Ryanair has denied allegations that it received illegal subsidies from the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores as part of a deal to offset airport fees it pays in the islands.
Portuguese police on Tuesday searched public entities and law firms in the Azores and Lisbon as part of a probe into whether the Azores struck an agreement with the airline that favoured it through the improper awarding of contracts to promote the region abroad, which investigators say may have served as a covert subsidy.
Ryanair "does not have an agreement with the Azores," the airline said in a statement last night.
It said it had already announced in November that it would cancel its routes to the Azores, citing high fees imposed by airport operator ANA and a lack of government action.
Ryanair has cancelled routes in several European countries, including Spain, Austria and Belgium, over what it says are "excessive fees" levied by airport operators.
Police said the alleged illegal financing could involve several crimes, including subsidy fraud and abuse of power by public officials.
Pedro Fonseca, deputy director of the criminal police, told TV channel RTP Acores that Ryanair may have received public subsidies since 2023 through fictitious financing contracts intended to offset airport fees in the Azores.
The scheme involved a private association serving as an intermediary between the regional government and Ryanair, he said.
A director at the department of planning and structural funds in the regional government said on Tuesday the searches targeted documents related to tourism promotion and that full cooperation with the police was being provided to "ensure maximum transparency in this process".