World | Keiko Fujimori Lefty Leads Fujimori Scion in Peru Vote Ollanta Humala leads by roughly 5%; recount could loom By Polly Davis Doig Posted Jun 5, 2011 5:02 PM CDT Copied Presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori waves to supporters after casting her ballot in Lima, Peru, Sunday June 5, 2011. Peruvians voted Sunday between Keiko Fujimori and Ollanta Humala. (AP Photo/Karel Navarro) Peru went to the polls today in a heated presidential election that put a leftist former military officer in a slight lead over the daughter of jailed ex-president Alberto Fujimori, reports Reuters. Early returns gave Ollanta Humala roughly a 52% lead over Keiko Fujimori's 47%, but overseas votes could factor and a lengthy recount is possible. Humala led a 2000 revolt against the elder Fujimori, who was credited with Peru's economic growth but eventually convicted of corruption. Humala has tied Keiko Fujimori, just 36 years old, to her father's government, but has had to downplay his own radical past. Read These Next Kansas City Chiefs moving across state line. CBS News boss pulls 60 Minutes segment critical of Trump policy. Feds strike another blow in war on wind turbines. During group swim, witness spots a shark carrying a body. Report an error