Argentine ex-leader Kirchner dies at 60
FORMER Argentine President Nestor Kirchner died yesterday after suffering heart attacks, state television reported.
The husband of Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez succumbed to heart trouble as the couple waited in their home in the Patagonian city of Calafate to be counted in the nation's census.
Fernandez was at his side when he died, state television reported.
Kirchner, 60, had undergone an angioplasty after a heart attack in September.
Kirchner, a likely candidate in next year's presidential elections, was secretary general of the South American alliance known as Unasur and also served as a congressman and leader of the Peronist party.
The news immediately had a great impact in Argentina.
"A great patriot has died," said Juan Carlos Dante Gullo, a ruling party congressman, to state TV. "This will leave a huge hole in Argentine politics. We will have to follow his example. Argentina has lost one of its greatest men."
The leader of the human rights group Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Estela de Carlotto, said Kirchner "gave his life for his country."
Kirchner served as president from 2001-2007, bringing Argentina out of severe economic crisis and encouraging changes in Argentina's justice system that set in motion dozens of human rights trials involving hundreds of people who had previously benefited from an amnesty.
He recently was appointed secretary general of the Union of South American Republics, or Unasur, and was preparing for an intense 2011 poll campaign in which either he or his wife would run again to maintain their hold on power.
The husband of Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez succumbed to heart trouble as the couple waited in their home in the Patagonian city of Calafate to be counted in the nation's census.
Fernandez was at his side when he died, state television reported.
Kirchner, 60, had undergone an angioplasty after a heart attack in September.
Kirchner, a likely candidate in next year's presidential elections, was secretary general of the South American alliance known as Unasur and also served as a congressman and leader of the Peronist party.
The news immediately had a great impact in Argentina.
"A great patriot has died," said Juan Carlos Dante Gullo, a ruling party congressman, to state TV. "This will leave a huge hole in Argentine politics. We will have to follow his example. Argentina has lost one of its greatest men."
The leader of the human rights group Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Estela de Carlotto, said Kirchner "gave his life for his country."
Kirchner served as president from 2001-2007, bringing Argentina out of severe economic crisis and encouraging changes in Argentina's justice system that set in motion dozens of human rights trials involving hundreds of people who had previously benefited from an amnesty.
He recently was appointed secretary general of the Union of South American Republics, or Unasur, and was preparing for an intense 2011 poll campaign in which either he or his wife would run again to maintain their hold on power.
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