New law could expose Spain’s royals

Spain's Princess Cristina waves from inside a car beside her husband, Inaki Urdangarin, in Madrid. The spending habits of the royal family could be revealed under the terms of the country's new transparency law, according to reports. File photo: Daniel Ochoa de Olza

Spain's Princess Cristina waves from inside a car beside her husband, Inaki Urdangarin, in Madrid. The spending habits of the royal family could be revealed under the terms of the country's new transparency law, according to reports. File photo: Daniel Ochoa de Olza

Published Apr 5, 2013

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Madrid - The Spanish royal family has agreed to be included in the country's new transparency law, potentially giving the public unprecedented access to information on its spending and activities, a palace source said on Friday.

The source, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said representatives of the royal family have been negotiating for two months with the government on how to increase oversight of its activities.

The move takes place as the once-popular royals are embroiled in a corruption scandal that has badly damaged their public image and as ordinary Spaniards struggle with a deep economic crisis.

On Wednesday, an examining magistrate charged King Juan Carlos's youngest daughter, Princess Cristina, with aiding and abetting her husband, who is charged with a number of crimes in a six-million-euro corruption case.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, whose centre-right People's Party is also embroiled in a number of corruption scandals, has sent to Parliament a bill for a new transparency law. It is currently being debated.

The bill, as well as other resolutions Rajoy has sent to Parliament, proposes tighter regulation of tax declarations, assets and activities of public employees, rules for lobbying activities, harsher punishments for corruption, and more thorough audits of foundations, labour unions and business chambers that receive public funding. - Reuters

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