The Miami federal court cash scandal case which involves Venezuela and Argentina is becoming increasingly embarrassing for the administration of President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.
Only 23% of Argentines believe President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner is performing a good job, while 65% consider she's on the wrong track, according to the latest public opinion to be released over the weekend.
In a moving military ceremony the remains of an Argentine Air Force Canberra navigator shot down over the Falkland Islands in 1982 were handed on Monday to his family for burial in Cordoba.
Former Argentina president Eduardo Duhalde has called on the leaders of Argentina's farm rebellion to engage actively in politics, urging them to participate in government and congressional posts. Farm protests should not fade away, he said.
The hegemonic political system forged by former Argentine president Néstor Kirchner and his wife and successor Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has suffered an irreversible blow with the defeat of their grain duty hike bill in Congress in July, according to three Menemist intellectuals.
Former Economy minister Martín Lousteau claimed that Argentine President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner's administration is atypical, very centralized and is incapable of delegating, adding that the President is in love with abnormality and crisis.
The Argentine government said that relations with United States have been affected and described the Miami federal court cash scandal case, which allegedly involved money for President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner electoral campaign, as a political operation.
The Argentine pilot remains returned from the Falkland Islands last August correspond to Air Force navigator Captain Fernando Casado, who was shot down during possibly the last air incursion before the end of the conflict in June 1982, according to primary reports published Wednesday in Buenos Aires daily Clarin.
This Wednesday an oil exploration platform is scheduled to arrive in the South Atlantic contracted by Argentine state energy company Enarsa, Chilean state oil company Enap Sipetrol international branch and Argentine oil major YPF.
Argentina's Federal Fisheries Council (CFP) called on the National Institute of Fisheries Research and Development (INIDEP) to implement a mechanism that ensures a steady update of scientific information on fisheries particularly common hake (Merluccius hubbsi).