Spain's King Rejects Abdication Talk ahead of Hip Op

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Spain's 75-year-old King Juan Carlos has "at no time" considered abdicating despite needing surgery to replace a prosthetic hip, his eighth operation in just over three years, the royal palace said Friday.

It is the latest in a string of blows for the king, who walks with a crutch and has appeared frail in recent months, while weathering corruption scandals that have damaged his popularity.

He will undergo the operation in Madrid in "the coming days", the head of the royal household Rafael Spottorno told a news conference.

"The king has at no time considered abdication," despite being examined by doctors over recent weeks due to pain in his left hip, he added, however.

Doctors said the monarch will require between two and six months to recover from the operation to replace the prosthetic hip that he received in November 2012.

"Treatment of an infected prosthesis is always through surgery. It consists of replacing the prosthesis," said Miguel Cabanela, a top Spanish orthopedic surgeon from the Mayo Clinic in the United States, who will perform the operation.

"His majesty's general health is much better than average for patients of his age whom I have operated on. He is a very vigorous man, he takes very little medication," he added.

Juan Carlos is widely respected for steering Spain to democracy after the death of longtime dictator General Francisco Franco in 1975, and helping to quell an attempted military coup in 1981.

But his image suffered due to a corruption scandal implicating his youngest daughter Cristina, whose tax affairs are being investigated by a judge, and an expensive elephant-hunting holiday which he took in Botswana last year.

The king's son-in-law, Cristina's husband Inaki Urdangarin, has been under investigation since late 2011 for alleged embezzlement.

While the corruption scandal gained steam, Juan Carlos broke his hip during the secret African hunting trip and had to be flown home for medical care at a time when one in four Spaniards was out of work.

He issued a public apology after his return -- an unprecedented move for a Spanish king -- but the affair fueled calls from some quarters for him to abdicate in favor of his 45-year-old-son, Prince Felipe, the youngest of three children he has with Queen Sofia.

The king had both of his hips replaced last year after his hunting trip.

His most recent operation was in March when he underwent back surgery to treat a slipped disc.

Nearly six in 10 Spaniards (56,9 percent) feel Juan Carlos should abdicate to make way for his son, according to a poll published in March.

Despite his operations and opinion polls showing his popularity plunged last year, the king insisted in a televised interview in January to mark his 75th birthday that he had "energy and hope" to continue ruling.

In April he joked that he would "soon be back causing trouble" during his first official appearance since his back operation.

The king made an official visit to Morocco in July but he began having pain again in his left hip at the start of September, "which became fairly evident in his public appearances", Spottorno said on Friday.

The king had a benign tumor removed from a lung in May 2010. In 2011 he was given an artificial right knee and had a torn Achilles tendon repaired.

He has had 12 operations in total since his first surgery in 1954 in Tangiers to have his appendix removed.

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