The court ruled to annul the pardon on October 4, after which Fujimori had been hospitalized. Peruvian lawmakers have endorsed a bill allowing former President Alberto Fujimori, accused of corruption and human rights abuse, to avoid being jailed after his pardon on humanitarian grounds had been overturned, local media reported.
The draft law concerns people sentenced to jail and aged over 65 years who suffer from a grave illness confirmed by medics. Under the law, a person is put an electronic bracelet on and is allowed to only move within its outreach instead of going to prison.
Fujimori, 80, who suffers from cancer, served as the president of Peru from July 1990 to November 2000. Defeating the militant Shining Path group has been one of the achievements of his presidency.
READ MORE: ‘Very Dangerous’: Peru’s President Pardons Former Dictator Fujimori
Fujumori’s administration was, however, marred by embezzlement of public funds, bribing businessmen and journalists, and such human rights violations as extrajudicial killings of the insurgents and forced sterilization of indigenous peoples. Fujimori was sentenced to jail in 2009.