Supreme Court rejects suspension of 3,000 million euro loans to Indra and Escribano

Spain's Supreme Court Contentious-Administrative Chamber has denied Santa Bárbara Sistemas' precautionary measure to suspend 3,000 million euros in state loans to the Indra and Escribano Mechanical & Engineering joint venture. The court finds no evidence of imminent and irreparable harm to General Dynamics' subsidiary. It emphasizes the significant public interest in national defense modernization.

Spain's Supreme Court Contentious-Administrative Chamber has rejected Santa Bárbara Sistemas' request, the European subsidiary of U.S.-based General Dynamics, to precautionary suspend 3,000 million euros in loans granted to the joint venture (UTE) of Indra and Escribano Mechanical & Engineering (EM&E). These loans fund special armament modernization programs (PEM), part of contracts totaling 7,240 million euros, approved by royal decree on October 14 last year.

The court argues that the harms claimed by Santa Bárbara "do not go beyond a mere allegation lacking supporting evidence," with no proof of imminent or hard-to-repair damage. It notes that the company, a global defense leader, would not see its continuity, market position, or jobs threatened, and it already receives other loans, such as 176 million for the Pizarro vehicle upgrade program.

In contrast, suspension would cause "significant harms" to public interest by disrupting military, industrial, and budgetary planning. The judges highlight the national and EU strategy to reduce external dependency and bolster the defense industry, requiring immediate execution of these programs.

The ruling does not address the merits of Santa Bárbara's appeal, which continues its legal challenge against the artillery contract awards, where it sought to propose its Némesis model.

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Dramatic illustration of Escribano brothers selling their 14.3% Indra stake in a high-value deal amid government tensions.
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Escribano brothers sell their 14.3% stake in Indra and exit the company

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Brothers Ángel and Javier Escribano sold their 14.3% stake in Indra through an accelerated placement, valued at over 1.3 billion euros. The deal, announced on May 5, 2026, ends three years of shareholding after a conflict with the Spanish Government. Javier Escribano resigned as company director.

Spain's state-owned SEPI has expressed concern to Indra over the conflict of interest in acquiring Escribano Mechanical & Engineering (EM&E), owned by president Ángel Escribano, whose brother Javier leads it and sits on Indra's board. SEPI demands the conflict be resolved before proceeding with the analysis. The announcement follows rumors that caused a 4.19% stock drop on Tuesday.

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The Administrative Court of Antioquia issued a precautionary measure against Decree 182 of 2026, which planned to transfer more than six million affiliates to Nueva EPS. The judge found that the regulation would create a high concentration of users and endanger their freedom of choice. The government was ordered to refrain from implementing it until the underlying controversy is resolved.

Concepción's Court of Appeals has upheld precautionary measures against three crewmembers of the fishing vessel Cobra, charged with culpable homicide in the 2025 collision that killed seven Bruma fishermen. Following their formalization earlier this month, the court rejected requests to alter the restrictions, while Blumar S.A. faces no measures.

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The European Commission sent two reasoned opinions to the Spanish Government this week over the abusive chaining of temporary contracts in public administrations. It demands higher compensations for affected interim workers and threatens to take Spain to court if the situation is not corrected within two months. Over one million of the three million public employees are temporary.

 

 

 

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