Local October 16, 2018 - 12:06 pm

Medina accepted illegal campaign donation: Spanish outlet

D. Medina. File

Santo Domingo.- Spanish newspaper El Confidencial.com reveals that Spanish former Commerce minister, Miguel Sebastian, charged with kickbacks and who served during José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero’ tenure, made an illegal donation in 2011 for the campaign of then-candidate Danilo Medina , of the ruling party (PLD), just days before Mariano Rajoy took office.

The outlet reports the donations were from 2000 to 2017 and include illegal commissions, trips to Panamanian leaders and their partners, through agreements without legal base, Louis Vuitton gifts with taxpayer money, US$500,000 dollars from Sebastián to the Dominican Government and an electoral donation of 10,000 euros to the current president.

El Confidencial adds that he official irregularly donated, according to Spanish authorities, to the Dominican Government, allegedly to train the staff that would work in Merca Santo Domingo, a regional market built by the Spanish company Mercasa.

COVID-19

October 13, 2024 - 11:00 am

Public Health to focus on health impact of drinking water

October 13, 2024 - 9:24 am

Cardiologist Moya explains heart is impacted more by heat

October 6, 2024 - 11:15 am

Specialist warns of respiratory virus outbreak in Dominican Republic

October 3, 2024 - 11:44 am

Former Health Minister Wilfredo Hidalgo accused of embezzling over 300 million pesos

MOST READ

Local

Dominican Republic-US open skies agreement set to launch in 2025

Bavaro & Punta Cana

Tourism sector contributes 3 out of every 10 dollars of the Dominican Republic’s foreign exchange earnings

Economy

Airbnb expresses willingness to pay taxes in the Dominican Republic

Economy

Confotur credited for boosting foreign investment in the Dominican Republic

MORE NEWS

Local

Tension at Haina Vacation Reception Center amid repatriation riot

Economy

Maria Abreu and Abreu & Associates empower expats in the Dominican Republic

Economy

CHTA warns against tax reforms in Dominican Republic that could undermine Caribbean tourism

Local

CEED provides daily meals for 3,000 youth at U-17 Women’s World Cup