Argentina slams senator concerned over lawyer's death

Reuters

Published Jan 30, 2015 10:26AM ET

Argentina slams senator concerned over lawyer's death

By Richard Lough

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina on Friday lashed out at a U.S. Republican senator who expressed doubts about the government's ability to conduct a credible investigation into the mysterious death of a prominent local prosecutor.

Cabinet chief Jorge Capitanich accused Florida Senator Marco Rubio of "imperialist behavior" and warned him against "unwarranted meddling" in a case that has outraged many Argentines and put heavy pressure on President Cristina Fernandez to determine what happened.

Alberto Nisman, who was investigating a 1994 bombing that killed 85 people at a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, was found on Jan. 18 sprawled on his bathroom floor in a pool of blood, a single bullet to his head.

While preliminary autopsy results suggested he killed himself, many Argentines remain skeptical. Fernandez has suggested she believes Nisman was killed by rogue spies but has not offered further details.

Days before his death, Nisman claimed Fernandez tried to whitewash his investigation and said he had further evidence to present to Congress.

Rubio sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday that said: "I am deeply concerned about the ability of the government of Argentina to conduct a fair and impartial investigation into (Nisman's) death."

Rubio, a potential Republican candidate for president in 2016, urged Kerry to push for an independent, internationally assisted investigation.

Asked about Rubio's comments at his daily news briefing, Capitanich said "unwarranted meddling by a state in the internal affairs of another is an interference that is wrong."

Nisman claimed Fernandez had opened secret channels with Iran to clear a number of Iranian suspects in the bombing. Fernandez's government branded the claim "absurd."

Iran has vigorously denied any role in the bombing.