Argentina president criticises Alberto Nisman and Israel over 1994 bombing

Argentinian president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner said on Sunday the prosecutor who had accused her of a criminal cover-up had also praised her, characterising the late Alberto Nisman’s actions as contradictory in a sharply worded speech that included a rebuke of Israel over the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community centre.

Fernández said documents had been found in Nisman’s safe, one written in December and the other in January. She said in both he spoke favourably of the president’s speeches to the United Nations aimed at getting justice for the attack on the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association, which killed 85 people.

She said that was contradictory to his allegations that she and other top officials in her administration had orchestrated a cover-up with Iran to shield officials allegedly responsible in a grain-for-oil deal. Fernández has rejected the allegations and Iran has long denied involvement in the bombing.

“Which Nisman do I go with?” she said. “With the one who accused us of a cover-up or the one who addressed me, acknowledging all we had done” to bring justice?

Nisman was found dead on 18 January, the day before he was to detail his allegations against Fernández to Congress. Authorities are investigating whether Nisman committed suicide or was killed.

Alberto Nisman was investigating the bombing at the time of his death.
Photograph: Natacha Pisarenko/AP

The case has rocked Argentina, creating a scandal that Fernández’s administration has struggled to confront. The president, constitutionally barred from running in October elections, got a boost last week when a federal judge threw out the case that Nisman had been building, saying it wasn’t solid enough to open an investigation.

Fernández, known for fiery, populist rhetoric, made the comments about the documents at the end of her nearly four-hour speech. When opposition legislators held signs saying “Open the Archives!” on the community centre bombing, she launched into a vigorous defence of all she had done to bring justice in the case, first as a legislator in the 1990s, and since assuming the presidency in 2007.

The bombing had become a “chessboard of national and international politics”, she said.

In particular, she took aim at Israel, saying the country had shown tremendous interest in getting justice for the community centre bombing but not in the 1992 bombing of the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, which killed 29.

Nobody has been convicted for either attack.

“Why does the state of Israel demand (justice) for AMIA,” she said, referring to the Spanish acronym of the community centre, “and not for the blowing up of their own embassy?”

It wasn’t clear what, if anything, Fernández was implying. The president often makes vague accusations that other nations are meddling in the South American country’s affairs.

In January 2014, Itzhak Aviran, the former Israeli ambassador to Argentina, reportedly told a Jewish news agency that “most of the guilty (for the attacks) are in the other world and we did that”. The comments were immediately denied by the Israeli government. At the time, Nisman, who headed up the Jewish community centre bombing for 10 years, said he would summons Aviran.

On Sunday, Fernandez said she would formally request that Israel send Aviran to Argentina to testify so “Argentinians can at least know the perpetrators” of the 1992 and 1994 attacks.

A message sent to the Israeli embassy’s press office late Sunday seeking comment was not immediately answered.

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