http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/01/21/inenglish/1358798040_751687.html
The ex-premier of Valencia, Francisco Camps, who was forced to step down after his implication in the Gürtel kickbacks-for-contracts corruption scandal, is a fan of Valencia. So much so that his last act in office was to use the Valencia Finance Institute (IVF) to guarantee the loans that Valencia CF, Hércules and Elche had asked the banks for in recent years: 118 million euros in total.
With the announcement by the debt-racked teams that they are unable to pay back these loans, the lenders will trigger the deal in place with the regional government, making it the biggest shareholder in all three sports clubs. This contravenes the Public Limited Sports Company Law, which prohibits any one entity from holding over five percent of more than one team participating in the same competition.
After the execution of the guarantee against the IVF, current regional premier and Camps' Popular Party successor, Alberto Fabra, has inherited a poisoned chalice. The Generalitat has had to absorb 70 percent of Valencia's shares, and unwillingly now also owns 65 percent of Hércules and 45 percent of Elche. At the same time the region's unpaid invoices from pharmacies, care workers and privately run hospitals are stacking up, while massive cutbacks are being implemented in education, healthcare and scientific research.
Three years ago, Hércules borrowed 18 million euros from Caja Mediterráneo to pay player bonuses following its promotion to Primera, and to cover an unpaid tax bill. The club was owned at the time by Enrique Ortíz, who is also embroiled in a corruption scandal and is accused of illegally financing the Popular Party.
Camps' hand is also evident in the collapse of Valencia CF. In 2004, he invited the president of the region's business associations, Juan Soler, to assume the presidency of the club to avoid the return of Paco Roig, who was considered a danger to the team. Soler embarked on a pharaonic plan to build a new stadium. As the construction industry crashed, the new stadium remained half-built, the land on which Mestalla stands could not be sold and Valencia's debt rocketed to 550 million euros.
Bancaja, its principal creditor, placed current president Fernando Llorente in charge and the hemorrhage was stemmed through refinancing and the sale each summer of the team's best player.
The generosity of the regional government under Camps did not end there. Levante also accepted a loan of 5.6 million euros from Caixa Penedés. It hopes to start paying some of it back this year. Villarreal, meanwhile, last year refused five million euros of public money, but has a sponsorship deal with Castellón airport that was worth 20 million euros over five years.
The aerodrome is another legacy of Camps' administration. To date, not one plane has landed or taken off from it.
The future of Valencia, Elche and Hercules may depend on whether other European clubs decide to report them to the European Union regarding their breach of ownership rules, and an investigation from Brussels could derail the rescue of these clubs, according to EU sources.
In 2001, Manchester United and Bayern Munich reported Real Madrid to the EU regarding the sale of its training pitch to the local government.
Valencian Government FC
posted on 25/1/13
Henrik,
as a side note,the lights are still on at the airport,costing god knows what in electricity bills?
posted on 25/1/13
The main point I take from it is that it is illegal and if reported then Valencia could be kicked out of Europe.
Spain is a shambles at the moment, unemployment across the country is 26% (roughly 12million people) and in the Valencian community it is even higher at 28%. Football is struggling to survive there and the total disregard for tax liabilities whilst the Spanish people see their services cut is appalling.
posted on 25/1/13
yep, i agree.
i heard on the local news yesterday that 60% of under 25 year olds are now unemployed.
this is a very worrying statistic.
posted on 25/1/13
Indeed, and what of the figures they are hiding?
posted on 25/1/13
Apparently the government of Valencia are angry that their airport without planes is losing credibility because a Formula 1 Driver is using it as a test track.
posted on 25/1/13
indeed,err, indeed.
its not good here at the moment.as for the footy the smaller clubs will struggle. Barca and Real will always be ok but i fear for Villa Real,Valencia,Hercules etc.
when people have to worry about putting food on the table,football,quite rightly so,will become secondary.
its a sad state of affairs really but quite understandable.