Madrid Leader Cifuentes Resigns Over Supermarket 'theft video'
![Image result for cristina cifuentes](https://estaticos.elperiodico.com/resources/jpg/2/7/1523443548372.jpg)
The head of
Spain's Madrid region has stepped down amid shoplifting allegations, weeks
after being accused of faking a master's degree.
Cristina
Cifuentes condemned as a personal attack the publication of a video from 2011
showing her handing items to a supermarket security guard.
It is
claimed she had taken two pots of anti-ageing cream worth €40 (£35; $50).
Ms
Cifuentes, 53, gave up her master's last week when it emerged that two
signatures on the document were forged.
A prominent
figure in Spain's ruling centre-right PP (Partido Popular), Ms Cifuentes had
already come under pressure from political opponents to resign because of the
degree affair.
She told a
press conference on Wednesday that she had planned to announce her resignation
next week but had brought it forward in response to the latest allegations.
Her
resignation is a blow to Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, whose party has faced a
succession of corruption scandals. By stepping down she averted a motion of no
confidence which she said would have brought Madrid under the control of the
left-wing socialist and Podemos parties.
Mr Rajoy
said the president of Madrid's regional government had done the right thing in
stepping down.
Ms Cifuentes
condemned the video that appeared on the OK Diario website on Wednesday as part
of a "campaign of harassment aimed at bringing me down". At the time
the video was recorded, she was number two in the Madrid assembly.
However, she
went on to admit the recording was genuine.
"It was
an involuntary mistake and it's being used to go beyond political issues, it's
personal," she said. "I was already the target of blackmail two years
ago for that video, but this time I tell you a red line has been crossed."
The erupting
scandal surrounding Ms Cifuentes has also hit King Juan Carlos University, from
which she received the fake master's degree.
The head of
its law institute has been suspended after initially supporting the Madrid
region's president. The institute's deputy director earlier had resigned in
protest at her signature being forged.
The region
of Madrid is home to 6.5m people and Spain's capital city.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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