A Cuban woman who was at the doors of the Valencia Courts, in Spain, rebuked a former Spanish politician who skipped the line to attend the trial in which he is accused of several charges for crimes allegedly committed during his tenure in government positions. .
Shouting “get in line!”, a Cuban woman attackedEduardo Zaplana, who was Minister of Labor and Social Affairs in the popular governmentJosé María Aznar, who arrived surrounded by cameras and journalists at the headquarters of the Valencian courts, in the so-called City of Justice.
The one who was also president of that community (1995-2002) answered journalists about the hearing he was facing in court as he approached the front door.
Suddenly, the attention of Zaplana and the media around him focused on the figure of a Cuban woman who was waiting her turn to enter the building, and who reacted in a bad mood with the arrival of the former politician and the right of way that was given to her. .
“Get in line!” the woman said four times to Zaplana, who was smiling in confusion. “I've been here since early. At nine thirty I have an appointment and this man comes here with a hard face and cameras. "Well, take pictures of me too!" protested the Cuban.
“No, get in line behind me!” said the woman before facing the civil guards who were guarding the entrance to the building and who were doing their best to move her aside and let the former politician pass. "Tell him to pass! "Come on, you are shameless!" the Cuban concluded before Zaplana finally managed to enter the judicial headquarters.
"Spain has a new QUEEN. #HazLaCola #Zaplana," joked a user on social networks, echoing the incident that is already viral among Spanish users who follow with interest the trial against the former politician.
The prosecution requests 19 years in prison for Eduardo Zaplana, whom it accuses of being the ringleader of a plot that would have obtained bribes from concessions during his time as president of the Generalitat Valenciana, and charges him with "membership in a criminal organization, money laundering , bribery, falsification of commercial documents and administrative prevarication".
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