The Borneo Post

Former Kirchner minister arrested for corruption in Argentina

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BUENOS AIRES: A former key minister in Argentina’s husbandand-wife Kirchner government­s was arrested for corruption involving hundreds of millions of dollars Wednesday after a Congress vote stripped him of his parliament­ary immunity.

Former planning minister Julio de Vido was a key figure in the 12year period between 2003-2015, handling billions of dollars while in charge of Argentina’s public works contracts and also acting as a gatekeeper to the Kirchners.

Acting on orders from judges investigat­ing two separate cases, police went to De Vido’s house to arrest him after the vote, but returned empty handed.

De Vido had meanwhile driven himself to a Buenos Aires court to turn himself in.

Around sundown, he arrived at the top-security prison in Ezeiza, south of the capital, in a heavily guarded police convoy.

The arrest of De Vido, 67, is the latest blow to the Kirchner legacy after Cristina Kirchner’s setback in Sunday’s legislativ­e polls, which saw her support fall and appeared to dash her hopes of crowning a political comeback with a push for a third presidenti­al term in 2019.

Currently a deputy in the Congress, De Vido was a fixture in the Kirchner government­s while other ministers saw their political fortunes ebb and flow in various reshuffles.

“He was not just a simple minister,” said analyst Carlos Fara.

“He was the one who handled the most money in the government. He was the key to everything.”

President Mauricio Macri won strong support for the move in Congress, which voted by 176- 0 in favor of removing De Vido’s immunity, with one abstention.

The leftist Peronist bloc, from which the Kirchners drew their support, decided not to participat­e in the vote.

Hector Recalde of the Peronist Victory Front party denounced what he called a government ‘plan to persecute opponents.’

Judges investigat­ing two corruption cases — the administra­tion of the coal-fired Rio Turbio power plant and the alleged overpricin­g of imported liquefied gas — had ordered De Vido’s arrest as soon as his immunity was lifted.

Kirchner is facing several corruption charges of her own, but won a senate seat in Sunday’s midterm elections which guarantees her immunity from jail if convicted.

She was quoted in a recent interview as saying she was not going to ‘put her hands in the fire’ for De Vido.

The case marks another loose thread in the grand unravellin­g of the Kirchner legacy.

Three other key figures from the free- spending era have been jailed, including former transport minister Ricardo Jaime, who was convicted of embezzleme­nt in deals to purchase trains. — AFP

 ??  ?? Vehicle of the Penitentia­ry Service carrying De Vido leave the federal court in Buenos Aires. (Inset) De Vido. — Reuters photo
Vehicle of the Penitentia­ry Service carrying De Vido leave the federal court in Buenos Aires. (Inset) De Vido. — Reuters photo

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