![]() |
Spain’s Infanta Cristina and her husband Iñaki Urdangarin. They are on trial for corruption. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images |
The Infanta Cristina, the sister of the king of Spain,
will appear in court in Mallorca on Monday on charges of tax evasion,
the first time a member of the royal family has been arraigned in court.
Cristina Federica Victoria Antonia de la Santísima Trinidad de Borbón
y de Grecia – her full title – and 17 co-defendants face 89 charges
ranging from fraud and money laundering to trafficking of influences.
It is alleged that the sixth in line to the Spanish throne was
complicit in the illegal business affairs of her husband Iñaki
Urdangarin, a former Olympic handball champion. The trial will be
presided over by three female judges.
Urdangarin is suspected, along with a former business partner Diego
Torres, of exploiting his royal connections to win fraudulent publicly
funded contracts worth €5.8m through the Instituto Nóos, a
not-for-profit organisation that organised sport and tourism conferences
in the Balearic islands. Investigators allege that €2.6m was embezzled
and laundered through a shell company that Cristina co-owned with her
husband. Both deny any wrongdoing.
The prosecution alleges that Cristina could not have been unaware of
her husband’s allegedly dubious business dealings. Questioned in court
in February 2014 she said she took her husband at his word and during
six hours of questioning replied “I don’t know” 188 times and “I don’t
remember” on 55 occasions.
In a new twist, Torres claims in a TV interview to be broadcast on
Sunday night that he, Urdangarin and Cristina are all innocent because
everything they did was done with the approval of the palace.
“The palace looked at what we were doing and said ‘very good,
excellent, keep it up’. They guided us all along,” Torres said during
the interview.
As Cristina has been ostracised by the palace and stripped of her
title of Duchess of Palma by her brother, her sense of family loyalty
may have worn thin and she may well go along with Torres’s version of
events.
However, her lawyers are expected to mount a defence based on the
“Botín doctrine”, named after the former head of Banco Santander, Emilio
Botín. The doctrine states that if a case is brought by popular action
and not by the state the defendant does not have to stand trial. The
case against Cristina has been brought by the pseudo trade union Manos
Limpias (Clean Hands).
Jaume Matas, the former president of the Balearic Islands, is among
the accused and faces charges of perverting the course of justice,
fraud, embezzlement and trafficking in influences. He has offered to
give up his €2.6m home to “make good the damage done by Nóos” and to
avoid the prospect of spending the next 11 years in jail.
The indictment runs to 70,000 pages and 363 witnesses are due to be called. The court refused to admit demands that the current and former kings give evidence.
No comments:
Post a Comment