Argentine court convicts social activist defended by UN panel
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Activist Milagro Sala speaks before being given a guilty verdict at a courtroom in San Salvador de Jujuy, in the northern Argentine province of Jujuy, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2016. (AP)
An Argentine social activist whose arrest was criticized by a United Nations panel has been convicted on charges of "inciting criminal acts" during a violent protest in Jujuy province seven years ago.
Wednesday's ruling by a three-judge panel gave Milagro Sala a suspended three-year prison sentence. The 53-year-old activist was acquitted on a charge of making threats during the protest against political leaders, including then-Sen. Gerardo Morales, who is now governor of Jujuy.
Though she won't serve any time under the court's sentencing, Sala will remain in detention to face other charges.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Earlier this year, the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention called on Argentina's government to immediately release Sala, saying there had been a scheme of "consecutive accusations" designed to indefinitely deprive her of freedom. It also said the state undermined her right to a proper defense because of a lack of specifics and clarity in the accusations against her.
Sala heads Argentina's Tupac Amaru social movement and won a seat last year in the regional parliament of the Mercosur group of South American nations.
Previously charged over the 2009 protest, she has been in jail since being arrested about a year ago on allegations involving a different protest. Last Jan. 16, the Jujuy provincial government brought additional allegations claiming her movement "embezzled public funds" meant for the construction of housing for low-income people.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}The U.N. panel concluded there was no legal justification for Sala's pre-trial detention and said judicial independence in the case was being violated.
Sala has denied any wrongdoing. She is a close ally of former President Cristina Fernandez, and her supporters say her arrest was a political vendetta by allies of current President Mauricio Macri. They say she only looks to benefit the poor.