LIMA, Peru (AP)
American Lori Berenson was convicted and
sentenced to 20 years in prison Wednesday for collaborating with
leftist guerrillas in a thwarted plot to seize Peru's Congress.
A civilian terrorism court found the 31-year-old New York native
guilty of ''terrorist collaboration'' with the Tupac Amaru
Revolutionary Movement, or MRTA, but acquitted her of charges that
she was an active rebel militant.
''Everything leads to the conclusion that the accused Lori
Berenson Mejia was not a mere spectator,'' the judges said in a
verdict, read for nearly four hours by a court clerk.
''Nor was she distant from what was occurring around her in
relation to the activities of the MRTA,'' the verdict said, adding
the case showed ''an express and voluntary collaboration.''
The proceedings were carried live on Peru's cable news station
Canal N, reflecting widespread local interest in the case.
In accepting the prosecution's recommended 20-year-sentence, the
court ruled that Berenson aided the group by renting a house that
served as their hideout and posing as a journalist to enter
Congress to gather intelligence with a top rebel commander's wife.
Presiding Magistrate Marcos Ibazeta told Berenson if she had any
questions or comments.
''I consider this an unjust sentence and I am innocent of the
charges against me,'' she said, requesting that the sentence be
nullified.
The verdict came five hours after Berenson, a former
Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, said in her closing
statement: ''I am not a terrorist.''
''I am innocent of the prosecutor's charges of being a member of
and a collaborator with the MRTA,'' she said. ''I am not a
terrorist. I condemn terrorism, and I say that in every case.''
There is little sympathy for Berenson in Peru, which still
remembers the bloody war against leftist rebels that wound down in
the early 1990s.
Justice Minister Diego Garcia Sayan said earlier that the
government would respect the verdict and that Berenson would serve
out any sentence in Peru -- dimming hopes that she could receive a
presidential pardon even if she is convicted.
A spokesman for President-elect Alejandro Toledo, who takes
office July 28, said he had no immediate comment on whether he
might consider a pardon. But the spokesman said Toledo might
discuss the matter on a trip to the United States next week to seek
economic aid.
Berenson has served more than five years in Andean jails after
the military convicted her for allegedly plotting a thwarted raid
on Congress by the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, or MRTA.
That conviction was annulled in August and a new trial ordered.
Wednesday's proceeding capped a high-profile trial in which
Berenson adamantly proclaimed her innocence and criticized Peru's
judicial system.
Earlier Wednesday, Berenson was led into the courtroom in San
Juan de Lurigancho prison, flanked by two female guards in
bulletproof vests. She wore a beige jacket and a gray turtleneck,
with wire-rimmed glasses perched on her nose. Journalists and her
supporters filled the room.
After Berenson's 45-minute closing statement, Mark Berenson
flashed a peace sign with his fingers and said he believed in his
daughter's innocence.
''She loves Peru, she loves justice. If there is justice in this
country, this court will acquit her,'' he said.
Mark Berenson and wife Rhoda, who both attended the hearing,
have fought a long battle to free their daughter. They have made
powerful allies in the U.S. Congress.
Peru had hoped Berenson's retrial would showcase how much its
justice system has improved since the end of President Alberto
Fujimori's 10-year autocratic rule in November.
Fujimori declared emergency rule in the early 1990s to fight
powerful leftist guerrillas. He set up a system of hooded military
judges who dished out tough sentences to suspected guerrillas in
trials widely criticized as lacking due process. The government
claimed the anonymity of judges was necessary to protect them
against reprisals from rebel groups.
Berenson said she was used by Fujimori as a ''smoke screen'' to
make himself appear tough on terrorism.
''They used me as a symbol of political violence and of
terrorism for more than five years,'' she said Wednesday. ''I did
not deserve this type of label.''
Berenson arrived in Peru after working as a personal secretary
to a Salvadoran rebel leader during peace negotiations that ended
El Salvador's civil war in 1992. She has described herself as a
social activist caught up in circumstances beyond her control.
Much of the prosecution's case rested on testimony from Pacifico
Castrellon, a Panamanian who came to Peru with Berenson in late
1994.
Castrellon testified that he and Berenson met with, and took
cash from, MRTA leaders in Ecuador before settling in Lima several
weeks later. He said one of the contacts was Nestor Cerpa, the top
MRTA commander.
Berenson, who denied the meeting ever took place, has
acknowledged that she and Castrellon rented the house used by MRTA
guerrillas as a hide-out. But she said she did not know her
housemates were rebels.
Prosecutors say Berenson posed as a journalist to enter Peru's
legislature several times in 1995 to gather information. She was
accompanied by Cerpa's wife, who acted as her photographer.
Berenson, who was accredited by two left-leaning U.S. magazines but
never published, insists she was researching articles about women
and poverty.
Berenson and Cerpa's wife were arrested hours before a military
assault on a rebel safehouse that left three rebels and one police
officer dead.
Police say rebels had moved into the top floor of the house,
where they were creating a plan to seize Congress and hold the
members hostage in exchange for imprisoned comrades.
Berenson moved out of the house three months before her arrest
and said she knew nothing about activities on the top floor of the
house, where police discovered 8,000 rounds of ammunition and
dynamite.
Other evidence allegedly seized from the house included a coded
floor plan of Congress allegedly scrawled by Berenson. There was
also a forged Peruvian election ID card bearing her photo. She
suggested they were planted by police.
The MRTA is named for an Inca ruler who led an Indian revolt
against the Spanish colonists in the 1730s. The group is blamed for
the deaths of some 200 people since it took up arms in 1984.
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