Global NewsArgentina’s Vice-President Cristina Escapes Assassination Attempt

Argentina’s Vice-President Cristina Escapes Assassination Attempt

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Argentina’s vice-president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, survived an assassination attempt late Thursday, after a gunman’s weapon failed to fire as he tried to shoot her at close range outside her home, the country’s leader said.

Vice President Cristina was unharmed in the incident, which has rocked the South American nation already racked by turmoil, due to spiraling inflation and Fernández’s trial on corruption charges, which she denies.

In an emergency television broadcast on Thursday night, Argentina’s President, Alberto Fernández, said the man attempted to kill the vice president as she was surrounded by large crowds of supporters outside her Buenos Aires residence at around 9 p.m. local time (8 p.m. ET) on Thursday,

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“Our vice president has been attacked and social peace has been disturbed.

“Cristina is still alive because, for some reason, the gun, which was loaded with five bullets did not fire, despite the trigger being pulled. This is something enormously serious. It is the most serious thing which has happened since we recovered our democracy”, said President Fernández.

Video footage showed a pistol being pointed from a crowd at the vice-president’s face at close range as she emerged from a car outside her residence in the Buenos Aires suburb of Recoleta.

“A Video footage of the incident shows the vice president greeting boisterous supporters, as she emerged from a car outside her residence in the Buenos Aires suburb of Recoleta when a hand appears from the crowd holding a black pistol. The hand appears to pull the trigger inches from her face and a click is heard, but no shot rings out. Members of the crowd then appear to turn and overpower the gunman”, an NBC report said.

VP Cristina, who was not hurt, attempted to duck as bystanders pushed the would-be assassin away.

Meanwhile, Police have arrested a 35-year-old Brazilian man in connection with the crime.

Reports said the suspect’s social media accounts showed that he had followed extremist groups associated with hate speech, including one denouncing “satanic communism.”

Economy minister, Sergio Massa, said after the incident: “When hatred and violence prevail over debate, they destroy societies and create situations like today’s attempted assassination.”

Mariano Machado, principal Latin America analyst at risk intelligence company, Verisk Maplecroft, said the attempted assassination would further polarise an already deeply divided country and could trigger more protests and violence.

The attack reduced the “chances of constructive dialogue within the political class”, he said, pointing out that President Fernández had blamed “the opposition, the judiciary and the media for driving the polarisation that culminated in last night’s events.”

Cristina, as she is universally known in Argentina, is the country’s most recognisable political figure and one of its most divisive. A radical left-winger in the ruling Peronist movement who also heads the Senate, she faces multiple prosecutions for corruption over alleged events during her 2007-15 presidency.

A federal prosecutor in one case demanded a 12-year jail sentence for VP Cristina and a lifetime ban on her holding public office last week, alleging fraud and an “illicit association” with corrupt officials and business people who received government contracts.

She has described the allegations against her as a politically motivated witch-hunt and called out her supporters on to the streets to defend her. Her dual roles as vice-president and head of the Senate give her strong legal protection and she is unlikely to face imprisonment.

The vice-president has clashed numerous times with Fernández, to whom she is not related, over policy. She opposes his $44bn debt deal agreed this year with the IMF, saying its requirements to cut energy subsidies and reduce the government deficit are unacceptable.

Her charisma and long political record have made her an iconic figure for Latin America’s left, and she is widely expected to run again for national office in elections next year.

After the attempted attack, messages of support poured in from political allies, such as Brazil’s presidential candidate and former leader, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, as well as Chile’s president, Gabriel Boric.

President Fernández declared a national holiday on Friday, so that Argentines of all political persuasions could unite in expressing their support for “life, democracy and solidarity with our vice-president”. He called for violence and hatred to be banished from the country’s political and media discourse.

Although economic crisis and political turbulence have buffeted Argentina repeatedly since the end of military rule in 1983, political violence is rare. Political tension has been rising this year as inflation spirals towards 90 percent a year and the peso plunges in value on the black market.

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