujimori era in the 1990s.

Others fear it signals a dangerous turn toward“judicialized politics,” where opponents are removed not at the ballot box but through legal maneuvers.

Rights groups warn that outlawing an opposition party risks eroding pluralism and deepening mistrust in already fragile democratic institutions.

For observers outside Peru, the case is a reminder of how democracies can falter not through coups, but through legal battles that strip citizens of real political choice.

The stakes go far beyond Keiko Fujimori: at issue is whether Peru's elections remain genuinely competitive, or whether the courtroom replaces the voters in deciding who gets to run.

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