martes, 28 de febrero de 2017

Spain's Princess Cristina cleared in tax trial

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-39005056


Spain's Princess Cristina, the 51-year-old sister of King Felipe and sixth in line to the throne, has been cleared in a tax fraud trial.
However her husband, Inaki Urdangarin, was given a six-year-and-three-month jail term by the court in Majorca.
Urdangarin was accused of using his royal connections to generate business income used for private spending.
The case began in 2010 and became symbolic of perceived corruption among Spain's elites, including the royals.
Princess Cristina, who now lives in Switzerland, was the first member of Spain's royal family to go on trial since the monarchy's restoration in 1975.
In 2015, King Felipe stripped her and Urdangarin, 49, of their titles as Duke and Duchess of Palma de Mallorca.







The sentence "the justice is  equal for all" would have a lot of meaning if it was truth, thing that like we can confirm repeated times in Spain it isn't true.


The last trials connected to the royal family demonstrate that unfortunately there are different opinions when it's time to apply the law and that they aren't objectives.

This generate in the public opinion a total suspicion about the apply of the law and it transmit us a lot of insecurity, because the law is precisely for give us security and for feel us all equale under it. The thing we can't to allow is that the politics take part in favour of particular social classes, even removing the district attorney they do their job well.

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