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Spain ex-king Juan Carlos probed over Saudi rail deal

Ex-King Juan Carlos, Dec 2018Image copyright AFP
Image caption The ex-king was tainted by a corruption scandal before his abdication in 2014

Spain’s Supreme Court has launched an investigation into former king Juan Carlos over possible illegal commissions linked to a high-speed rail project in Saudi Arabia.

The court prosecutor’s office says it aims to establish the ex-king’s connection with the project after his abdication in June 2014. At that point he lost his immunity from prosecution.

Spanish firms won a €6.7bn (£6bn) deal to build a Mecca-Medina rail link.

The probe involves Swiss banks too.

Spanish anti-corruption officials suspect that the king kept some undeclared funds in Switzerland, and a Swiss investigation is under way. However, those officials are awaiting documentation from the Swiss authorities, Spain’s La Vanguardia news website reports.

“This investigation focuses, precisely, on establishing or discarding the criminal relevance of deeds that happened after June 2014,” the Spanish prosecutor’s office said.

There has been no comment so far from the ex-king himself or his lawyers.

The Spanish government said that “justice is equal for all” and it would “not interfere” in the inquiry.

In March King Felipe VI renounced his inheritance from his father Juan Carlos, who is now 82.

The royal palace said Juan Carlos would also stop receiving an annual grant of €194,000 (£174,800; $217,100).

An economic crimes specialist, Juan Ignacio Campos, will head the new investigation, aided by three other Supreme Court prosecutors.

Preliminary inquiries were launched in September 2018, after recordings emerged of the king’s ex-mistress Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein. Reports say she mentioned a commission in connection with the Saudi contract.

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Media captionKing Juan Carlos abdicates in 2014

Juan Carlos ascended the throne in 1975 on the death of Gen Francisco Franco, the fascist dictator who ruled Spain for 36 years.

Juan Carlos was widely admired for steering Spain to democracy during a difficult period. But towards the end of his 39-year reign he drew criticism.

There was a lavish elephant hunting trip to Botswana in 2012, then a corruption scandal involving his youngest daughter, Cristina, and her husband Iñaki Urdangarin, which led to calls for him to step aside.

Click Here to Visit Orignal Source of Article https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-52977739

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