Spanish police arrested a mother and daughter suspected of shooting dead a ruling party politician in broad daylight on Monday in apparent revenge after the younger woman lost her job.
Officials said the wife and daughter of a police inspector were arrested on suspicion of gunning down Isabel Carrasco, conservative leader of the provincial council in Leon, northern Spain.
Police put a white sheet over Carrasco’s body as it lay on a pedestrian bridge above the Bernesga River in the northern city.
Photo: EPA
The killing of Carrasco, 59, a longtime local leader of the governing Popular Party, shocked the Spanish political world and halted their European election campaigns.
Officials said an assailant fired several bullets at Carrasco in the late afternoon.
The two woman were arrested shortly afterward and police are investigating whether they killed the politician.
“It seems that the daughter was fired yesterday from the council where she worked as an engineer,” an Spanish Ministry of the Interior spokesman said. “For that reason, everything indicates that it was personal vengeance. The police are carrying out tests to find out who fired the shots. The gun has not been found.”
An man who asked not to be identified who was walking by the river at the time said he heard five shots as he passed under the footbridge.
“We thought it was firecrackers. At that time the place was full of people, children playing, people walking their dogs,” he told the online edition of El Pais.
The national government delegate in the Castilla y Leon region, Ramiro Ruiz Medrano, called it “a tragic act without explanation” and said Carrasco was not known to have received any threats.
He said the two women were “the wife and daughter of a police inspector.”
Spain has seen many political killings over its history, but the Spanish Ministry of the Interior said Carrasco’s did not look politically motivated.
Numerous Popular Party officials were assassinated in the 1990s and early 2000s in killings blamed on the Basque separatist group ETA, which announced an end to violence in 2011.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said on Twitter he was “dismayed by the murder of Isabel Carrasco.”
“My condolences and support to her family and friends. Now is the time to be united,” he wrote.
Besides being head of the Leon provincial council, Carrasco was also leader of the party for Leon Province.
Both the Popular Party and the main opposition Spanish Socialists cancelled campaign acts for the elections for the European Parliament which are to be held in Spain on May 25.
A lawyer by training, Carrasco was born in the province of Leon and held various provincial and regional posts, according to her biography on Leon city hall’s Web site.
She had led the Leon provincial council since 2007.
Local newspaper Diario de Leon described her as a “powerful character.”
“Despite her small size, her very strong character and the way she took the reins of power caused her to be known as the ‘super-delegate,’” it wrote.
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