The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Former president faces fresh probe

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BUENOS AIRES. - An Argentine appeals court ordered a new investigat­ion on Thursday into charges that ex-president Cristina Kirchner obstructed a probe into a 1994 bombing that killed 85 people at a Jewish community centre.

She is accused of conspiring to protect high-ranking Iranian officials suspected of ordering the Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah to carry out the attack.

Kirchner, Argentina’s president from 2007 to 2015, allegedly received oil and trade benefits from Iran in exchange for signing off on a deal that enabled the suspects to avoid prosecutio­n.

The accusation­s were first leveled by the late prosecutor Alberto Nisman, who was found dead in mysterious circumstan­ces the day before he was due to present his 289-page report against the president and her foreign minister, Hector Timerman to Congress.

Iran has denied involvemen­t in the attack.

Kirchner likewise denies the allegation­s against her.

Kirchner branded Nisman accusation­s “absurd” and stated that he was murdered by rogue intelligen­ce agents who used the prosecutor to accuse her and then killed him when he was no longer needed.

Four lower courts had thrown the case out on grounds there was no evidence a crime had been committed.

But the new decision reopens a murky case that has dogged Kirchner since her presidency, a day after she was charged in a separate corruption case.

The three judges also ordered the case be removed from the court of their colleague Daniel Rafecas and transferre­d to a randomly selected judge.

Rafecas threw out the original request to reopen Nisman’s case, brought by the Delegation of Argentine Jewish Associatio­ns (DAIA).

The unsolved bombing at the Argentine Jewish Mutual Associatio­n (AMIA) in Buenos Aires was the deadliest terror attack in Argentine history.

It still haunts the country two decades later.

No one has been convicted for the bombing, which wounded 300 people. - France24/AFP.

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