Former Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner said she 
doesn't fear the prospect of going to jail, describing her growing legal
 troubles as part of a "persecution" of progressive Latin American 
leaders that has boosted the right in the region.
Speaking to foreign media on Saturday, Kirchner compared her 
situation to that of Brazil's suspended center-left President Dilma 
Rousseff, now subjected to an impeachment trial in the Senate.
"In the case of Brazil, the intervention of a partisan judiciary is 
very clear, and you're seeing it here as well," Kirchner said, 
describing parallel efforts by media to smear progressive leaders.
"It's obvious it's a judicial persecution."
Kirchner is facing four investigations, "three of them on corruption 
and money laundering," said Al Jazeera's Teresa Bo, reporting from El 
Calafate.
"While the corruption cases seem to be getting closer to Kirchner, until now she hasn't been formally charged."
Kirchner, 63, said allegations of graft and money laundering during 
her administration were trumped up by unnamed powerful interests who 
want to punish her for putting Argentines before foreign investors as 
she managed Latin America's third biggest economy between 2007 and 2015.
Investigations targeting the former president have moved rapidly 
since her center-right nemesis, Mauricio Macri, replaced her as 
president in December.
In May, Kirchner was indicted on charges related to the central bank's sale of dollars in the futures market.
Soon after, anti-corruption police searched her properties and she 
was embarrassed anew when her former public works secretary was caught 
stashing bags of cash in a convent in a Buenos Aires suburb last month.
"I don't want to minimize anything, but I think those are episodes 
that can take place for any government," Kirchner said. She called for 
an audit of public works in her government that she said would clear her
 of any involvement in wrongdoing.
Kirchner said she does not fear going to jail if it is the political 
price she must pay for her policies, including generous welfare spending
 and the nationalization of energy company YPF and the airline 
Aerolineas Argentinas .
"When you make decisions like these, it's clear that you risk going 
to jail and being politically persecuted," she told reporters.
The former leader lamented the recent victories of Macri and other 
conservatives in the region that she says threaten the progress made by 
the once-powerful alliance of leftist leaders led by late Venezuelan 
President Hugo Chavez.
"There's been a regression of what were once national and popular 
governments in the region," said Kirchner, who succeeded her husband, 
the late Nestor Kirchner, as president.
Macri's decision to slash subsidies for utilities has hurt the middle
 class, Kirchner added, and the deal he brokered with hedge funds that 
had sued Argentina over its unpaid debt had yet to revive an economy 
mired in recession.
"They thought it would rain dollars after that agreement," she said.
Macri has denied having any involvement in the judicial branch. 
Prosecutors investigating Fernandez could not be reached for comment 
outside of regular working hours.


 
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