Kirchner said that on her recent visit to Pope Francis -- a fellow Argentine whose help she has sought in Argentina's ongoing debt default row -- police warned her about supposed plots against her by Islamic State activists.
"So, if something happens to me, don't look to the Mideast, look north" to the United States, Kirchner said at Government House.
- Don't believe US: Kirchner -
Just
hours after the US embassy here warned its citizens to take extra
safety precautions in Argentina, an aggravated Kirchner said "when you
see what has been coming out of diplomatic offices, they had better not
come in here and try to sell some tall tale about ISIS trying to track
me down so they can kill me."
The
president said local soybean producers unhappy with prices, other
exporters and car company executives, all were involved since they would
benefit from a devaluation of the peso, which is being pushed lower by
her government's selective default.
"Exporters
who have lost money have Argentina in a vise .. so do the car company
executives who tell consumers they have no inventory when they do ....
What they are all waiting for is a devaluation."
Argentina exited recession
with 0.9-percent economic growth in the second quarter, national
statistics institute INDEC said Wednesday, a rare bit of good news amid
the country's new debt default.
But
with inflation estimated at more than 30 percent and the value of the
peso tumbling, Latin America's third-largest economy is still mired in a
slowdown after averaging 7.8-percent annual growth from 2003 to 2011.
Argentina
is still struggling with the aftermath of a default on nearly $100
billion in debt in 2001, with the two hedge funds it labels vultures
battling the country in US courts.
But
it has been blocked by US federal judge Thomas Griesa, who has ordered
the country to first repay two hedge funds demanding the full $1.3
billion face value of their bonds.
Griesa
ruled Monday that Argentina was in contempt of court after it passed a
law allowing the government to repay creditors in Buenos Aires or Paris
-- skirting the New York judge's freeze on the bank accounts it
previously used to service its debt.
Argentina has been locked out of international financial markets since its 2001 default.
More
than 92 percent of its creditors agreed to take losses of up to 70
percent on the face value of their bonds in 2005 and 2010 to get the
struggling country's debt repayments back on track.
But
the two hedge funds, US billionaire Paul Singer's NML Capital and
US-based Aurelius Capital Management, which had bought up defaulted
Argentine bonds for pennies on the dollar, refused to accept the
write-down and took the country to court.
The
strategy, which stands to make them profits of up to 1,600 percent, has
earned them the label "vulture funds" from Buenos Aires.
Blocked
from paying its restructured debt, Argentina missed a $539 million
interest payment and entered default again on July 30.
It
is now trying to buy time until the end of the year, the expiration
date for a clause in the restructuring deals that entitles all
bondholders to equal treatment.
Argentina
is meanwhile lobbying to create a UN convention to prevent a minority
of bondholders from scuppering struggling countries' debt restructuring
plans.
A resolution to negotiate such a framework passed the United Nations General Assembly earlier this month.
- Tough outlook -
Economic
analysts are forecasting the economy will shrink two percent this year,
though the government is forecasting a return to economic growth of 2.8
percent in 2015.
The end of
the boom has revived the ghost of Argentina's 2001 economic crisis, when
it defaulted on $100 billion in debt and deadly riots erupted.
That
violence, in which at least 26 people were killed, led to the
resignation of president Fernando de la Rua, who was replaced by Adolfo
Rodriguez Saa. He resigned a week after taking office amid more unrest.
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