Editorial
Commentary
Alvaro
Vargas Llosa:
Hope and Reform
The recent extradition of former Peruvian President Alberto
Fujimori to face charges of human rights violations and corruption is a
welcome development. It is also a monumental challenge to the institutions
of a country that has not been able to establish the rule of law as successfully
as it has been able to generate economic growth in recent years.
Among other charges, Fujimori, who was extradited to Lima by Chilean authorities,
will be tried in relation to two civilian massacres at the hands of a military
death squad active during his regime. His political organization -- mostly
a collection of relatives and cronies -- is using its 13 members of Congress
to pressure the government and the magistrates to set him free.
Some Peruvians rationalize the human rights violations and the corruption
of the Fujimori years with the argument that the country was at war with
the Maoist terrorist organization known as Shining Path and that his government
spurred the economic recovery of the last decade.
The greatest challenge in the upcoming trials will not be political pressure
on judges or the publicity of a highly charged case at a time when global
financial institutions are on the verge of granting Peru an investment
grade, the highest economic rating. The greatest challenge will be testing
the Peruvian people's capacity to decouple in their minds their personal
views of Fujimori's government from the moral and legal implications of
the crimes for which he will be tried.
The capacity or incapacity to make that distinction will tell us whether
Peru has gone from being a society that puts institutions and moral principles
at the mercy of political necessity -- the mark of underdevelopment --
to a society that embraces the principle that the law is an impersonal
set of rules over and above personal preference, political convenience
or sheer passion.
Because many Peruvians were not ready to make that distinction in the
1990s, Fujimori's government was able to concentrate colossal amounts of
power with popular support -- hence the crimes and the corruption for which
dozens of his former collaborators have gone to jail. There was a time,
shortly after Fujimori fled to Japan and resigned his post by fax in 2000,
when many Peruvians, shocked by spectacular revelations of high-level corruption,
seemed ready to understand that accountability, limits on government, and
the separation of powers are extremely important. However, with the passing
of time a substantial number of people have started to forget the tragic
events of the recent past. Even if they distance themselves from Fujimori
personally, they seem to advocate, for instance with regard to law and
order issues or the uncomfortable presence of NGO activists in parts of
the country, some of the dictatorial tactics that made human rights violations
and corruption systematic in the 1990s.
The mental transition from the idea that strongmen are the solution to
a nation's problems to the idea that impersonal institutions should be
more powerful than those who rule is crucial. Much of the progress that
has taken place in the world in recent centuries stems precisely from that
transition. The countries that have not shaken off the tradition of strongman
rule need to learn not to subject basic human rights to the whims of politicians
acting on a wave of popular fear.
Peru is undergoing Asian-style growth rates and its entrepreneurial class
is rapidly adopting new technologies and becoming competitive. But the
other part of the development equation -- decoupling the institutions from
the political process in order to protect individual rights permanently
-- is not yet fully in place. That is an age-old cultural trait that will
need to be overcome through leadership and reform.
One way to start is to show the population that Fujimori's trials are
not part of any political revenge and that he will be treated more fairly
than he treated his enemies. But Peru's still precarious judiciary will
also need to show that it is ready to do its job impartially, no matter
how much political pressure Fujimori's supporters bring to bear.
Alvaro Vargas Llosa is Senior Fellow and Director
of the Center on Global Prosperity at the Independent Institute and
the author of Liberty for Latin America.
Petroleumworld does not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
note: This commentary was originally published by TCSDaily.com,
on 10/16/2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest of
our readers. Petroleumworld does not necessarily share these views.
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Petroleumworld
News 10/18/07
Copyright© 2007
Alvaro Vargas Llosa. All rights reserved.
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