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The wife of Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, Begona Gomez, on Wednesday denied allegations of corruption and influence-peddling linked to her teaching business in her first testimony in court ...
A Madrid court has summoned Begona Gomez, wife of the Spanish prime minister, to appear before a judge on July 5 over allegations of corruption and influence peddling that spurred premier Pedro ...
Madrid's prosecuting authority said on Thursday it had requested the dismissal of a corruption case against Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's wife that prompted him to announce he is ...
Spain was one of the countries seriously affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, which had a significant impact on the economy and Spanish society. [2]Following a referral by the Partido Popular mayor of Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, in April 2022 the Prosecution Ministry opened an investigation into Soluciones de Gestión y Apoyo a Empresas (SGAE), a business support firm, over six suspicious public ...
María Begoña Gómez Fernández (born 29 January 1975) [1] is the wife of Pedro Sánchez, the Prime Minister of Spain. Gómez was director of business outsourcing for the Inmark Group until her husband became Prime Minister of Spain in 2018. From 2018 to 2022, she was executive director of the Africa Center of the Institute of Enterprise.
Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón was born in 1972 in Madrid to well-off parents, Pedro Sánchez Fernández and Magdalena Pérez-Castejón. [5] [6] His father was a public administrator who spent most of his career at the Ministry of Culture's Instituto Nacional de las Artes Escénicas y de la Música (lit.
Spain recalled its ambassador to Buenos Aires for consultations on Sunday after Argentina's President Javier Milei made derogatory comments about Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's wife during ...
On 4 December 1983, mercenaries Mohand Talbi, Jean-Pierre Échalier, and Pedro Sánchez—who had been hired with fondos reservados [note 2] from the Ministry of the Interior—kidnapped Segundo Marey from his home in Hendaye, mistaking him for alleged ETA leader Mikel Lujua. Segundo Marey, who was born in 1932 and died in 2001, had no ties to ETA.