Bolivia captures fugitive former adviser to Peru president

LA PAZ/LIMA, (Reuters) – Bolivia captured a fugitive former adviser to Peru’s president yesterday when he was spotted eating in a public market four days after escaping house arrest.

Police arrested Martin Belaunde, Humala’s campaign adviser in his failed 2006 presidential bid, in northern Bolivia near the border with Brazil, said Bolivian deputy justice minister Rene Martinez.

“He was walking…there was no resistance,” Martinez said on local Peruvian broadcaster RPP. Bolivia had been preparing to extradite Belaunde to Peru to face corruption charges when he vanished from a residence in La Paz where he was guarded by a team of police.

Belaunde fled to Bolivia late last year after Peruvian prosecutors charged him with graft and unlawful association. Belaunde has denied the accusations and says he is a victim of political persecution for being a socialist.

The scandal has eroded Humala’s popularity ahead of presidential elections next year and heightened perceptions of government corruption.

Peru said it was sending a delegation to La Paz to bring Belaunde to Lima on Friday. The government offered a $200,000 reward for information leading to his capture earlier Thursday.