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Spanish PM punched by wife's cousin during walkabout

The sudden attack on the Spanish leader was caught on camera

Rose Troup Buchanan
Friday 18 December 2015 07:52 EST
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Spanish PM punched by teenage cousin

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A teenage boy who punched the Spanish Prime Minister is a distant relation of the leader.

Mariano Rajoy, 60, was approached by the 17-year-old boy, named locally as private schoolboy Andrés de V. F, and asked to pose for a selfie while walking through crowds in Pontevedra city, Galicia.

The attack, which left the PM unhurt although minus a pair of glasses, was caught on camera.

Andrés, who is believed to be the son of a cousin of Mr Rajoy’s wife Elvira Fernández Balboa, according to ocal newspaper La Voz de Galicia, was sentenced to six months in a youth detention centre on Thursday for attacking the PM.

As he was led away from the scene in Pontevedra, the teenager appeared to have no regrets. Rasing his hands he gave the crowd and enthusiast thumbs up and reportedly shouted: “I’m happy I did that".

It has been reported the teen, who has been expelled from many of the top schools in the Galician region, had recently been treated for depression having shown troubled behaviour.

The PM later told Spanish news service Telecinco it was “over very quickly”.

"The only problem was that my glasses fell off and I could not find them, but then normal life resumed."

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