Peru's Ex-President Surrendered To U.S. Officials For Extradition In Mega Corruption Scandal
Toledo was first arrested for alleged connection to the Odebrecht scandal in 2019 while he was living near Stanford University, his alma mater, as a visiting scholar.
04/21/23
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/peru-s-ex-president-surrendered-to-u-s-officials-for-extradition-in-mega-corruption-scandal-here-s-what-to-know/ar-AA1aavvs
Dr. Alejandro Toledo was democratically elected President of Peru in 2001.
There was an eight-month gap between the time when President Alberto Fujimori left Peru, under a cloud of corruption charges, and the start of the Toledo Administration.
With the exception of the one million dollars George Soros' Open Society provided for the july 2000 anti-Fujimori protests (Cuatro Suyos), only media businessman Baruch Ivcher had been identified as a contributor. There are rumors that another, somewhat unsavory businessman, Leon Rupp, had been a major backer. Raul Diez Canseco, the first VP from an old, wealthy Lima family, also helped to bankroll Toledo's campaign.
https://premium.globalsecurity.org/military/world//peru/president-toledo.htm
Since leading anti-drug President Alberto Fujimori was driven from office in November 2000, coca cultivation has grown there as well—by about 25% over the past two years. Who toppled Fujimori? Wall Street, the U.S. State Department, and a cool $1 million that George Soros admits he gave in mid-2000 to opposition leader Alejandro Toledo, now Peru's President.
Judging by the coca-cultivation trend shown, Toledo is now returning the favor to Soros and his dope pals. And if these policies continue in Peru—and all opposition to them is now being smashed by the Soros-funded Truth and Reconciliation Commission—coca cultivation will continue to rise there as well.
While Colombia's coca cultivation rose almost four-fold from 1992-2000, under one pro-drug President after another, Peru under Fujimori cut cultivation by 75% in that same period; and Bolivia's dropped almost as dramatically, especially under Bánzer. It was only when Soros and the IMF managed to get rid of these leaders and their policies, that cultivation began to rise again in the two countries.
November 7, 2003
https://larouchepub.com/other/2003/3043soros_bolivia.html
Cocaine is winning the drug war in Peru
https://nypost.com/2015/10/14/cocaine-is-winning-the-drug-war-in-peru/
Peru's Presidential elections were thrown into a tizzy on Saturday night, when an insider in Alejandro Toledo's campaign leadership, [Alvaro Vargas Llosa], gave an explosive hour-and-a-half interview on the Peruvian talk show, "The Sniper," in which he revealed (among other things) that he had arranged a meeting between Toledo, George Soros, and others, in Warsaw, Poland, at which Soros had agreed to give a million dollars to Toledo, to finance Toledo's July 2000 "March of the Four Corners."
Toledo's campaign to bring down Fujimori was an operation run through Soros, Project Democracy, and the State Department, to re-install the drug mob in power in Peru
Vargas Llosa said he knew the money was, indeed, received, but said Soros was not happy with the results of his "investment," and so when Toledo asked Soros for more money at their meeting in Davos, Switzerland in early 2001, Soros turned him down.
April 23, 2001
https://larouchepub.com/pr/2001/042401perusorosshock.html