The vice president of the Consell, Mónica Oltra, has come out this Friday in the face of the forceful and harsh report of the Prosecutor’s Office that attributes the possible commission of three crimes in the case of the minor abused by her husband. Oltra has not cut herself and has pointed out that “when the truth becomes incredible, this country has a problem.”
In addition, she has made it clear that she has no intention of resigning because the only red line that she has drawn is “the truth.” “And the truth and reality is that none of these thirteen people [those investigated in the process] nor I have done anything illegal or dishonest,” she argued.
In fact, he has emphasized to questions about his possible resignation: “Nothing has changed and more after reading the report of the Prosecutor’s Office.”
The vice president and leader of Compromís has defended herself by questioning the work of the Prosecutor’s Office. “The reality is what it is. It is said that there are 13 people who have entered to protect me. The president has assured that she does not know all these people, they do not know what they vote for, or if they like her and she regrets that the prosecutor does not believe them and questions their independence when some of them have been working for the Administration for 20 years.
In this sense, Oltra has indicated that the reports “must be based on facts and evidence, not on speculation and conjecture. That is unheard of”, he pointed out from the chair of spokesman for the Valencian Government. Likewise, he has acknowledged that he “would be lying if he said that the tone of the Prosecutor’s Office has not surprised him.”
And neither has she slackened in her argument that the extreme right is behind the accusation against her. “They are at the door”, she has pointed out to refer to the small concentration led by the leader of Spain 2000 in front of the Palau de la Generalitat.