Cristina Fernández De Kirchner Requests House Arrest: A New Chapter in Judicial Persecution - teleSUR English
- Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, former president of Argentina, has requested to serve her six-year sentence under house arrest due to humanitarian reasons, as reported by her defense team.
- The Lula Institute condemned her six-year prison sentence as a political maneuver aimed at harming progressive forces in Argentina and Latin America.
- Her defense states that her age, prior assassination attempt, and former head of state status warrant house arrest for her security.
- Fernández de Kirchner's conviction and the legal processes raise concerns about the independence of Argentina's judicial system and threaten democracy.
10 Articles
10 Articles
The property located in San José 1111, in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Constitución, was named after users who “infringed Google’s policy”; years ago, it had appeared on Wikipedia as “ladrone de la Nación”
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner Requests House Arrest: A New Chapter in Judicial Persecution - teleSUR English
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, former president of Argentina, requests to serve her sentence under house arrest following the ratification of her conviction. Her defense cites humanitarian reasons and denounces a judicial advance aimed at excluding her from political life, as popular mobilization in support of her cause grows. Related: Cristina Fernandez’s Prison Sentence Is a Political Maneuver: Lula Institute A Justified Request: Rights and S…
The Court Will Decide Next Week Whether to Grant House Arrest to Cristina Kirchner - Diario Panorama
The Federal Oral Court 2 has five working days to decide whether the former president will be able to serve the sentence for the Road Case from her home. It also assesses the situation of eight other convicts.
The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America - Peoples' Trade Treaty (ALBA-TCP) this Wednesday condemned the ruling of the Argentine Supreme Court against Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. Member countries described it as an "illegitimate act of neocolonial lawfare" and denounced the sentence as a "political maneuver disguised as justice to pursue popular leaders."
Sheinbaum’s gesture of support took place one day after the Supreme Court rejected the appeal filed by the ex-mandataria. Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, expressed her solidarity this Wednesday with former Argentine president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner after the Supreme Court confirmed her six-year prison sentence and disqualification from holding public office. “Yes, all our solidarity with Cristina Kirchner is a more political matte…
The Lula Institute, which houses archives and assets received by the Brazilian president, again went out to deplore the ratification of that Court’s resolution yesterday. It accuses the highest court of “cloaking leaders seeking justice and social equality.” Read more
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