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Second time lucky: Spain’s royal Ferraris finally get buyers

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The first time they went up for auction, there were no buyers. But on Thursday, two Ferraris gifted to Spain's former king Juan Carlos by an Arab sheikh finally went for nearly 444,000 euros, the government said.

A symbol of corruption in Spain's scandal-hit monarchy, the black and silver-plated cars were ceded to the state by King Felipe VI when he took over in 2014 after his father's abdication and pledged to clean up the royals' image.

The crown's popularity had been severely damaged by Juan Carlos's lavish lifestyle at a time of devastating economic crisis in Spain, as well as Princess Cristina's alleged involvement in a corruption scandal targeting her husband, for which she has since been acquitted.

The sports cars were given to Juan Carlos by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, after the former king visited his country in 2011, but he never drove them.

They first went under the hammer in November 2015 for an asking price of 350,000 and 345,000 euros ($400,000 and $394,000), but there were no buyers.

In Thursday's auction in Madrid, however, they went for 201,555 and 242,287 euros, one of them to a car dealership and the other to a private buyer, the finance ministry announced in a statement.

Felipe has ordered members of the royal family not to accept any extravagant gifts. Any official presents they receive must now be donated to national heritage.

The first time they went up for auction, there were no buyers. But on Thursday, two Ferraris gifted to Spain’s former king Juan Carlos by an Arab sheikh finally went for nearly 444,000 euros, the government said.

A symbol of corruption in Spain’s scandal-hit monarchy, the black and silver-plated cars were ceded to the state by King Felipe VI when he took over in 2014 after his father’s abdication and pledged to clean up the royals’ image.

The crown’s popularity had been severely damaged by Juan Carlos’s lavish lifestyle at a time of devastating economic crisis in Spain, as well as Princess Cristina’s alleged involvement in a corruption scandal targeting her husband, for which she has since been acquitted.

The sports cars were given to Juan Carlos by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, after the former king visited his country in 2011, but he never drove them.

They first went under the hammer in November 2015 for an asking price of 350,000 and 345,000 euros ($400,000 and $394,000), but there were no buyers.

In Thursday’s auction in Madrid, however, they went for 201,555 and 242,287 euros, one of them to a car dealership and the other to a private buyer, the finance ministry announced in a statement.

Felipe has ordered members of the royal family not to accept any extravagant gifts. Any official presents they receive must now be donated to national heritage.

AFP
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