Gulf Times

Argentina ex-minister jailed in graft case

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Amember of former president Cristina Fernandez’s cabinet was sentenced to nearly six years in prison, one of the highestpro­file conviction­s in a corruption crackdown that has also ensnared Fernandez.

Julio De Vido, who served for 12 years as planning minister under Fernandez and her late husband and predecesso­r Nestor Kirchner, was sentenced to five years and eight months on charges that he siphoned money from public works projects, indirectly causing a 2012 wreck of a passenger train that left 51 people dead and 700 injured.

“I am here because of perverse political, media and judicial persecutio­n that I have been subject to since December 2015,” De Vido said during his trial, referring to the date President Mauricio Macri took office.

De Vido is one of the highestran­king former officials from the Kirchner and Fernandez era to be stripped of immunity and prosecuted.

Fernandez has been indicted on graft charges, but she is immune from arrest as a sitting senator in the country’s national legislatur­e.

She has denied receiving bribes and challenged investigat­ors to scour her home region of Patagonia if they believed she had hidden cash.

Speculatio­n is rife that Fernandez could try to run against Macri in next year’s presidenti­al elections, although she has not said she has any plans to seek the presidency again.

“If she is the leading opposition presidenti­al candidate, it is much tougher to put her in jail,” said Mark P Jones, director of the Argentina Program for Rice University’s Baker Institute.

Despite the corruption scandal, Fernandez and her Peronist movement still enjoy popularity among about a third of Argentine voters, Jones said.

Fernandez won two presidenti­al elections through nationalis­t appeals and generous social welfare programmes.

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