Rufián points to Vox as heir to the coup plotter Tejero: “Now I would not enter with a pistol, I would enter with a deputy act”

MADRID, 5 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS) –

Defense Minister Margarita Robles praised this Wednesday the work of the 3,000 agents who are part of the National Intelligence Center (CNI) and their efforts in favor of “peace, freedom and against terrorism.”

Robles has thus pronounced herself in the control session of the Government in Congress when asked by the ERC spokesman, Gabriel Rufián, about the documentary ‘Save the King’, in which two former agents of the Spanish intelligence service relate to the king emeritus with the attempted coup.

“It refers to a documentary that I am not aware of,” Robles has cleared, recommending in exchange another film that will be released soon about the eight CNI agents who were killed in an ambush in Iraq in 2003 “for working for peace and freedom, fighting terrorism”.

Instead, Rufián has claimed that, if he really trusts “the word” of the CNI agents, listen to those who talk about the King Emeritus in the documentary produced by HBO. “I appeal to his patriotism, what are you going to do?”, He has asked him.

But in addition, he has speculated that “surely” the current monarch, Felipe VI, “would not have to do what he did before.” “Tejero would not enter with a pistol, he would enter with a deputy act, in fact there are 52”, he has accused in reference to the Vox parliamentarians.

Precisely this Tuesday the representatives of the PSOE, the PP and Vox at the Congress Table stopped a new attempt by United We Can and parliamentary partners of the Government so that the Chamber investigates “the scandals related” to Juan Carlos I and the “involvement of some estates of the State” to control the information about them.

These three parties, following the criteria set by the legal services of the Chamber, refused to admit the request presented last week by the minority partner of the coalition government, together with ERC, Bildu, Más País, Compromís and also Junts, the PDeCAT and the Galician Nationalist Bloc (BNG); under the argument that it is not admissible “taking into account the institutional position of the Head of State in the constitutional framework.”