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Acciona confirms that the contracts referred to in a Spanish corruption probe are not irregular.

The Spanish construction firm Acciona announced on Thursday that it found no evidence to support allegations of corruption in the public works contracts which are at the center of an investigation into the Socialist Party.

According to Acciona's CEO Jose Manuel Entrecanales, the case involves a former Acciona employee who left in 2021. He contracted Servinabar 2000 as a partner for a joint venture with a company that is being investigated by the police over allegations of corruption.

Acciona, according to him, has over 30,000 partners.

Local media reported that Servinabar had denied any criminal activity. Servinabar could not be reached for comment.

After a police report was published in the media, which included recordings of former members of Sanchez's inner circle discussing kickbacks for public infrastructure projects, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez promised a complete overhaul of his political party.

The contents of a leaked report have not been confirmed by the police, who has seen a scanned copy.

Acciona's legal team said that it had not found any evidence of irregularities or bribery in the awarding process of the contracts cited in the report. The company said that no complaints had been made by other companies about the tenders held in different Spanish regions.

Santos Cerdan, the third-ranked Socialist Party member, resigned last week after leaked recordings showed him discussing bribes in a meeting with the former Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos. Both men have claimed innocence and said that the recordings may have been manipulated.

At least three shareholders expressed concern about the investigation during Acciona’s annual meeting. However, Entrecanales stated that the probe would not impact the Spanish construction business of the company, which only accounts for 3% in its global construction business.

Acciona said it has terminated contracts with Servinabar, and dismissed the head its construction department in Spain because he failed to supervise the former employee adequately. Corina Poins is the reporter. (Editing by Charlie Devereux, Mark Potter and Mark Potter.)

(source: Reuters)