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 35-year-old Brazilian national Fernando Andre Sabag Montiel.
The Argentine Ministry of Security confirmed the weapon used in the incident was a .380 firearm with bullets inside.
In a televised address late Thursday, Argentina’s President Alberto Fernández said the suspect aimed a loaded gun at Fernández de Kirchner, which did not fire despite the pulled trigger.
“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,” he said.
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.
Governor of Buenos Aires province, Axel Kicillof, called the attack “one of the worst episodes in our history” in a Twitter post following the incident.
“Those who insist on persecuting, inciting violence and even calling for the death penalty must stop now. You cannot continue to promote hatred and violence,” Kicillof said.
Pope Francis, who is Argentinian, sent a telegram to Fernández de Kirchner to express solidarity with her. “I pray that in the dear Argentina, social harmony and respect for democratic values always prevail , against all kinds of violence and aggression,” the pontiff said.
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 en Español.
Appeals against violence
The incident has shocked the nation, and the President declared Friday a national holiday for Argentinians to rally together in support of Fernández de Kirchner.
Football matches were also suspended in the country on Friday, according to a statement from the country’s national football organization.
Latin American leaders reacted to the news in horror, with Mexican, Cuban, Venezuelan and Chilean officials expressing their solidarity with Fernández de Kirchner.
“We stand in solidarity with the Argentine Republic in the face of the assassination attempt suffered by its vice president @CFKArgentina. We join all the voices that repudiate violence and demand justice,” Paraguayan President Mario Abdo Benitez wrote in a Tweet.
Brazilian presidential contender Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva described Fernández de Kirchner as “a woman who deserves the respect of every democrat in the world,” in a tweet on Friday. “This violence and political hatred that has been encouraged by some is a threat to democracy in our region. The democrats of the world will not tolerate any violence in political disagreements.”
“Violence can never, never be tolerated under any circumstances. My solidarity with Ms. Cristina Fernández and all the Argentine people in the face of the attack,” Uruguayan President Luis Lacalle Pou wrote on Twitter.
CNN’s Jorge Engels, Tara John, Alex Stambaugh Nicola Ruotolo, Manveena Suri and Stefano Pozzebon contributed to this report.
Source by www.cnn.com