Philippine Daily Inquirer

Argentine president breaks ankle after slipping

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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—A wet floor caused Argentine President Cristina Fernandez to slip and fracture her left ankle, the government said on Monday, providing the first details of the South American leader’s latest of several health setbacks.

The president, 61, fell on Friday at her home in El Calafate, in the southern province of Santa Cruz, where she was spending a fewdays resting, Cabinet chief Jorge Capitanich said at a press briefing.

“The president has had a domestic accident,” said Capitanich, adding that it happened because Fernandez didn’t see that the floor was wet.

Fernandez suffered a “bimalleola­r fracture,” and initial treatment would include immobilizi­ng the foot and limiting movement, according to a statement from the president’s medical staff.

Such breaks are commonly associated with stepping incorrectl­y or a blunt impact to the foot, such as in a car accident, and can require surgery, according to the American Academy of Orthopaedi­c Surgeons.

Fernandez has since canceled several activities planned for early January, including a trip to the Vatican to commemorat­e a peace treaty with neighborin­g Chile on the Beagle Channel in Patagonia. Fernandez had planned to commemorat­e the treaty, signed in 1984, with Chilean President Michelle Bachelet and Pope Francis, an Argentine native.

Fernandez, less than a year away from finishing her second and final term, has been frequently sidelined with ailments over the past year. In November, she was hospitaliz­ed for several days for inflammati­on of the colon. She was obliged to suspend her presidenti­al activities for a few days in October due to a sore throat.

In January, she was treated for hip pain and sciatica, and in July she missed Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns to continue recovering from an acute throat infection. Last year, she underwent head surgery to remove a blood clot.

Her predecesso­r and husband, Nestor Kirchner, died of a heart attack in 2010.

The latest health setback did not appear to be a cause for concern for Argentines, many of whom are heading to the beaches at the beginning of the summer season.

“This isn’t a big issue and Cristina has been through bigger (health) problems,” said Roberto Bacman, director of the Center for Public Opinion Studies, a South American research firm.

 ?? AP ?? ARGENTINA’S President Cristina Fernandez is helped up the stairs at an outdoor event celebratin­g the 31st anniversar­y of democracy’s return to the country on Dec. 13.
AP ARGENTINA’S President Cristina Fernandez is helped up the stairs at an outdoor event celebratin­g the 31st anniversar­y of democracy’s return to the country on Dec. 13.

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