Perfil (Sabado)

ARA San Juan espionage probe: Macri ordered to attend hearing next week

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Dolores Judge Martín Bava on Wednesday ordered former president Mauricio Macri to appear before him on October 28 to answer questions in the probe into alleged illegal espionage against the relatives of 44 crew-members who died in the ARA San Juan Navy submarine tragedy.

Macri had been ordered to appear before Bava on Wednesday but refused, posting on Twitter that he would “not appear until the issues that my lawyer will raise are resolved to guarantee me due process and a defence in court.”

He went on to accuse the magistrate of being prejudiced and demanded Bava recuse himself from the case.

On Wednesday, Bava rejected Macri’s challenge, calling the former president’s defence team’s arguments “manifestly inadmissib­le.” The former president’s summons was prompted by “an evaluative and well-founded process of the evidence,” he added.

In a letter to Macri, the judge said he met none of the criteria for recusal, adding that he had “no friendship, enmity, or prejudice of any kind, objective or subjective, with the accused or with the plaintiffs.”

After receiving the letter, Macri’s lawyer Pablo Lanusse said his client will finally submit to meeting the judge. “We are going to be there, of course. Mauricio Macri’s investigat­ive hearing will be held on October 28,” the lawyer told the LN + news channel.

The opposition leader stands accused of ordering the country’s federal intelligen­ce services to spy on relatives of crew-members who died when the ARA San Juan sank on the high seas in November 2017. The vessel was discovered at a depth of 900 metres (3,000 feet) after a year of searching.

Family members of the crew members have told investigat­ors they were followed and wiretapped, filmed and intimidate­d into abandoning any claims related to the sinking.

Macri is accused of ordering the espionage. He risks between three and 10 years in jail for allegedly violating Argentina’s intelligen­ce laws.

“I have nothing to do with this case. I never spied on or asked to spy on the families,” said Macri, 62, who returned to the country this week from travelling in the United States and Qatar.

The former president had also questioned having been summoned “in the electoral campaign” for the November 14 legislativ­e elections, and other measures such as a ban on him leaving the country.

Bava had said that “the thenpresid­ent was fully aware of the follow-up carried out by the Federal Intelligen­ce Agency regarding the relatives of the crew members” of the submarine.

The then-heads of the intelligen­ce services Gustavo Arribas and Silvia Majdalani are also accused of gathering “illegal intelligen­ce” on the relatives, who were trying to find out the fate of the submarine when it was missing.

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