Alberto Fujimori, a former president of Peru who has already been sentenced to 25 years in jail for human rights abuses, has received a six-year prison term for corruption after his final trial.
- Fujimori, who had admitted bribing opponents, wiretapping and the illegal purchase of a media outlet, said that he would appeal Wednesday's sentence.
- The court in Lima, the Peruvian capital, also ordered the 71-year-old former president to pay a $8m fine to the state and $1m to political leaders and journalists that he targeted.
- Multiple prison terms do not accumulate in Peru, so Fujimori's maximum prison term will stay at 25 years.
- But Fujimori could be released earlier if his daughter, Keiko Fujimori, is elected president in 2011.
- Keiko Fujimori, who is leading some opinion polls as the election approaches, has said that she will grant her father a pardon if she becomes leader.
- Prosecutors had accused Fujimori of ordering Vladimiro Montesinos, a former intelligence chief, to use state funds to secretly spy on 28 politicians, journalists and businessmen.
- Fujimori was also accused of authorising bribes to be paid to 13 congressmen so that they would join his party, and allegedly bought off a TV station and a newspaper editorial board to support his re-election campaign in 2000.
- Montesinos, who is serving a 20-year term for bribery and selling weapons to Colombian rebels, said during his own trials that he made the payments on Fujimori's behalf. Fujimori said that he knew nothing of the money.
- Fujimori, who was extradited to Peru from Chile in 2007, has also been convicted by a three-member panel of crimes against humanity for authorising military death squads, abuses of power, and of embezzlement.
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