Iran has repeatedly denied any link to the bombing, and an Argentine judge in February 2015 dismissed the accusations as baseless.">
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News > Latin America

Argentina to Reopen Jewish Center Bombing Case Against Cristina

  • Former Argentina president Cristina Fernandez will be tried in a case that was reopened on Thursday.

    Former Argentina president Cristina Fernandez will be tried in a case that was reopened on Thursday. | Photo: Reuters

Published 29 December 2016
Opinion

Iran has repeatedly denied any link to the bombing, and an Argentine judge in February 2015 dismissed the accusations as baseless.

An Argentine federal appeals court will order the reopening of a probe that accuses former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner of covering up Iran's alleged role in the bombing of a Jewish center in 1994, state news agency Telam said on Thursday.

IN DEPTH:
The Death of Argentine Attorney Alberto Nisman

Two years earlier the prosecutor who initially made the accusation, Alberto Nisman, was found shot dead in the bathroom of his Buenos Aires apartment. Nisman had said Fernandez worked behind the scenes to clear Iran and normalize relations to clinch a grains-for-oil deal with Tehran.

Nisman's death rocked Argentina, with some trying to pin the blame on the government of Fernandez, whose late husband President Nestor Kirchner ordered the investigation into the AMIA bombing. However, courts have repeatedly dismissed the allegations of an official conspiracy.

Fernandez's government said Nisman's murder was perpetrated by rogue agents from the defunct Secretariat of Intelligence  a holdover from Argentina's Dirty War era —​​​​​​​ which was dissolved immediately after his death, but a report by Reuters revealed that President Mauricio Macri's government wants to revive the infamous agency, sparking fears of a return to authoritarian rule and open class warfare in the country.

OPINION:
Alberto Nisman’s Death and AMIA: Who Cares About the Truth?

Iran has repeatedly denied any link to the bombing, and an Argentine judge in February 2015 dismissed Nisman's accusations as baseless. A review panel later agreed, finding insufficient evidence to formally investigate the president.

Still, a delegation of Argentine Jewish associations pushed Macri to reopen the case, citing new evidence.

Fernandez has faced numerous criminal charges since leaving office a year ago. Earlier this week, she was indicted on corruption charges arising from allegations she skimmed money intended for public works projects, which her supporters say are being launched used to prevent Fernandez from running for office in the future.

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