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Rodrigo Rato points the finger at Mariano Rajoy

The for­mer pres­i­dent of Bankia, Ro­drigo Rato, is blam­ing the Bank of Spain and the gov­ern­ment for Bankia’s ban­cruptcy again. At his sec­ond ap­pear­ance at the trial at the Na­tional Court about Bankia shares being put on the stock mar­ket, Rato, who ran the or­ga­ni­za­tion from 2010 to 2012 and stepped down May 7 2012, said it was Mar­i­ano Rajoy (who was pres­i­dent of Spain at the time) who was re­spon­si­ble for him leav­ing. “The pres­i­dent of the gov­ern­ment fired me. He fired me per­son­ally. It was a purely po­lit­i­cal de­ci­sion” he told the anti-cor­rup­tion pros­e­cu­tor when ques­tioned. He also pointed the fin­ger at the Fund for Or­derly Bank Re­struc­tur­ing (FROB in Span­ish) and the Min­is­ter of the Econ­omy at the time Bankia shares went on the stock mar­ket, Elena Sagado of the so­cial­ist party, ex­plain­ing that they were the ones who gave the or­ders.

Rato re­sponded to the pros­e­cu­tor’s ques­tions say­ing that launch­ing shares on the stock mar­ket was “rea­son­able” in re­la­tion to the price of the shares. “The law changes the reg­u­la­tory frame­work,” he ar­gued, point­ing out that there was a “change of panorama that was not in line with the or­ga­ni­za­tions’ own strat­egy but rather with ongress”. Rato is cur­rently serv­ing a sen­tence of 4 years and 6 months for the “black cards” case.

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