CNIO maintenance chief dismissed over secret warehouses

Alejandro Aguilera, CNIO maintenance chief, was dismissed on Thursday by contractor Eiffage. He managed warehouses sealed by police in a corruption probe. Technical director Javier de Dios remains in his post.

Alejandro Aguilera, head of Eiffage's maintenance contract with Spain's National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), was dismissed on Thursday, as reported by elDiario.es. As contract manager, he oversaw "secret" warehouses sealed by police late March amid a probe into an alleged corruption scheme linked to former manager Juan Arroyo.

These segregated facilities, unknown to most staff, held construction materials mostly for external works, per investigation sources. A July 2025 complaint to the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office by a former senior official details "self-requests" for supplies with 150-420% markups, minor contracts to skirt limits, and simulated services. Eiffage Energía, starting CNIO services in 2020, states it has received no UDEF or prosecutorial requests and is ready to cooperate.

The dismissal aligns with nine Gedosol workers' contracts ending, a firm under scrutiny, bringing recent exits to 20 per CSIF union. CSIF demands an urgent Science Ministry meeting over centre paralysis. Staff gathered at CNIO gates this morning to protest and seek clarity, opposing essential personnel departures. The ministry under Diana Morant has not commented.

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PDI Director Eduardo Cerna testifying before the Chamber of Deputies' Security Commission on Consuelo Peña's retirement.
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PDI director assumes responsibility for Consuelo Peña's retirement before commission

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PDI Director General Eduardo Cerna testified on Monday before the Chamber of Deputies' Security Commission that he decided the retirement of Prefect General Consuelo Peña, subdirector of Intelligence, Organized Crime and Migration Security. He reaffirmed it was an institutional decision per current regulations. Ruling party lawmakers praised the presentation and called to end the generated controversy.

Spain's National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO) is reviewing whether scientist Mariano Barbacid violated its code of good practices by failing to disclose a conflict of interest in an article retracted by the US National Academy of Sciences. The paper, on a pancreatic cancer therapy tested in mice, was withdrawn because the authors did not declare their shares in Vega Oncotargets, the company set to commercialize the patent. Despite knowing since March, Barbacid did not inform the Cris Cancer Foundation, which raised 3.6 million euros in donations.

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Doctor Raúl Rabadán has decided not to assume the role of scientific director at the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (CNIO), despite unanimous selection in September 2025.

Chile's Minister of Women and Gender Equity, Judith Marín, confirmed the Kast government will continue pursuing the involuntary resignation of SernamEG director Priscilla Carrasco once her medical leave for breast cancer treatment concludes. This follows last week's initial request, which was paused due to her retroactive leave. The move continues to spark cross-party criticism amid questions over management and political trust.

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On the second day of the masks case trial at Spain's Supreme Court—following initial testimonies from family members denying corruption involvement—witnesses detailed the hirings of Claudia Montes, friend of former minister José Luis Ábalos, and Jésica Rodríguez, Ábalos's ex-partner, in companies under the Transport Ministry. Montes admitted reading train books during work hours, while accounts highlighted unexcused absences and ministerial interventions.

The government of President José Antonio Kast requested the non-voluntary resignation of Priscilla Carrasco, national director of the National Women's Service and Gender Equality (SernamEG), on Monday while she undergoes treatment for triple negative breast cancer. The decision drew cross-party criticism, including from officialdom, for lacking empathy given her health situation. Kast justified it citing a loss of trust due to management differences.

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Following Comptroller General approval and publication in the Official Gazette, the nationwide oncology sanitary alert—declared by President José Antonio Kast in late March amid delays affecting thousands on cancer waiting lists—has taken effect. It grants the Ministry of Health extraordinary powers to expedite diagnostics and treatments for 33,000 patients until September 30, 2026, with potential extension.

 

 

 

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