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CRIME

Spanish prosecutors seek 15-year jail term for ex-minister

Spanish prosecutors have called for a 15-year jail sentence for a former interior minister accused of masterminding an alleged spying operation within the conservative Popular Party, court documents showed on Friday.

Spanish prosecutors seek 15-year jail term for ex-minister
Illustration photo of the Supreme Court in Madrid. Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP

The case centres on allegations that a driver was paid out of state coffers to spy on the former treasurer of the main opposition Popular Party (PP), Luis Barcenas.

The high-profile affair has been dubbed “Operation Kitchen” because the code name of the alleged informant was “the cook”.

Fernando Diaz, 72, who served as interior minister between 2011 and 2016, is accused of embezzlement, crimes against privacy and concealment for his alleged role in the affair.

At the time of the alleged spying, Barcenas was at the heart of a judicial probe over a kickbacks scheme which financed the party, known as the Gurtel case, for which he was later jailed for 33 years.

The ruling led to the ouster of the then prime minister Mariano Rajoy in a confidence vote in parliament several days later.

The aim of the alleged spying was to find out what dirt Barcenas had on party officials.

The probe into the spying affair is one of several which have been opened based on searches carried out following the arrest of in 2017 of Jose Manuel Villarejo, a former police commissioner who for years secretly recorded conversations with top political and economic figures to be able to smear them.

Diaz has said he knew nothing about the alleged spying but public prosecutors have called for him to be sentenced to 15 years in jail, according to a copy of the charge sheet published Friday.

Prosecutors are seeking a jail term of 19 years for Villarejo. A date for the trial has not yet been set.

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CRIME

Spain seizes 1.8 tonnes of Sinaloa Cartel’s crystal meth

Spanish police said Thursday they had seized 1,800 kilos of crystal meth that Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel was trying to sell in Europe, the country's "biggest-ever seizure" of the narcotic.

Spain seizes 1.8 tonnes of Sinaloa Cartel's crystal meth

Police arrested five people during the raid in the eastern Alicante province, one of them a Mexican running the cartel’s Spanish operation, a statement said.

“This is the biggest-ever seizure of crystal meth in Spain and the second largest in Europe,” Antonio Martinez Duarte, head of the police’s drug trafficking and organised crime unit, told reporters.

“Among those arrested is a Mexican citizen linked to the Sinaloa Cartel,” he added.

READ ALSO: What are the penalties for drug possession in Spain?

He did not give his name but indicated the suspect was responsible for receiving the narcotics in Spain then distributing them within Europe.

The Sinaloa Cartel is one of Mexico’s oldest, largest and most violent criminal groups whose influence remains strong despite the arrest of its founder Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman and his son.

Both have been extradited to and jailed in the United States.

During the operation, police also detained three Spaniards and a Romanian, seizing five cars, documents, a weapon and cash.

But police believe it was a one-off trafficking operation and that “Mexican organisations are not permanently based” in Spain, Martinez Duarte said.

“These organisations send a trusted person who carries out the operation in line with their interests” and once that is over, he goes back home, he explained.

The seized narcotics had been due to be shipped to central Europe.

Although Spain is one of the main drug gateways to Europe, seizures of synthetic narcotics are uncommon as most traffickers usually deal in cannabis and cocaine.

READ ALSO: Why is Spain’s Europe’s cocaine gateway?

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