TVE 1 broadcasts tonight, at 9:30 p.m., a new installment of ‘Weekly Report’. On this occasion, the situation of open war between the president of the Community of Madrid and the general secretary of the PP has placed the Popular Party on the brink of the abyss. ‘Weekly Report’ analyzes the precedents of this crisis and its possible consequences with Soledad Gallego-Diaz, Jose Antonio Zarzalejos and Pablo Simon.
The triggers: the alleged payment by a brother of Díaz Ayuso of more than 280,000 euros related to a contract for the sale of masks to the Ifema hospital in the hardest moments of the pandemic, and the accusations of the Madrid president about the alleged attempt by the PP to spy on his family.
Díaz Ayuso broke all the bridges with the PP leadership this Thursday in an appearance with harsh accusations and recriminations against Pablo Casado. The general secretary returned the accusations and announced the opening of a file. After hours of silence, Pablo Casado, certified this Friday the situation of rupture in an interview on the Cope chain.
Another of the topics that ‘Weekly Report’ will deal with will be the elections in Castilla y León. The results complicate the governance of the largest and most depopulated region in Europe. ‘Weekly Report’ reviews the possible alternatives to form a government, in addition to addressing the reality of several towns that are barely staying alive.
Fernández Mañueco advanced the elections in search of a majority close to the absolute, but he has remained at 10 seats. The spectacular rise of Vox, who has gone from one prosecutor to 13, makes his support more expensive, but Mañueco insists on governing alone. The Socialists have lost 7 seats and they warn him that they will not help him with an abstention for nothing.
One of the most outstanding data of the elections is the good results of the provincial groups and the Soria Ya platform.
What’s more, Afghanistan will also be present in the new installment of ‘Weekly Report’. The country is suffocating under repression and starvation, while the Taliban gain a foothold in power. “Very rarely has the situation in a country deteriorated so quickly” assures Cecilia Garzón, head of the world food program to a team of ‘Weekly Report’, who has traveled to the country half a year after the departure of Western troops.
Afghanistan has always been a poor country, but today the economic crisis is deepening at an unsustainable rate and has spread to the middle class and civil service.
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The Islamic emirate also wants to erase women from the streets. As soon as they arrived, they were sent home and prohibited from working. “My personal stuff is in my office, but I can’t even go and get it because I’m a woman.” explains to ‘Weekly Report’ one of the activists who risk their lives every day for asking for freedom and rights, Munisa Mubariz.