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Chile judge: No extradition for ex-Peru leader

A Chilean Supreme Court judge has ruled that former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori should not be extradited to Peru to face human rights and corruption charges, a court spokesman said Wednesday.
(FILE) Peruvian President Alberto Fujimo
Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori salutes during his inauguration in July 2000 in Lima. A Chilean judge rejected Wednesday Lima's request to extradite former Peruvian president Alberto Fujimori to Peru, where he faces corruption and human rights charges. Jaime Razuri / AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: Reuters

A Chilean Supreme Court judge has ruled that former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori should not be extradited to Peru to face human rights and corruption charges, a court spokesman said Wednesday.

"Judge Orlando Alvarez ... rejected the extradition request presented by the Peruvian government against Alberto Fujimori," court spokesman Cristian Fuenzalida told reporters.

The judge's ruling now passes to the Supreme Court which has the final say on whether Fujimori, who ruled Peru from 1990-2000, is sent to Lima.

In the meantime, the verdict is open to appeal by Peruvian state prosecutors.

Fujimori has been in Chile since 2005 and is under house arrest in the capital Santiago.

Peru accuses him of embezzling millions of dollars and of human rights abuses including involvement in two massacres during Peru's battle with the Shining Path Maoist rebel group.

He denies all the charges against him.

The 68-year-old fled to Japan — the country of his parents' birth — after his government collapsed in 2000 under the weight of a huge corruption scandal. He lived there for five years.

He recently announced he intended to run in this month's Japanese Senate elections, a move dismissed by his critics as a ploy to avoid extradition from Chile.