The Secretary of Sports, Inés Arrondo, is in the eye of the storm after starring in a strong altercation with a security employee at the National Center for High Performance Sports (CENARD), located in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Núñez.
According to reports, the incident occurred on February 16 when Arrondo arrived at the property in her car around noon and a private security employee in charge of controlling the entry of vehicles stopped her because he did not recognize her.
The man asked for his identification and, according to his account, Arrondo violently got out of the car, began to rebuke him and there began a struggle during which the 24-year-old employee received a scratch on his face, for which notified the City Police.
Minutes later a cell phone arrived from the 13B Neighborhood Police Station and the man told how the incident was, for which a case for minor injuries was advanced, but while the police made the record, the young employee assured that he did not want to make any complaint.
Faced with this situation, social and political leaders went to the Arrondo intersection for their violent reaction to the custodian and even came to ask for his resignation since it is not the first case of violence that the former hockey player has had.
Last year she was accused of “disqualifying, silencing and intimidating several glorious and irreproachable leaders of our recent sports history” for the criticism raised against her management by two Olympic medalists.
The deputies Maximiliano Ferraro (president of the Civic Coalition) and Waldo Wolff (PRO), as well as Maximiliano Guerra, former dancer and allied leader of Patricia Bullrich, repudiated the behavior of the Secretary of Sports.
“The use of verbal, physical, psychological violence or abuse of power in the exercise of a position in the public function is inadmissible. Public officials must act with responsibility, humility, austerity and not believe that we are masters and lords,” Ferraro said in his opinion. about the fact. Along the same lines, Wolff considered that the official “should at least step aside until Justice is definitively issued.”
For his part, Guerra, aligned with the PRO for a couple of years, asserted: “Occupying a public position implies assuming a very great responsibility. What happened at Cenard with Arrondo was pathetic and a display of arrogance.”