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Rajoy questioned on corruption: first time a Spanish serving prime minister appears in court

Thursday, July 27th 2017 - 10:06 UTC
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“I never took care of the economic issues in the party. I was devoted to political activity,” Rajoy told the three magistrates during the proceeding. “I never took care of the economic issues in the party. I was devoted to political activity,” Rajoy told the three magistrates during the proceeding.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has told the country’s National Court he did not know anything about the ruling Partido Popular’s accounting practices when a corrupt scheme allegedly helped fund it. Wednesday’s highly-anticipated hearing was the first time that a prime minister has appeared in court while holding office since Spain transitioned to democracy four decades ago.

 Rajoy himself is not accused of wrongdoing, but the court called him to provide evidence as the party’s vice secretary general until 2003, and its secretary general until 2004, when the illegal funding scheme was allegedly still operating.

“I never took care of the economic issues in the party. I was devoted to political activity,” Rajoy told the three magistrates during the proceeding.

Businesspeople, elected officials and other Partido Popular members, including two former treasurers, are among the 37 accused of bribery, money laundering and tax evasion in the “Gurtel case”, named after the German translation for belt.

The Spanish word for belt is also the last name of Francisco Correa, a businessman arrested in 2009 who is the key defendant in the case, considered one of the largest corruption scandals in the country’s modern history.

Correa faces a 125-year prison sentence if found guilty of controlling the network of aides and companies that arranged free events for the party in exchange for public contracts.

In an apparent attempt to underscore that he is a witness and not a defendant, Rajoy gave evidence seated at a table on the stage at the same level as the three magistrates – not standing in front of them as is customary.

Rajoy repeated what he had said earlier: that he never met Correa and he was the one, as party president in 2004, who ordered a halt to contracting with Correa’s companies upon learning that they were misusing the conservative party’s name.

The trial is part of a wider probe into illegal party funding reflected in hidden accounting kept by Luis Barcenas, the party treasurer for almost three decades.

In the most damaging allegations to date, Barcenas has said there was always a scheme of illegal contributions to the Partido Popular and that top officials were aware. The party and Rajoy have denied his claims.

Rajoy called allegations that high-ranking party officials received illegal bonuses “absolutely false”. He explained that some received additional payments from the Partido Popular to their salaries as legislators – money he said was taxed.

Categories: Politics, International.

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  • Brit Bob

    Rajoy - “This is the only such territory in Europe, and one that affects our own territorial integrity,” Mr Rajoy said, claiming that Britain had “ignored the mandate” of the UN General Assembly. (Daily Telegraph 26 Sept 2013)

    Gibraltar - Some Relevant International Law: https://www.academia.edu/10575180/Gibraltar_-_Some_Relevant_Internationa...

    Oh dear.

    Jul 27th, 2017 - 10:34 am 0
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