Suspect arrested after failed assassination attempt on Argentine vice president
A frame from a video released by TN Argentina highlights the moment when a man pointed a weapon at Argentina Vice President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.
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A man has been
arrested after attempting to shoot Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, Argentina's
vice-president and former President, at point blank range outside her home in
Buenos Aires on Thursday.
Video of the
incident shows the vice president smiling as she walks by a crowd of people.
A man in the
crowd then surges forward, pointing a gun at Fernández de Kirchner's face and
apparently attempting a shot.
No bullets are fired and the two-time former
President flinches backward, unharmed.
The attacker
was taken into custody after a few seconds of confusion and panic.
Argentina's
official news agency, Télam, identified the man as a Brazilian national, later
updating his name to Fernando Andre Sabag Montiel.
The Argentine
Ministry of Security confirmed the weapon used in the incident was a .380
firearm with bullets inside.
"Cristina
is still alive because -- for some reason we can't technically confirm at this
moment -- the weapon, which was armed with five bullets, did not shoot although
the trigger was pulled," said Argentine President Alberto Fernández in a
televised address Thursday evening.
He called the
assassination attempt an attack on democracy, saying, "We must eradicate
hate and violence from our media and political discourse."
He declared
Friday a national holiday for the country to rally together in support of
Fernández de Kirchner.
Former
Argentine President Mauricio Macri also renounced the attack on Thursday,
calling for an "immediate and profound clarification by the justice system
and the security forces."
Fernández de
Kirchner is among Argentina's most prominent political figures, having served
as President from 2007 to 2015, before taking office as vice president in 2019.
Her supporters
have been holding rallies outside her home for several days, in response to an
ongoing trial in which she is accused of corruption during her term as
President.
Earlier in
August, a federal prosecutor called for Fernández de Kirchner to serve a
12-year prison sentence. The court is yet to rule on the request.
Days later, her
supporters clashed with police in the Argentine capital, with Télam reporting police used
sticks and tear gas on protesters after a group of people knocked down fences
near her home.
During the
national address on Thursday, President Fernández said he had been in touch
with the judge assigned to the case to act as quickly as possible.
Argentina has
been roiled by demonstrations this summer, with thousands taking to the streets
protesting the administration's management of soaring inflation and corruption
allegations.
In 2016 a judge
indicted Fernández de Kirchner along with 11 others on charges of corruption,
illicit association, and aggravated fraudulent administration, freezing $643
million of her assets.
Fernández de
Kirchner was charged for allegedly directing public road works to a company
called Austral Constructions during her presidency.
At the time,
she had criticized the investigation as being politically motivated.
She was also
simultaneously on trial for another corruption case, in which she was accused
of allegedly meddling with the sale of US dollars by the nation's central bank.
The case was dismissed in 2021, with the court
ruling in favor of Fernández de Kirchner, according to CNN affiliate CNN
Español.


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