PM insistent on 'absolute transparency' in finding cause of crashpublished at 15:32 GMT
Guy Hedgecoe
Reporting from Adamuz
Image source, Burak Akbulut/Anadolu via Getty ImagesThe prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, arrived in Adamuz accompanied by a convoy of cars and his security detail. It was an incongruous moment for this sleepy town which sits next to the site of the crash.
The Socialist leader declared three days of mourning and called for Spaniards to unite in grief. However, what caught many people's ear was his insistence on 'absolute transparency' in finding the cause of the accident.
Last April, Spain suffered a national electricity blackout for several hours. The government's failure to give an immediate explanation as to why it happened drew accusations from political opponents of incompetence and encouraged outlandish conspiracy theories.
With almost any news event in Spain now feeding into the country's deeply polarised politics, Sánchez clearly wants to make sure that Sunday's tragedy in southern Spain does not suffer a similar fate.









