The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Spanish king’s brother-inlaw jailed for embezzleme­nt

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MADRID: The Spanish king’s brother-in-law began a six-year jail sentence yesterday, drawing a line under a long-running corruption scandal that enraged the public and brought shame on the royal family.

Inaki Urdangarin, the husband of King Felipe’s sister Cristina, arrived at a prison north of Madrid early on Monday after losing an appeal at the Supreme Court last week.

The former Olympic handball player was sentenced to five years and 10 months of prison for embezzling millions of euros in a case which caused uproar and even contribute­d to the abdication of Felipe’s father.

Urdangarin, 50, turned himself in at a facility near Brieva, about 100 kilometres north of Madrid, at 8 am. The move brings to a close a long-running scandal that has embarrasse­d the Spanish royal family.

Urdangarin was guilty last year of embezzling millions of euros between 2004 and 2006 from the non-profit Noos Institute sports foundation that he headed on the island of Majorca.

The probe first began in 2010 and the scandal really took off a year later when the royal family excluded him from its activities.

The case fuelled angry protests by Spaniards suffering hardship in an economic crisis.

Urdangarin was seen as a symbol of the elite’s perceived corruption. It also soured the end of Juan Carlos’s reign.

He gave up the throne in June 2014, hoping his son Felipe VI could freshen up the image of the monarchy.

Urdangarin and Cristina eventually moved with their children to Switzerlan­d.

In 2015, King Felipe VI stripped them of their titles of duke and duchess of Palma.

At the start of 2016, the pair went on trial in Majorca along with more than a dozen others. Urdangarin faced charges of embezzleme­nt, influence peddling, forgery and money laundering.

In February 2017, he was found guilty of creaming off millions to fund a lavish lifestyle. The court handed him a sentence of six years and three months.

Cristina was tried on charges of helping her husband evade taxes while he headed of the Noos Institute. She was acquitted, but was fined 265,000 euros on separate charges on the grounds that she had benefited from her husband’s wrongdoing.

Despite Urdangarin’s sentence, he was allowed to remain free while pursuing an appeal to the Supreme Court. He lost that case last week, although the court reduced his sentence by five months. — AFP

 ??  ?? Urdangarin leaves the courthouse in Palma de Mallorca, on the Spanish Balearic Island of Mallorca in this file photo. — AFP photo
Urdangarin leaves the courthouse in Palma de Mallorca, on the Spanish Balearic Island of Mallorca in this file photo. — AFP photo

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