‘Darkest forces of power’: Argentina’s Javier Milei labels prosecutor’s mysterious death a ‘murder,’ not suicide

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from WND:

Alberto Nisman was investigating the 1994 AMIA bombing, when he was found dead in his apartment’s bathroom

JERUSALEM – Argentina’s President Javier Milei, whose style of governing has seemingly completely revolutionized the South American country, recently declared the death of a prominent prosecutor investigating the July 1994 terrorist bombing of the downtown Buenos Aires Argentine-Israelite Mutual Association, to be an act of murder.

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The case remains one of the most bitterly divisive in Argentina, with the previous government’s insistence that Alberto Nisman, who was found dead on the floor of his apartment’s bathroom exactly ten years ago in January 2015, had committed suicide being strenuously denied by those who knew him. The failure to bring anyone to justice either for the original bombing – which claimed the lives of 85 people and until Oct. 7 was the single greatest number of Jews murdered since the Holocaust – or Nisman’s death is a stain on Argentina’s law enforcement and judicial system.

Beyond that, Iran’s dirty fingers were assessed to have been behind the attack – via its Lebanese proxy Hezbollah – and getting to the bottom of both of these cases has significant ramifications for both Argentina in particular and South America in general.


Milei’s interjection could be crucial. As a vocal supporter of Israel and Jewish causes, Argentina’s president’s pressure may just produce some results. He said Nisman’s death was at the “hands of the darkest forces of power.”

It would seem simply too neat that merely days after Nisman accused then-Argentina president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and several other ex-government officials of seeking to cover up alleged Iranian involvement in the bombing, he would take his own life. Indeed, the special prosecutor was found dead the night before he was due to testify about his allegations in Congress.
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