Argentina: Six years in prison for Vice President Kirchner

However, the ex-president (2007-2015) can still appeal once morest the first-instance verdict. It might therefore be years before a final judgment is reached. That is why Kirchner remains at large for the time being and might also run once more in the presidential election next year.

Kirchner and her late husband, ex-President Nestor Kirchner (2003-2007), are said to have procured public contracts for a friendly contractor without a tender. According to the public prosecutor’s office, his company received 80 percent of all public road construction contracts in Kirchner’s home region of Santa Cruz.

Argentina: Six years in prison for Kirchner

Argentine Vice President Cristina Kirchner has been sentenced to six years in prison in a corruption trial. The court found the 69-year-old guilty of misappropriation of public funds. The judges also banned her from holding public office for life.

Part of the excessive construction costs later flowed back to the couple. As the leader of a criminal organization, the current vice president stole around a billion US dollars from the state. The allegations relate to the Kirchners’ tenure at the head of state.

“A Real Firing Squad”

Kirchner rejected the allegations and accused the judiciary of investigating them for political reasons. “When I first spoke here, I said that the court bends the law for political reasons. I think I was being generous back then. In reality, it’s a real firing squad,” she said in her closing remarks at the trial.

Archyde.com/Juan Mabromata

Argentina’s Vice President Kirchner can appeal once morest the first instance verdict

The left-wing Argentine government described the investigations once morest Kirchner as “lawfare” – a war with legal means. President Alberto Fernandez stood behind his vice several times. “When politics takes hold in the courts, justice flees through the windows,” he recently wrote on Twitter. On Monday, however, he himself called for investigations once morest several judges and prosecutors involved in the Kirchner case because of a joint trip to Patagonia with entrepreneurs.

Kirchner stands for polarization

Kirchner represents the left wing of the current governing coalition and is seen as the real power puller in Buenos Aires. Again and once more she imposes her will on the government. Her followers, who often come from humble backgrounds, see Kirchner as the guarantor of the lavish social programs. The charismatic politician dominates the streets through social movements, trade unions and party groups such as the youth organization La Campora, which is loyal to her.

Hardly any other female politician in Argentina is as polarizing as Kirchner: as passionately as she is loved by her supporters, her opponents hate her just as passionately. Argentina’s political landscape is highly polarized, and the “grieta” (Eng.: rift) between right and left runs through society as a whole.

Police officers are standing in front of Kirchner's house

Archyde.com/Agustin Marcarian

Units took up positions in front of Kirchner’s house as the site was besieged by supporters

Trailer camped in front of apartment

After the public prosecutor’s office had called for Kirchner to be jailed for twelve years, hundreds of her supporters camped for days in front of her apartment in the elegant Recoleta district at the end of August. On September 1, she escaped an attempted attack when a man pointed a gun at her from close range, but it jammed.

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