Perfil (Sabado)

Macri: Kirchneris­m is using attack on VP to persecute its ‘symbolic enemies’

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Former president Mauricio Macri has accused members of Argentina’s government of “using” the failed attack on Vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner outside her Recoleta apartment as a pretext to “persecute” its “symbolic enemies.”

The opposition leader initially condemned the attempted assassinat­ion of the vice-president on Thursday in its immediate aftermath and this week he again described it as a “violent and reprehensi­ble act.”

However, he accused Fernández de Kirchner’s allies of using the attack for political gain and launching “a hunt for symbolic enemies to whom they attribute, without any rationalit­y, the instigatio­n of that attack.”

The failed shooting attack stunned Argentina, which has seen low levels of political violence since a return to democracy in 1983. Yet the country is bitterly polarised after years of economic crisis and political infighting. Initial calls for unity and a lowering of tensions seem almost immediatel­y collapsed.

Comparing the reaction to last Thursday’s failed attack to the 1991 assassinat­ion attempt on former president Raúl Alfonsín, Macri said that the government and the ruling Frente de Todos coalition is seeking to “weaken two essential pillars of democracy.”

The Juntos por el Cambio leader, who led Argentina from 2015 to 2019, recalled that Alfonsín had “immediatel­y refused to position himself as a victim or to use the attack as a political battering-ram.”

“But the violent act that put the vicepresid­ent’s life at risk and that deserved the repudiatio­n of all organisati­ons and leaders, is now being used by Kirchneris­m in a partisan way to start a hunt for symbolic enemies to whom they attribute, without any rationalit­y, the instigatio­n of that attack,” Macri continued in a letter shared on his social network accounts.

Targeting Interior Minister Eduardo ‘Wado’ de Pedro specifical­ly, Macri alleged that the official had sought to establish “a direct link between newspaper, radio and television editorials and the attack on Cristina Kirchner.”

“This attributio­n is as irrational as the attack itself and could endanger the lives of journalist­s, the integrity of the independen­t media and, subsequent­ly, democracy itself,” warned the opposition leader.

“That is why I come here to warn public opinion about this manoeuvre that is taking advantage of the attack on Cristina Kirchner to establish the persecutio­n of the press and the judiciary”, added the former president, which said Kirchneris­m “is using the opportunit­y to weaken two essential pillars of democracy and in the process, change the course of the judicial events that we all know about” – a reference to the ongoing graft trial against the vice-president.

“I emphasise that there is no possibilit­y of democracy without freedom of the press and that freedom of expression is not only the result of the lack of prohibitio­ns, but also of the absence of threats and intimidati­on; a right of all Argentines as expressed in the National Constituti­on,” continued Macri.

The opposition, he pointed out, “are vigilant, we are together, we believe in freedom of the press and in the independen­ce of the judiciary, we believe in democracy.”

He concluded: “We will not allow ourselves to be confused.”

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