(Reuters)
- Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner struck a defiant
note on Sunday in her first national address since a prosecutor
announced he would continue to investigate allegations she tried to
cover up a 1994 bombing, saying harsh Patagonian winters had taught her
to be tough.
The accusations - first brought by a state investigator
whose mysterious death last month threw the Fernandez administration
into turmoil - were deemed credible on Friday by a newly-named
prosecutor who said he would press on with the investigation.
In a televised speech, Kirchner did not refer to the probe.
But she made it clear she would not bend under the mounting political
pressure.
"Some are amazed at how I can endure all I have to endure,"
said Kirchner, speaking to a crowd at hospital she had just inaugurated
in her adopted home province of Santa Cruz.
"I tell them it was here in Patagonia - with the wind, the
cold and
the snow - that I learned that I can endure anything," she
said. "To live in southern Argentina you have to be tough."
Kirchner's image has taken a hit from allegations that she
tried to whitewash the alleged involvement of a group of Iranians in the
1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, in
which 85 people died.
She denies the accusation, which was first leveled by state prosecutor Alberto Nisman.
Nisman's body was found on Jan. 18 in his Buenos Aires
apartment, a bullet in his head and a pistol by his side. The following
day he had been scheduled to appear before Congress to present his case
that Fernandez conspired with Iran to clear the bombing suspects in
order to clinch a deal to trade grains for Iranian oil.
No conclusive evidence of either murder or suicide has
surfaced. Kirchner at first speculated that Nisman killed himself, and
later said rogue intelligence agents were behind his death.
The saga is expected to strengthen opposition candidates in
the October presidential election, in which Kirchner is
constitutionally barred from running for a third consecutive term.
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