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Peru’s ex-President Alberto Fujimori has been cleared of corruption in a case relating to a 1994 arms purchase.
Mr Fujimori – who is in self-imposed exile in Japan – has said he intends to run for the presidency in 2006.
Mr Fujimori faces more than 20 other criminal charges. His lawyers are trying to get all the outstanding court proceedings against him dismissed.
On return he faces arrest on charges of human rights abuses and corruption. Mr Fujimori denies any wrongdoing.
He has been accused of involvement in the killing of 25 suspected members of the Shining Path guerrilla group by death squads, and also of misusing public funds.

Peru’s ex-President, Alberto Fujimori, cannot hold any public sector job or head a party list until 2011, the electoral tribunal has confirmed.
An official from the alliance led by Mr Fujimori said the move was political.
The group would have to decide whether to appeal against the decision or replace Mr Fujimori as leader before the 2006 election, Martha Chavez said.
Mr Fujimori has been in custody in Chile since arriving there from self-imposed exile in Japan last month.
Peru is seeking Mr Fujimori’s extradition to face a number of charges, including corruption and organising death squads.
He has denied any wrongdoing, and says the charges are aimed at preventing him from standing for president in April’s poll.

Peru’s former President Alberto Fujimori is not eligible to stand in the 9 April presidential poll, the national electoral agency has ruled.
Officials reiterated a ruling by Congress that he was ineligible for public office until 2011.
He is under arrest in Chile awaiting an extradition hearing after he tried to return to Peru to run for election. His daughter entered his application.
Mr Fujimori’s supporters say he intends to appeal against the ruling.
They say the ban on his candidacy is unconstitutional, and 20 of them are protesting by holding a hunger strike outside the national electoral agency’s office in the capital Lima.
Earlier, the electoral agency confirmed that 24 other candidates had entered successful applications for April’s election – the highest number of candidates in a Peruvian presidential race in more than two decades.

O novo secretário-geral da Otan, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, afirmou que a prioridade da organização deve ser a guerra no Afeganistão, incluindo negociações com integrantes moderados do Talebã.
Rasmussen, que já foi primeiro-ministro da Dinamarca, disse que existem “grupos com os quais se pode conversar”.
“A Otan é uma aliança militar forte e nós precisamos de um esforço militar forte no Afeganistão”, afirmou ele, em entrevista coletiva.
O novo secretário-geral da organização afirmou que “muito está em jogo”, internacionalmente e para a Otan, no Afeganistão. Ele acrescentou que aprova o aumento do número de soldados no país, prometido pelos aliados da Otan, mas deixou claro que “esta não é apenas uma solução militar. Temos que aumentar nossos esforços civis também”.

A campanha para as eleições presidenciais desta semana no Afeganistão chega ao fim nesta segunda-feira à sombra das ameaças à votação feitas pelo Talebã.
O grupo radical islâmico, que governou o país de 1996 até 2001, quando foi derrubado pela invasão militar liderada pelos Estados Unidos, anunciou um boicote à eleição e prometeu atrapalhar a votação.
No domingo, folhetos atribuídos ao Talebã foram distribuídos pelo sul do país ameaçando atacar locais de votação durante o pleito da quinta-feira.
Nas últimas semanas, o Talebã vem intensificando suas ações. No sábado, um atentado com um carro-bomba atribuído ao grupo matou sete pessoas em frente à sede da Otan em Cabul, numa das áreas consideradas mais seguras e protegidas da capital.