MADRID. The prime minister’s chair is a hot seat, and Pedro Sánchez is sweating. Sources close to the investigation confirm that a web of offshore accounts and shell companies is tightening around his administration.
Uncovered documents show payments routed through Panama and the British Virgin Islands, tracing a trail from an energy company to a foundation run by the prime minister’s wife. The scandal has already toppled one minister, but Sánchez refuses to fall. He clings on, calling it a smear campaign.
But the numbers don’t lie. The European Union watches nervously. A destabilised Spain means a destabilised eurozone.
And the cash flows keep coming. This is a story of power, money, and the blind eye turned by those who should see most clearly.












