Critics of a member of the Court in the political opinion

Moliné O´Connor accused deputies

(DyN). - The vice-president of the Supreme Court of Justice, Eduardo Moliné O´Connor, criticized yesterday the order of political judgment against the nine members of the maximum Argentine court and described like "capricious" the imputations, when exposing during the Hemisférica Conference of the Inter-American Society of Prensa (SIP), celebrated in Washington.

During that conference the subject of the relations between the press and Justice in the Latin American countries struggled and attended as invited the ministers of the cuts, authorities of the O.A.S., the Inter-American Commission of Human rights and jurists of the continent.

To the being consulted on the degree of independence of the Judicial Power in the Argentina and the situation of the Supreme Court in the occasion of the political judgment that is transacted in the House of Representatives, Moliné O´Connor showed that "it is a cuestionamiento formulated by a minority group of legislators who responds to sectorial political interests that disapprove some of the sentences of the court".

The magistrate indicated that "the orders of political judgment began in February, shortly after whom the Court pronounced in defense of the right of property of the ahorristas declaring the dissability of certain acts of government". And he emphasized that "who promoted the political judgment they did not have repairs in enunciating publicly that all the ministers would be removed to the few weeks".

The minister assured that "in spite of this unusual situation, the judges of the Court continue normally acting their as with the particularitity of which no of them was designated by the present government nor by both previous presidents".

Moliné O´Connor was trusted on the future: "In most of the legislators prime the good sense that will end at the rejection of the capricious imputations formulated by a minority that aspires to produce vacancies in the Judicial Power debilitating its independence".