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Mexico's first lady stirs Twitter storm with comment on kids with cancer

FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: Beatriz Gutierrez Muller, wife of Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, applauds during the celebrations the Three Kings' Day, or the Feast of the Epiphany, at Zocalo square in Mexico City

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican first lady Beatriz Gutierrez sparked an uproar on social media on Wednesday with a Twitter comment widely viewed as insensitive when she swatted away a question about what she was doing to help parents of children with cancer.

Gutierrez published a celebratory post on the two-year anniversary of the election victory of her husband President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in July 2018.

Responding to her post, Twitter user Jose David Guerra asked: "When will you personally attend to the parents of children with cancer? Thank you for your kind response."

Gutierrez responded, "I'm not a doctor, maybe you are. On you go, you help them," in a tweet that has since been deleted but was seen by Reuters and widely retweeted.

She later posted an apology in which she appeared to blame Lopez Obrador's opponents for the huge media attention her comments drew.

"My husband's adversaries are very inquisitive!" she wrote on Twitter. "If my expression 'I'm not a doctor' offended anyone, I apologize... I just want to express that I am deeply human and I wish the best for everyone."

The office of the president declined to comment on the row, which threatened to take some of the shine off Lopez Obrador's celebration of his landslide win's anniversary.

A shortage of medicines to treat cancer in children drew negative headlines for Lopez Obrador earlier this year as his government tried to overhaul the health system.

Images of sick children and distraught parents criticizing the government from crowded hospital wards damaged his reputation and ate into his popularity.

Gutierrez has been a strong defender of her husband, and has come under fire frequently from critics on social media.

The row sparked a trending hashtag #LaBrujaDelPalacio (The Witch of the Palace), referring to the National Palace, site of the president's offices and residence. Supporters of the first lady denounced the attacks, saying she deserved respect.

Lopez Obrador himself rarely shies away from conflict with adversaries. His critics and defenders have attacked each other vigorously on Twitter since he took office in December 2018.

(Reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez and Anthony Esposito; Editing by Dave Graham and Howard Goller)