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Oct 27, 2025

Canary Islands audit uncovers mis-spent €2.4 m in migrant-minors centres

Canary Islands audit uncovers mis-spent €2.4 m in migrant-minors centres
Delegado del Gobierno Anselmo Pestana confirmed on 27 October that four directors of centres housing unaccompanied migrant minors are under investigation for allegedly diverting almost €2.5 million in EU funds earmarked for food and accommodation. The revelation came during RTVE’s daily “Archipiélago Noticias Canarias” broadcast.

Spain re-opened emergency shelters across Tenerife, El Hierro and Gran Canaria this year after arrivals of minors hit a record 6 800. Brussels finances much of the care through REACT-EU and AMIF envelopes, making strict compliance essential. Pestana called for “limpieza” (“a clean-up”) in management practices and signalled that Madrid may tighten vetting of subcontractors that run reception facilities.

For multinationals seconding staff to the Canaries, the scandal matters because overcrowded or poorly managed centres strain local services, fuelling community tension that can spill over into housing and schooling markets used by expatriates. Companies should anticipate closer scrutiny of any CSR partnerships they hold with NGOs operating minors’ programmes and ensure supply-chain audits include EU-funded social projects.

The case also illustrates the growing role of financial-crime units—rather than immigration police—in steering Spain’s reception policy. As fiscal compliance eclipses head-line arrival numbers, service providers face new reporting duties; mobility teams should verify that relocation agencies have updated GDPR-compliant data-sharing protocols with child-protection authorities.
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