Fujimori's daughter sees Humala as rival in 2011
By Terry Wade and Teresa Cespedes
LIMA (Reuters) - Former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori's conviction on human rights crimes will backfire, his daughter said on Wednesday as she eyes a tough race for the presidency in 2011 against leftist Ollanta Humala.
Keiko Fujimori, a popular lawmaker, said many voters in Peru will start flocking to her family's party to protest the 25-year prison sentence her father received on Tuesday. He was found guilty of ordering two massacres that killed 25 people in the 1990s, when he was battling Maoist insurgents.
Despite the verdict, polls show a third of Peruvians still support the man credited with defeating the Shining Path guerrillas and enacting free-market economic reforms that helped generate years of growth.
"This sentence, which was so extreme, will be like a boomerang for people who think the Fujimori movement has been defeated," Keiko Fujimori, 33, told Peru's foreign press club.
"Lots of people, especially poor people, are thinking of getting involved in politics because they think the verdict is unfair."
She said her 70-year-old father's sentence essentially condemned him to life in prison -- the punishment given to Shining Path leader Abimael Guzman.
Already a front-runner for the 2011 presidential race, Keiko Fujimori said that if she runs her rival would be Humala, who spooked financial markets when he nearly won the 2006 election.
Each would compete for votes from the poor in a country with a poverty rate of nearly 40 percent. Continued...




