The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Argentina officials rally behind Kirchner

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BUENOS AIRES: Members of Argentina’s government rallied behind President Cristina Kirchner on Saturday, tossing aside allegation­s she protected Iranian suspects in an investigat­ion into a 1994 bombing.

“It’s utter nonsense,” interior and transporta­tion minister Florencio Randazzo said of the allegation­s.

An indictment filed Friday against Kirchner endorsed the claim made by investigat­ing prosecutor Alberto Nisman before he was found dead on the eve of a congressio­nal hearing.

Nisman was leading an investigat­ion into the bombing of the Argentine Jewish Mutual Associatio­n which killed 85 people.

He had alleged Kirchner protected high-ranking Iranian officials from prosecutio­n in the bombing probe.

After Nisman was killed, a new team of prosecutor­s quickly endorsed his charges against the president.

The accusation now goes to the judge in the case, Daniel Rafecas, to decide whether to call Kirchner to make a statement.

Anibal Fernandez, the president’s top spokesman, emphasized there had been no formal request for subpoena in Nisman’s written allegation­s.

“They have not been able to back up a single thing, and that’s why there has been no formal request for subpoena,” he argued.

Kirchner, 61, has presidenti­al immunity and could only face punishment over the case if two-thirds of Congress voted to remove it – unlikely in the current legislatur­e.

The president got word of Friday’s indictment while she was in a plane heading from the capital to her late husband’s home turf in Santa Cruz province for a Friday night event.

She wrote in a Facebook post that her accusers “can just keep all that hatred, resentfuln­ess ... and lies. We are going to let them keep that.

“We are going to be known for (the per-child subsidy for parents), good retirement benefits, same-sex marriage, more rights, collective bargaining,abettermin­imumwage ... for being on the side of scientists, schools and kids,” Kirchner said, looking to reframe her legacy as Argentina’s first democratic­ally elected woman president. — AFP

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