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What we learned this week

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THE WEEK IN CORONAVIRU­S

Argentina reached 115,444 deaths and 5,265,058 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s contagion by press time yesterday as against 115,225 deaths and 5,25,466 cases the previous Friday. Health authoritie­s announced that half the population had been completely vaccinated on Tuesday, thus immediatel­y triggering the announceme­nt that all airport entry caps would be lifted on October 19, always provided that the incoming passengers above the age of six are also completely vaccinated. It was further announced that the daily entry cap would be raised from 3,000 to 4,000 next week. On Thursday the British Government announced that 47 countries and territorie­s including Argentina would be lifted as from next Monday from the “red list” restrictin­g entry into the United Kingdom.

CFK ACQUITTED

Vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and nine other defendants, including Treasury Prosecutor Carlos Zannini and the late Héctor Timerman posthumous­ly, were acquitted on Thursday in the case of the 2013 memorandum of understand­ing with Iran denounced by the late prosecutor Alberto Nisman for seeking the impunity of Iranian officials mastermind­ing the 85-death terrorist bomb destructio­n of the AMIA Jewish community centre in 1994. The three judges of the TOF8 court considered that no crime was involved. Their sentence was appealed to the Criminal Cassation Court.

SUPREME COUR VACANCY

Supreme Court justice Elena Highton de Nolasco, 78, will resign as from November 1, it became known last Tuesday when a letter dated September 30 went public. The letter was written a week after Horacio Rosatti emerged as the new Chief Justice in an election boycotted by both Highton de Nolasco and former chief justice Ricardo Lorenzetti. Argentina’s first female justice but generally observing a low profile, she entered the Supreme Court in 2004 and had resisted retirement since reaching the statutory age of 75 in late 2017. Replacing her, which will require a two-thirds Senate majority, is expected to take time.

TRAPEROS GO MAINSTREAM

Chasing the youth vote, President Alberto Fernández last weekend received Elián Ángel Valenzuela (better known as trapero L-gante) at the Olivos presidenti­al residence, together with his partner and newborn daughter Jamaica. Also accompanie­d by first lady Fabiola Yañez, the popular singer and the presidenti­al father-to-be exchanged paternity notes with L-gante praising Fernández for seeking to exchange social plans for jobs and announced his own plans for completing his secondary education (currently in third grade) as an example to youth. The next celebrity on the presidenti­al list for an Olivos visit is Javier Calamaro.

LITHIUM TRIANGLE

The provincial government­s of Catamarca, Salta and Jujuy on Wednesday signed an agreement forming a Lithium Mining Region with the aim of reaffirmin­g provincial rights, also creating a regional committee bringing together two officials from the mining ministry of each province together with representa­tives of the Interior, Productive Developmen­t and Science and Technology Ministries at national level. According to various studies, Argentina has lithium reserves for more than four centuries. The agreement was signed by Governors Raúl Jalil (Catamarca), Gustavo Sáenz (Salta) and Gerardo Morales (Jujuy), joined by the new Science and Technology Minister Daniel Filmus among other national officials.

MARKET WATCH

Closing the week early on Thursday due to the long weekend, the “blue” parallel dollar fell to 184.50 pesos from the previous Friday’s level of 186 pesos in reaction to new restrictio­ns on financial transactio­ns while the official exchange rate dipped in parallel from 104.30 to 104.25 pesos, as quoted by Banco Nación, or just over 172 pesos with the 65 percent surcharges for authorised purchases. The CCL and MEP parallel but legal exchange rates both hovered just over 176 pesos at similar levels to last week. Country risk was also down last week, closing yesterday at 1,582 points as against 1,612 points the previous Friday.

MACRI SKIPS COURT

His absence in the United States prevented ex-president Mauricio Macri from heeding a Thursday summons by Dolores federal judge Martín Bava in the case probing the illegal espionage of the families of the lost ARA San Juan submarine. Stateside Macri announced on Wednesday that he would be giving classes as “a mentor for future leaders” at the Adam Smith Center for the Study of Economic Freedom, a Florida Internatio­nal University think tank directed by Cuban-american Carlos Díaz-rosillo, a former White House advisor during the Donald Trump presidency.

POLICE OFFICERS GET LIFE

ATucumán court sentenced the policemen Mauro Gabriel Díaz Cáceres and Nicolás Javier González Montes de Oca to life imprisonme­nt for killing Facundo Ferreira,12, with a shot to the head in the small hours of March 8, 2018, following a police chase. Their lawyers pleaded self-defence but the judges read out the sentence requested by the prosecutio­n.

RESCUED WHALES

Rescue teams saved two stranded whales along the Atlantic coast on Tuesday, the Fundación Mundo Marino said. The mammals had been stranded between Sunday and Monday on the beach of the seaside resort of La Lucila del Mar. Some 30 people participat­ed in the rescue operation, including local residents, marine conservati­onists, Civil Defence members, Coast Guard officers, firefighte­rs, volunteers and beach lifeguards.

SUPPORTERS STORM SUPERCLÁSI­CO

The day after River Plate defeated Boca Juniors 2-1 last Sunday at an overcrowde­d Superclási­co at the Monumental, Ministers Matías Lammens (Sports and Tourism), Aníbal Fernández (Security) and Carla Vizzotti (Health) huddled with AFA. Argentine Football Associatio­n officials to present the possibilit­y of denying public attendance to clubs not respecting controls. Decree 678/21 only permits half-capacity for mass events exceeding 1,000 people but there were 36,787 fans in the River Plate stadium last Sunday or 60 percent of total capacity, according to City Hall.

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