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After Prosecutor's Suspicious Death, Argentina's President Is Charged With Covering Up Iran's Alleged Involvement in Terror Attack
Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner delivers a speech during a ceremony at the Casa Rosada on December 27, 2012 in Buenos Aires. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

After Prosecutor's Suspicious Death, Argentina's President Is Charged With Covering Up Iran's Alleged Involvement in Terror Attack

"...it could be a disaster for Argentina."

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (TheBlaze/AP) -- The prosecutor who inherited a high-profile case against Argentine President Cristina Fernandez on Friday reaffirmed the accusations, formally charging the president with helping Iranian officials cover up their alleged role in the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center. The terror attack was the worst in Argentina's history.

A top government official called the move a "judicial coup."

Prosecutor Gerardo Pollicita's decision to go forward with the case was significant because it sets the stage for a close examination of the investigation that prosecutor Alberto Nisman was building before he was found dead due to a gunshot to the head on Jan. 18. Nisman was scheduled to bring his accusations before Congress the very next day.

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner delivers a speech during a ceremony at the Casa Rosada on December 27, 2012 in Buenos Aires. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images) Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner delivers a speech during a ceremony at the Casa Rosada on December 27, 2012 in Buenos Aires. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

Nisman accused Fernandez, Foreign Minister Hector Timerman and others in her administration of brokering the cover-up in exchange for favorable deals on oil and other goods from Iran. Fernandez and Timerman have strongly denied the accusations, and Iran has repeatedly denied involvement in the bombing, which killed 85 people.

In his statement released Friday afternoon, Pollicita recounted Nisman's accusations without providing analysis of them. He concluded that an investigation is necessary to "achieve a degree of understanding to prove or disprove the factual and dogmatic extremes expressed in the preceding paragraphs."

Pollicita will present his findings to judge Daniel Rafecas, the federal magistrate assigned to the case who will ultimately decide whether to dismiss it or send it on to trial.

Bloomberg Business reports on the controversial case:

Carl Meacham, Americas program director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., told Bloomberg that the case could bring a "seismic change for Argentina’s political environment."

"You have an economic crisis on the horizon and you marry that with a political crisis, it could be a disaster for Argentina," he added.

Meanwhile Friday, three other prosecutors and a coordinator were named to take over Nisman's general investigation into the bombing itself, which he had led for 10 years. No one has been convicted in the case.

Even before Pollicita's decision, amid rumors that it was coming, the administration was moving to both reject and minimize it.

Cabinet chief Jorge Capitanich called the move a "judicial coup" during his daily press briefing.

"The Argentine people should know that we're talking about a vulgar lie, of an enormous media operation, of a strategy of political destabilization and the biggest judicial coup d'etat in the history of Argentina to cover the real perpetrators of the crime," he said.

Similarly, Presidential spokesman Anibal Fernandez said moving the case forward was a "clear maneuver to destabilize democracy" but that ultimately "it has no legal value. It does not matter."

The strength of Nisman's 289-page investigation, presented to a judge a few days after his death, has been hot topic of debate within the legal community.

The basis of his case are wiretaps of administration officials allegedly talking about a secret deal around the time of a 2013 "Memorandum of Understanding" that Argentina reached with Iran. The agreement, which is being challenged in Argentine courts, on its face sets the conditions for the two countries to investigate the bombing.

Juan Jose Avila, a criminal lawyer, said arguing that Nisman's case wasn't strong enough misses the point, because at this stage, no investigation is ready to be tried in court.

"No accusation, when it's first made, is proven," he said.

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