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Spanish royal family hit by fraud scandal

Note: This article is from the Guardian.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Spanish royal family hit by fraud scandal” was written by Giles Tremlett in Madrid, for The Guardian on Thursday 8th December 2011 15.28 UTC

The once squeaky-clean Spanish royal family has become immersed in a growing fraud scandal that reveals how members of King Juan Carlos’s family may have cashed in on the monarchy’s good name.

At the centre of the scandal is the king’s son-in-law Iñaki Urdangarin, a former Olympic-medal-winning handball player who became the Duke of Palma after marrying Juan Carlos’s sporty daughter, the infanta Cristina.

Urdangarin and his business partners are the subject of daily leaks from a fraud investigation involving millions of euros of public money as Spain’s royal family struggles to hold on to its popularity.

Police have raided the offices of his private companies and of a foundation he once presided over, taking away documents.

El País newspaper reported this week that prosecutors believe Urdangarin, who has not been charged with any wrongdoing, will be named as a formal suspect in the case within two months. That could be a first step towards formal charges being placed.

The royal palace, meanwhile, added fuel to the scandal this week by suggesting Juan Carlos planned to cut the official royal family down to a nuclear core – in effect casting off his son-in-law and daughter.

On Thursday morning the palace press office appeared to have received a royal ticking off and publicly backtracked, saying “it deeply regretted having contributed to the fact that some media outlets reported this erroneously”.

Urdangarin himself, who now works for Spain’s Telefonica phone company in Washington DC, has said he is innocent.

“When I know the details of the investigations being carried out … I will be able to comment on their contents,” he said last month. “My professional behaviour has always been correct.”

Queen Sofia, meanwhile, has showed public support for her beleaguered daughter and son-in-law, allowing the latest edition of Hola magazine to publish pictures of her visiting them at their home in the US.

Speculation in Spanish newspapers has included predictions that Urdangarin will drop his aristocratic title so he can continue as a businessman or that Cristina will renounce her position as seventh in the line to the throne.

Within a few years of abandoning his sports career in 2000, and after studying at a prestigious business school, Urdangarin became the owner of a €6m (£5m) house in Barcelona. He set up various companies and became president of a nonprofit foundation, the Nóos Institute.

The institute boasted that its patrons included Urdangarin, his wife, an accountant described as an “assessor to the royal household” and professors from two of the world’s top business schools, the Barcelona-based Iese and Esade schools.

Nóos landed multimillion-euro contracts to organise events for regional governments in the Balearic Islands and Valencia.

But public prosecutors in Palma, the capital of the Balearics, have said there is evidence the institute was a front, charging hugely inflated fees and siphoning money off to Urdangarin’s private companies.

A €1.2m contract with the Balearic Islands was, prosecutors told investigating magistrate José Castro, “totally disproportionate to the task … based exclusively on a fictitious budget which did not analyse a single cost”.

They said evidence pointed to the foundation being used exclusively to channel money to other companies – many in the names of Urdangarin or his business partners.

“That was the sole aim,” they said.

At least €3.2m out of €5m was passed on from Nóos to Urdangarin’s companies, according to Publico newspaper.

The scandal comes as the royal family loses support among ordinary Spaniards. A regular poll by the state-run Centre for Sociological Investigation shows that, for the first time since polling started 17 years ago, trust in the royals has fallen below the halfway mark. Spaniards now place greater trust in the press.

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Spain’s king and queen bid farewell to Pope

Spain’s King Juan Carlos (at right in first photo below) and Queen Sofia said goodbye to Pope Benedict XVI at the Madrid-Barajas International Airport on August 21. The Pope visited Spain to attend World Youth Day festivities.

Pope Benedict XVI (L) is greeted by Spain’s King Juan Carlos before leaving the Madrid Barajas International Airport for Rome, after the end of his visit to World Youth Day festivities in Madrid, August 21, 2011. REUTERS/Paul Hanna (SPAIN – Tags: RELIGION SOCIETY ROYALS)

 

Pope Benedict XVI (L) is greeted by Spain’s Queen Sofia before leaving for Rome from the Madrid Barajas International Airport, after the end of his visit to World Youth Day festivities in Madrid, August 21, 2011. REUTERS/Paul Hanna (SPAIN – Tags: RELIGION SOCIETY ROYALS)

 

Pope Benedict XVI (C) chats with Spain’s King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia (R) before leaving the Madrid Barajas International Airport for Rome, at the end of his visit of World Youth Day festivities in Madrid, August 21, 2011. REUTERS/Paul Hanna (SPAIN – Tags: RELIGION SOCIETY ROYALS)

 

Pope Benedict XVI (C) waves as he is escorted by Spain’s King Juan Carlos (L) and Queen Sofia (R) to board his plane leaving for Rome from the Madrid Barajas International Airport, after the end of his visit of World Youth Day festivities in Madrid, August 21, 2011. REUTERS/Paul Hanna (SPAIN – Tags: RELIGION SOCIETY ROYALS)

 

Queen Sofia receives Culture Arts Patronage award

In a ceremony held on March 8, 2011 at Zarzuela Palace in Madrid, Queen Sofia of Spain was awarded the Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award 2011 by the Chairman of the Montblanc Foundation, pianist Lang Lang, and the CEO of Montblanc International, Lutz Bethge.

Lutz Bethge highlighted the Queen’s commitment to the weakest members of society and praised her efforts to grant them access to education and allow them to participate in cultural life, thus improving their future prospects. In addition to the award, Queen Sofia received a check for €15,000, which she donated to the Queen Sofia Foundation, a charitable and cultural foundation established in 1977.

Other winners of this year’s Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award include Britain’s Prince of Wales.

(Thank you to Janelle at Mission US for sending a press release and photos!) Photo copyright © Europa Press. Photo provided by Mission.

Queen Sofia accepts award

Feliz Navidad 2010

Spanish royal Christmas cards for 2010 (photos)

Video: Queen Sofia with pandas

King Juan Carlos thanks World Cup team

 

Royal pomp & glamor in Spain

Queen Sofia turns 70

Queen Sofia, the wife of Spain’s King Juan Carlos, celebrated her 70th birthday yesterday and attended a concert by conductor Zubin Mehta in Madrid.