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Ex-Argentine president Kirchner presents her best-selling book

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Former Argentine president Cristina Kirchner presented her best-selling book "Sincerely" at the Buenos Aires Book Fair amid expectations she will run in October's elections.

Chanting and flag-waving supporters waited for hours in the rain for Kirchner, who said she was motivated to write by her former cabinet chief Alberto Fernandez, who was "very distressed" at what was said about her and her late husband Nestor Kirchner, who also served as president and to whom the 600-page work was dedicated.

"He told me: 'It gives me a lot of anguish that those things are said about you, and you have to go out and tell your side'," Kirchner said Thursday night before an audience of 1,000 guests who included Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel along with political and union leaders, actors and rights activists.

With 300,000 copies sold in 20 days, according to Penguin Random House, a record for the Argentine market, the work is a mixture of family and political memories, loaded with harsh criticism of the center-right government of President Mauricio Macri.

Kirchner also dedicates an important part to defending herself against accusations of corruption.

She did not mention the elections Thursday but said these were "very difficult times" for the country.

Supporters waited for hours in the rain to see the former president
Supporters waited for hours in the rain to see the former president
Emiliano Lasalvia, AFP

Argentina is in the middle of an economic crisis, with annual inflation running at 54.7 percent in March while GDP contracted 2.5 percent in 2018.

Although she has not yet said whether she will run for the presidency, Kirchner's popularity has grown in recent weeks, with some polls indicating she could beat Macri in the second round.

However her participation in the elections is far from certain given that she is the subject of more than 10 corruption investigations related to her time in office.

She will go on trial in the first of those cases on May 21, accused of diverting public funds.

Former Argentine president Cristina Kirchner presented her best-selling book “Sincerely” at the Buenos Aires Book Fair amid expectations she will run in October’s elections.

Chanting and flag-waving supporters waited for hours in the rain for Kirchner, who said she was motivated to write by her former cabinet chief Alberto Fernandez, who was “very distressed” at what was said about her and her late husband Nestor Kirchner, who also served as president and to whom the 600-page work was dedicated.

“He told me: ‘It gives me a lot of anguish that those things are said about you, and you have to go out and tell your side’,” Kirchner said Thursday night before an audience of 1,000 guests who included Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel along with political and union leaders, actors and rights activists.

With 300,000 copies sold in 20 days, according to Penguin Random House, a record for the Argentine market, the work is a mixture of family and political memories, loaded with harsh criticism of the center-right government of President Mauricio Macri.

Kirchner also dedicates an important part to defending herself against accusations of corruption.

She did not mention the elections Thursday but said these were “very difficult times” for the country.

Supporters waited for hours in the rain to see the former president

Supporters waited for hours in the rain to see the former president
Emiliano Lasalvia, AFP

Argentina is in the middle of an economic crisis, with annual inflation running at 54.7 percent in March while GDP contracted 2.5 percent in 2018.

Although she has not yet said whether she will run for the presidency, Kirchner’s popularity has grown in recent weeks, with some polls indicating she could beat Macri in the second round.

However her participation in the elections is far from certain given that she is the subject of more than 10 corruption investigations related to her time in office.

She will go on trial in the first of those cases on May 21, accused of diverting public funds.

AFP
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