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Holocaust-expert judge takes on Argentine bombing case

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A respected Holocaust expert was named to take over as judge in the politically explosive case of a 1994 Jewish center bombing that has shaken Argentina since the lead prosecutor's mysterious death.

The case had become a hot potato in the courts amid revelations that late prosecutor Alberto Nisman had drafted an arrest warrant for President Cristina Kirchner before he was found dead in his apartment with a gunshot wound to the head last month.

Three judges had asked to recuse themselves from the case, which has gripped Argentina since Nisman, 51, turned up dead on the eve of a congressional hearing at which he was expected to accuse Kirchner of covering up Iranian officials' involvement in the deadly bombing. It was the worst terror strike on Argentine soil in the country's modern history.

The federal authority for criminal courts finally ended the impasse by ordering one of the three judges, Daniel Rafecas, to take on the case.

Around 2,000 people meanwhile rallied behind a banner that read "enough impunity" as they marched through Buenos Aires, calling for answers.

"I think we will end up with the truth," said Argentine Nobel Peace Prize laureate Adolfo Perez Esquivel, who marched at the head of the crowd, calling for an investigation by an independent commission.

Firemen  policemen and rescuers search for wounded people after a bomb exploded at the Argentinian I...
Firemen, policemen and rescuers search for wounded people after a bomb exploded at the Argentinian Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) in Buenos Aires on July 18, 1994
Ali Burafi, AFP/File

According to polls, some 70 percent of the population believe they will never know the truth behind Nisman's death.

Rafecas, a human rights expert, has authored studies on the Holocaust that earned him awards from three Argentine Jewish groups: B'nai B'rith Argentina, the Argentine Jewish Society and the Buenos Aires Holocaust Museum Foundation.

He is also known for trying military officers for abuses committed during the South American country's 1976-1983 dictatorship.

The bombing at the Argentine Jewish Mutual Association, a charities federation office known as AMIA, killed 85 people and wounded 300, the deadliest such attack in Argentina's history.

After the initial investigation ended with no convictions, Nisman was named in 2006 to reopen the case.

He accused Iran of ordering the attack via Lebanon-backed militant group Hezbollah, and requested arrest warrants for five Iranian officials including former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

On January 14, four days before he was found dead, Nisman filed a 300-page report accusing Kirchner, foreign minister Hector Timerman and another senior official of trying to shield the Iranian suspects in exchange for oil.

Nisman's death is being investigated by prosecutor Viviana Fein, who caused further controversy by initially denying that Nisman had drafted an arrest warrant for Kirchner.

Fein later said such a warrant had in fact been found in Nisman's apartment, denying she had succumbed to government pressure to cover it up.

In a bid to forestall further controversy, Fein said Wednesday she was cancelling her plans to go on vacation on February 18, which had drawn criticism from some, including the government.

"I've never been pressured, I'm not afraid," she told a press conference.

A respected Holocaust expert was named to take over as judge in the politically explosive case of a 1994 Jewish center bombing that has shaken Argentina since the lead prosecutor’s mysterious death.

The case had become a hot potato in the courts amid revelations that late prosecutor Alberto Nisman had drafted an arrest warrant for President Cristina Kirchner before he was found dead in his apartment with a gunshot wound to the head last month.

Three judges had asked to recuse themselves from the case, which has gripped Argentina since Nisman, 51, turned up dead on the eve of a congressional hearing at which he was expected to accuse Kirchner of covering up Iranian officials’ involvement in the deadly bombing. It was the worst terror strike on Argentine soil in the country’s modern history.

The federal authority for criminal courts finally ended the impasse by ordering one of the three judges, Daniel Rafecas, to take on the case.

Around 2,000 people meanwhile rallied behind a banner that read “enough impunity” as they marched through Buenos Aires, calling for answers.

“I think we will end up with the truth,” said Argentine Nobel Peace Prize laureate Adolfo Perez Esquivel, who marched at the head of the crowd, calling for an investigation by an independent commission.

Firemen  policemen and rescuers search for wounded people after a bomb exploded at the Argentinian I...

Firemen, policemen and rescuers search for wounded people after a bomb exploded at the Argentinian Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) in Buenos Aires on July 18, 1994
Ali Burafi, AFP/File

According to polls, some 70 percent of the population believe they will never know the truth behind Nisman’s death.

Rafecas, a human rights expert, has authored studies on the Holocaust that earned him awards from three Argentine Jewish groups: B’nai B’rith Argentina, the Argentine Jewish Society and the Buenos Aires Holocaust Museum Foundation.

He is also known for trying military officers for abuses committed during the South American country’s 1976-1983 dictatorship.

The bombing at the Argentine Jewish Mutual Association, a charities federation office known as AMIA, killed 85 people and wounded 300, the deadliest such attack in Argentina’s history.

After the initial investigation ended with no convictions, Nisman was named in 2006 to reopen the case.

He accused Iran of ordering the attack via Lebanon-backed militant group Hezbollah, and requested arrest warrants for five Iranian officials including former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

On January 14, four days before he was found dead, Nisman filed a 300-page report accusing Kirchner, foreign minister Hector Timerman and another senior official of trying to shield the Iranian suspects in exchange for oil.

Nisman’s death is being investigated by prosecutor Viviana Fein, who caused further controversy by initially denying that Nisman had drafted an arrest warrant for Kirchner.

Fein later said such a warrant had in fact been found in Nisman’s apartment, denying she had succumbed to government pressure to cover it up.

In a bid to forestall further controversy, Fein said Wednesday she was cancelling her plans to go on vacation on February 18, which had drawn criticism from some, including the government.

“I’ve never been pressured, I’m not afraid,” she told a press conference.

AFP
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