The PP describes the disappearance of the Inalsa papers as a "major scandal" and demands an investigation

The party demands "maximum transparency and an investigation commission where all political parties with representation in the Cabildo of Lanzarote are present"

June 24 2025 (10:04 WEST)
IMG 5551s
IMG 5551s

The Popular Party has described as "extremely serious" the disappearance of the minutes of the Board of Directors of Inalsa that the president of the Cabildo, Oswaldo Betancort, officially confirmed in the last General Meeting. For the popular, "the fact that complete books of three fiscal years (2009, 2010 and 2011) disappear is "enormously worrying" since it is assumed that these documents "are conveniently guarded, either by the secretariat of the Cabildo or by the public company."

"We are not talking about simple pieces of paper or a specific document that may have been misplaced within a file. These are the minutes of board meetings where agreements are adopted that must be perfectly clear and validated because, otherwise, there is no legal guarantee of what was agreed," says Ángel Vázquez, spokesperson for the Popular Group in the Cabildo of Lanzarote.

Vázquez assures that in the Popular Party "they are frankly concerned about the situation and acknowledges that he is not aware of a similar precedent in the recent history of the corporation." "For the moment we only know a few partial data that have been provided in this regard, such as the date on which the incident was apparently detected, in December 2022, and the date on which it was brought to the attention of the justice system, in February 2023," he declares.

From the PP insist that a matter of such importance requires the highest level of transparency, as well as the creation of an investigation commission "in which all political parties that currently have a presence in the corporation are represented, regardless of whether they belong, or not, to the bodies of Inalsa."

It should be remembered that, for now, the proposal to create a commission to clarify the facts is only a mere declaration of intent, since the proposal must be taken to an upcoming General Meeting of Inalsa.

Most read