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OLIVE PRESS
The
MALLORCA
FREE
Mask off! A BACKLASH against new rules forcing people to wear masks on the beach and by swimming pools has prompted the Balearics government to contradict the national administration. It has said that masks do not have to be worn provided that two conditions are met. The first is that you must be alone or with people from the same household and second, that a 1.5 metre distance can be kept from another person or group. The Spanish government had published in the Official State Gazette (BOE) that masks would be mandatory in all public spaces even where safety distances were met.
Slammed
It would have meant someone lying on a deserted beach stark naked could be fined for not wearing a mask. This decision was quickly slammed by the Balearic government with health minister Patricia Gomez immediately appealing for flexibility on the measure. “We believe that masks should not be worn on beaches if you are with people from the same household or if the safety distance can be respected,” said Gomez. A day later and after discussions with their legal team, Gomez explained that the new national law does not override its own regional legislation. “There is a sentence in the national law that mentions ‘in conformity with the health authorities.’ Continues on Page 4
Vol. 4 Issue 103
www.theolivepress.es
Your expat
voice in Spain April 9th - April 22nd 2021
Keep out
‘Fury’ at Spanish airport as 40 Brits deported back to UK, while dozens are kicked off flight from Gatwick DOZENS of Brits arriving at Alicante airport have been refused entry to Spain and sent back to Manchester on the same plane despite having evidence that they had residence status. Border guards had erected a sign in the terminal stating, ‘NO TIE CARD, NO ENTRY’ to the amazement of travellers, some of whom were flying to Spain to collect their TIE cards. Some 40 people who had arrived from Manchester Airport were left upset, angry and confused considering UK border officials AND airline staff had approved exit from the country. Stuart Miller, a 47-year-old offshore-worker from Manchester, described the situation as ‘absolutely diabolical”. “Even travellers who had letters from Alicante Foreigners’ Office asking them to collect their residency cards were turned away,” Miller told the Olive Press. “I mean what more proof do you need of residency?” Some of the others sent back included a woman wanting to see her sick father, stranded and alone in hospital. So heavy hand-
EXCLUSIVE By Simon Wade
ed was the arrivals desk that border agents were flanked by armed police, putting ‘the terror of God’ into those waiting to be questioned. “It appeared that only those who were actually on a list of legal residents, possibly checked in advance against the plane’s manifest, were allowed in,” said Miller.
Tension
“The rest of us were sent back without even being able to explain our legitimate reasons.” As the 40 plus travellers re-boarded, the flight was subsequently delayed, adding further to tension in the cabin. Miller added: “There was no advice, no help and no good reason for us being turned back at Alicante.” Ryanair staff had assured every traveller that their documentation - including COVID tests, letters and passports - was sufficient to gain entry into Spain. Mr Miller’s wife, Caz, warned other travellers: “Whatever paperwork you have with you, and whoever tells you that you’re
Discover hassle-free currency transfers Portals Nous, 07181, Mallorca. DISAPPOINTED: Stuart Miller
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DIABOLICAL: Brits were turned away by Spanish authorities
okay to travel, be prepared to be carted back on to the plane and sent back. “I think the airport policy depends on nothing more than the mood of the officials at the border.” Since the incident, other Brits travelling from UK airports to Spain have been subjected to ‘arbitrary rules made up on behalf of another country’, according to one Olive Press reader. One expat based in Rincon de la Victoria, near Malaga, told the Olive Press that a ‘staggering dozen or so passengers’ were refused to board his flight from Gatwick to Malaga yesterday (Monday). The retired businessman, 60, who asked not to be named, described it as ‘running the gauntlet’. “It was so traumatic. You just had no idea who was going to be allowed on. “Everyone turned away had valid PCR tests or they had valid reasons to travel, whether to see ailing relatives or to secure or visit their properties,” he said. Meanwhile, a retired IT professional described how he was turned away from boarding a Ryanair flight to Alicante at Manchester on Monday. He had specifically checked the gov.uk website to check that buying a property was one of the ‘reasonable excuses’ for travel to
Spain. He described how he and six others were turned away at the gate because they weren’t in possession of a TIE card, regardless of their reason for travel. “Ryanair staff had made the arbitrary decision to deny their passengers travel on behalf of the Spanish authorities,” said the 63-year-old who only wanted to be identified by his first name Alec. He claimed that staff had ‘no intention’ of engaging in any conversation and couldn’t back up or justify their own ruling with any evidence in print or online. Others refused on board the FR4007 included a woman with Italian citizenship who was travelling back to her family home in Spain.
Embassy
And a married couple, where the husband had the TIE card, but not his wife. “It is crucial that when making plans to travel from the UK to Spain, a UK National must make sure that they meet both the requirements to leave the UK and those to enter Spain, bearing in mind that they are not the same,” said a statement from the Embassy in Madrid. Opinion Page 6
2
CRIME
www.theolivepress.es
NEWS IN BRIEF Face mask fail FIVE men were detained after attacking two Policia Local officers in Capdepera. Neighbours had called police to report that the men were causing a disturbance on the street and were all failing to wear a face mask.
Hash bash FOUR people have been arrested for drug trafficking and belonging to a criminal gang after eight kilos of hashish was found by police during a raid on a flat in Palma’s Son Espanyolet district.
Hitting out THE Vox party has called for an Algerian teenager to be deported after hitting an employee at a centre for minors in Palma. Deputy spokesperson Toni Gili said: “These are children that refuse to adapt or follow the rules and instead take justice into their own hands."
SMOKED OUT: Family run marijuana plantation
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
A JOINT operation coordinated by police in Columbia and Mallorca has led to the arrest of eight members of the same family that trafficked narcotics into Spain from South America. The investigation was initiated in June 2020 when police at Bogota’s El Dorado airport discovered a package destined for the Mallorcan town of Son Severa was concealing almost 5 kilos of cocaine. Policia Nacional in Mallorca were immediately notified and a task team was set up to bring down the responsible criminal gang.
Sting operation
Family fortunes In Mallorca, covert surveillance was undertaken at the address and on the inhabitants’ movements. Once enough evidence was collected, police raided four properties, finding large quantities of cocaine, two marijuana plantations with over 100 plants and various cutting equipment. Eight people were arrested in the sting, all who have been charged with drug trafficking and belonging to a criminal gang.
AN APPEAL has been made to catch the individual or group behind the theft of 21 beehives in Mallorca. Mel Vici de Alaro, an island born company that produces and sells honey, revealed that their beehives had been stolen from a farm in Petra. The bees had been taking part in an important environmental project where they were pollinating almond trees planted on the land. Owner Pau Queralt estimates the theft to be of at least €15,000 and said that ‘the thieves knew what they were doing’ as they took off with the heaviest hives.
Failed test
A DOCTOR has been caught handing out fake PCR certificates to German tourists holidaying in Mallorca. In an investigative TV series with reporter Sascha Winkel and aired on the German RTL network, the doctor is seen
Fake COVID certificates handed out for €80 issuing negative certificates to tourists that have not been tested for coronavirus at the Medizin Centrum in Santanyi.
Biker horror A MOTORCYCLIST has had their foot amputated after being seriously injured in a road accident. Police are appealing for information on the driver that mowed down the man then sped off. The incident happened at the intersection that connects Cami de Ca Na Gabriela and Carretera Militar in s’Arenal around 5.30pm Tuesday afternoon. Investigators say the suspect hit the biker after speeding through a red light. As a result of the impact, the victim was thrown several metres in the air before landing on a grassy verge. Medics administered first aid then took the victim to Son Espases hospital where he had his foot amputated. He remains in serious condition.
In the documentary, travellers explain to Winkel that the private clinic was offering these certificates to be used to return to Germany for €80. Before being handed the document, the tourists say that the doctor asks what date they would like to be put on the certificate.
Hidden
Winkel then wears a hidden camera and makes an appointment at the clinic where he is given a PCR certificate in minutes and without being asked to take any type of test. With the results in hand, Winkel asks the doctor for an explanation as to why he didn’t need a test, but the doctor refuses to comment on the matter.
Essential
REPORTER: Sascha Winkel Working with Interpol, Spanish police have since contacted the German authorities to obtain the raw footage collected by Winkel with the reporter travelling to Mallorca this week to be interviewed by investigators. At present, the German government has made it a requirement for all of its citizens travelling abroad to present a negative PCR test on their return home. In the Balearic Islands, international travellers that test positive are isolated in a hotel dedicated to COVID-19 patients.
“Each box contains essential information for monitoring the swarm, such as how long it has been active or the type of bee that it contains,” explained Queralt. Policia Local say the thieves carried out their theft with ‘precision’, undertaking the theft in the dead of night using a truck. Anyone with information is urged to contact the police. In recent years, pollination has become big business in Spain and thieves are now targeting hives with growing sophistication. Just this week, a man was arrested for stealing bees from their hives in the Murcia region and then selling them around the country.
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NEWS
www.theolivepress.es
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
3
LOVE RETURNS ONE of Britain’s most popular reality series is set to be filmed in Spain this summer. Love Island is reportedly gearing up for its big return after the coronavirus halted last year’s production plans. Producers of the hit dating show had earlier confirmed that the series would be going ahead as hoped for 2021 and sources have claimed it will return to Mallorca this year. A source said: “All precautions have been taken to make sure it goes smoothly. They’ve included COVID safety measures and increased checks on contestants’ mental health.”
Walk off
VALENCIA football team walked off the pitch after an allegedly racist slur directed at one of their players. The game against Cadiz on Sunday night was temporarily abandoned after 30 minutes when Cadiz’s Juan Cala allegedly flung insults at defender Mouctar Diakhaby. Cala, who has since ‘strenuously denied’ allegations against him, received a yellow card for his actions and seconds later Valencia players made the decision to halt the match and walk off the pitch in protest. Diakhaby eventually urged his teammates to continue the match and Hugo Guillamon took his place on the pitch. Cala stayed on for Cadiz and the team eventually won the match 3-0. Following the incident, Valencia released a ten-point statement entitled ‘no to racism’ on their official website. They added that Diakhaby is the ‘latest victim of racism in football’.
Footballers behaving badly Stars flouting COVID travel restrictions
Jammy Queen!
TROUBLE: Goncalo Guedes
HAPPY FAMILY: But Marcelo could be in the dog house
REAL Madrid star Marcelo could be fined €2,700 for breaching COVID-19 regulations after he posted a photo of himself enjoying an unauthorised
Royal approval QUEEN Letizia never puts a foot wrong, and continued to show off her array of high fashion ensembles as she attended celebrations to mark 275 years since the birth of renowned Spanish artist Francisco Goya. The royal, 48, opted for a tailored jacket and skyscraper heels for her appearance in Zaragozaher alongside her husband King Felipe VI, 53, to remember the painter who was born near the city in the town of Fuendetodos in 1746. The mother of two cut a stylish figure as she greeted members of the Goya Foundation in Aragon and the Goya Fuendetodos Cultural Consortium.
Anniversary
Letizia teamed a sleek pair of black trousers with an elegant white jacket and carried a small bunches of flowers wrapped in pink tissue paper as she attended the event in the Spanish city. The event marks the 275th anniversary of the birth of Goya, a world renowned artist who gained fame during the Romantic movement. He is often referred to as both the last of the Old Masters and the first of the moderns, as he was very successful during his lifetime and is now considered the most important Spanish artist of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
By Kirsty McKenzie
day trip to Valencia. The club’s €10 million player is under investigation after he shared a snap of his family at Malvarrosa beach on Instagram last week. In the image, Marcelo can be seen beaming alongside his wife and children, with none of the family wearing a mask. Marcelo, his wife and e l d e s t son now
face being slapped with individual fines amounting to €700, €600 for not respecting the perimeter closure plus €100 for not wearing a mask in a public space. The fines amount to 0.01% of his salary. Marcelo is not the only one who has been misbehaving of late - Barcelona manager Ronald Koeman was spotted in Marbella and Valencia player Goncalo Guedes went to Ibiza over the Easter weekend.
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SEVILLA’s Moorish Royal Alcazar palace is famed for the colourful splash of its orange trees. But palace authorities face a problem of what to do with all the fruit when they pick them to encourage new blossoms. Now they have decided to get rid of some of the problem by sending them to Queen Elizabeth. In a revival of an old tradition, a crate of the citrus fruit is to be packaged up and presented as a gift, with the oranges destined to be turned into marmalade to grace the royal breakfast table. The tradition of Sevilla gifting oranges to the British royal family dates back to the reign of Queen Victoria. Her granddaughter Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg married into the Spanish House of Bourbon.
NEWS
www.theolivepress.es From front
Off limits “Our legal team understands that by this, our legislation is not superseded by the national one, and our own measures will therefore remain in force.” Meanwhile, the interior areas of bars and restaurants will continue to be off limits to the public for at least another two weeks. Announcing the extension at a press conference, tourism minister Iago Negueruela said: “We have restrictions because we have a virus. “We cannot lose sight of the situation in which we find ourselves and I ask for responsibility from everyone to bring the pandemic under control.” Asked about measures for the Balearics once the nationwide state of alarm ends on May 9, Negueruela said that the government are ‘currently studying what decisions to make’, but maintaining the 10pm curfew may be one of them. As it stands, the accumulated incidence rate of coronavirus remains stable in the Balearic Islands, with 58.4 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. By islands, it stands at 57.2 in Mallorca, 33.1 in Menorca, 28.3 in Ibiza and 66 in Formentera.
A BRITISH man died after a 45 metre fall from a Mallorca viewpoint in Formentor Witnesses said that the 56-year-old apparently 'threw himself off' the top of the Es Colomer viewpoint and landed on the cliff rocks.
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
Cliff death
Franco on hold
The Guardia Civil said he was a local resident who lived in nearby Pollenca. A mountain rescue team got to him by using ropes to descend from Es Colomer and confirmed that he had died.
THE renaming of streets linked to dictator Francisco Franco in Palma de Mallorca has been put on hold. The city council had intended to wipe out the memory of Franco by renaming 12 streets at a cost of €40,000. However, the project received heavy criticism from historians who accused the council of ‘mistreating history’, and asking for a review before going ahead.
Optimistic Sanchez
PRIME Minister, Pedro Sanchez, has said that he does not plan to ask Congress to extend Spain’s second State of Alarm beyond its scheduled ending of May 9. Sanchez also detailed the country's vaccination schedule at a news conference on Tues-
No plans to extend State of Alarm past May 9 day with 70% coverage to be achieved by late August. The current State of Alarm was introduced to give the country's 17 regions legal support for in-
TOURISTS that test positive for coronavirus while in Mallorca will be isolated at a dedicated hotel. The Balearic Ministry of Health said that any international traveller diagnosed with COVID-19 will be taken to the IB-Salut run Melia Bay hotel in Palma and locked away. Holidaymakers that test positive at an airport or port control will also be isolated here. At present, the hotel is caring for 11 German tourists and two Balearic residents –
troducing local curfews and border closures to slow down COVID-19 infections. Pedro Sanchez said: “We want May 9 to be a full stop and we are
Plague hotel the latter who are not able to quarantine at home due to their social status. Government spokesman and tourism minister, Iago Negueruela, said that the tourists will be allowed to leave the hotel once a negative result is yielded. Asked who will pay for these stays, Negueruela said the Balearic government ‘would not be responsible’.
working towards that. We have no plans to extend the State of Alarm any longer.” Sanchez was bullish over the vaccine roll-out programme with a large rise of doses expected to be delivered over the coming weeks and months. Ever since December, the Prime Minister has stuck to his guns that 70% of the population would be inoculated by late summer. He backed up his confidence with details of Spain's vaccination timetable. “We will be getting 3.5 times more doses in the second quarter of 2021 compared to the first,” he stated. That adds up to 38 million doses, rising to 48 million between August and September. “10 million people will have got two injections by the first week of June.”
Discovery island MALLORCA has won a lucrative deal with the Discovery network which will showcase the island as an all-year-round sports destination. Presenting the €400,000 campaign at a press conference this week, Consell de Mallorca president, Catalina Cladera, said that the project would ‘play an important part in the island’s recovery after the coronavirus health crisis’. "We want to convey to the whole world that right now, our greatest attraction is that we are a safe destination for tourism and with this first great promotional campaign we will contribute to the dream that many of us have, which is to travel again," said Cladera. The audience reach will be Europe-wide with an estimated 25 million views thanks to special features being broadcasted on Eurosport 1 and 2, the Global Cycling Network and Discovery Golf, amongst others.
Nurse PTSD A STUDY by the SATSE nursing union has revealed that 90% of nurses in the Balearic Islands are suffering from post-traumatic stress as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, with levels of anxiety doubling in the last seven months.
OP QUICK Crossword Across 1 Roman Empire expert (6) 5 More likely to be off work (6) 8 Resort to violence (3,5) 9 Clever remark (3) 10 Five flew on Apollo 17 (4) 11 Lord ---, Lord Chancellor 1970-74 and 197987 (8) 12 Crackers (4) 13 Off this, it’s not made for you (3) 14 Fix socks (4) 15 Unforeseen difficulties (8) 18 Way of walking (4) 19 Parisian nose (3) 20 Surgery hang-ups? (8) 21 Cause trouble (4,2) 22 Night flight (3-3)
OP Sudoku
4
Down 2 Uplifting (13) 3 Help-yourself spreads (7) 4 Bridge hand (5) 5 Oozing (7) 6 Thoroughly searches (5) 7 Remarkable (13) 13 Idle pup messing about in a heap (5,2) 14 Fuel for Rovers? (3,4) 16 Unclear (5) 17 The highest degree (5)
All solutions are on page 30
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The Olive Press all editions - FP_342x256 - PROMO MAN - April 7th
6
NEWS FEATURE
www.theolivepress.es Voted top expat paper in Spain
A campaigning, community newspaper, the Olive Press represents the huge expatriate community in Spain with an estimated readership, including the websites, of more than two million people a month.
OPINION GET A GRIP! THERE was a depressing inevitability about the latest round of bad news relating to Brexit and the ongoing travel restrictions between Spain and the UK . The blame for this fiasco lies squarely with an incompetent and disorganised relationship between the two governments. Boris Johnson and his cronies were part of a dishonest campaign during the 2016 referendum which led to the country voting narrowly for leaving the EU. In the mess that followed, Johnson refused to back sensible compromises and instead pursued an ideologically rigid Brexit that was oblivious to the concerns of thousands of people who rely on free movement, whether it is to be with their families or boost the economy. We’re still paying for the recklessness of Brexit – with no end in sight. And while vaccines will deliver us from the worst of the travel restrictions, the hard truth is that it will take some time before faith in travelling between Spain and the UK is restored. But there is something that the Spanish government can do now - and that is GET A GRIP! It is unforgivable that it can not ensure its own agents - police and border controls for example follow ITS OWN RULES. These incidents reported on our front page must not be swept under the carpet or tied up in knots with red tape. And while potential solutions are not obvious, the UK Government must provide as much support to Brits to help them navigate this nightmare - not wash their hands of the problem or worse, direct them to another vague statement on the government website. The rules need to be clearer, the communication needs to be stronger between the EU and the UK and airlines need to assure passengers that they won’t be hauled back home on arrival. We can accept Brexit has happened. But no one agreed to this fear and uncertainty as a result.
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Driven to distraction EXCLUSIVE By Fiona Govan
S
PAIN and the UK are holding high level discussions to allow Brits to continue to exchange their driving licences for Spanish ones without the need to take the Spanish driving test, a senior British diplomat has told the Olive Press. It is one of those issues that has been a thorn in the side of Brits living in Spain as Brexit loomed; the need to exchange British driving licences for Spanish ones. The issue took on an urgency for Brits as the end of the transition period approached. Appointments at the DGT were scarce due to a sudden last minute rush compounded by delays during the pandemic Brits were told that as long as they registered their intent to exchange their driving licences before December 30 then they would have six months in which to do it.
Test
Battle of 100 DAYS ON: The phoney war’ is well and truly over three months after the end of the withdrawal transition period and the consequences for expats are just starting...
T
HOUSANDS of British expats who were oblivious to rule changes in the New Year have been left exposed and unprotected in the new age of Brexit, warns The Expat Centre in southern Spain. Under the terms of the Withdrawal Agreement, Britons wanting to enjoy the rights and freedoms they previously enjoyed living in Spain, must now prove they lived here legally prior to December 31. While most registered as residents under repeated advice by both British and Spanish authorities, and hundreds more are still in the process of getting their documentation, there are still many who failed to start the process before the end of year deadline.
Those who missed the boat have been told they will have to take the Spanish driving test. However, there is some hope that a simple swap may be re-introduced. David Hunt, the Head of Citizens’ Rights and Mobility Department (Europe Directorate) at the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office told the Olive Press: “We are working on an agreement with the Spanish authorities that will allow Brits to exchange their driving licences for Spanish ones without the need to undergo a practical test.” However, he could not guarantee that a bilateral agreement would be in place before the present June 30 deadline and warned people to follow the legal requirements in the meantime. “We are hopeful for a future agreement, but in the meantime ask people to follow the rules of the road in the countries where they live.”
By Fiona Govan
Brexit is ringing the changes in Spain - but it’s not the sound of till bells
L
This leaves potentially thousands of Brits unprotected in Spain without healthcare, without rights and – thanks to COVID-19 – without a way of easily getting back to the UK. Those who are not legally resident or in the process of applying for residency, risk falling foul of the 90-day rule that came into effect at the end of March. “Any stays beyond the 90 days in any 180-day period will be dependent on the applicable visas and immigration rules for Spain. This may require applying for a visa and/or permit,” warns the British Embassy. Many of those struggling to get their paperwork in order have
HOMEWARD BOUND: How many Brits will have to leave?
Costa packet OST deliveries, disastrous delays, hefty hidden customs duties when goods do arrive – business owners in post-Brexit Spain report that things have changed but not for the better. Nadine Walker (pictured below), who runs Nest gift boutique in one of Madrid’s coolest neighbourhoods, has faced nothing but obstacles in the three months since the Brexit transition period ended. Over 13 years she has built up the business to become the capital’s go-to place for British greeting cards, funky wrapping paper
By Simon Wade
and handcrafted knick-knacks imported from the UK. “But since Brexit I have had huge problems with deliveries,” she fumes. “Orders used to arrive within three to seven days but since New Year, I’ve had deliveries go missing, packages that have been turned around and returned to the UK and had to be resent … And I’ve had to pay couriers cash on arrival to cover customs duties that weren’t included in the original price.” When you run a small business with narrow margins, this is more than a mere annoyance. “At the beginning of January, I made a big order of cards and gifts for Valentine’s Day but it didn’t arrive until well after February 14, so I lost out on all that trade,” she adds. She now has to pay between €10 and €50 extra on each delivery and often has to struggle to get receipts so that she can claim it against tax. “My margins have become smaller, and I’m trying to source things from elsewhere within the EU, such as Ireland. But I set up the shop specifically because there was a gap in the market for the sort of things I could find in the UK but not here.” Nadine hopes that these are just teething problems that will be sorted out in the coming months. “The big problem seemed to be that no-one knew what the new rules were, especially the courier companies. I’m already worried about Christmas which is when I need to rely on deliveries coming in on time.”
Fighting for
A
NNE Hernandez is supposed to be retired. Instead she spends her days and much of her nights helping Brits across Spain sort out problems that have been caused by Brexit. “Since January 1, I have been busier than ever,” the President of the Brexpats in Spain organisation told the Olive Press. “It’s incredible how often I was accused of scaremongering when insisting people needed to sort themselves out and get their paperwork in order before the deadline. “Now they are coming and asking for help to get residency, sort out their driving licences, get in the health system, but many of them have just left it too late. “There was this arrogance of ‘Oh I’m British and the Spanish need us here so they’ll sort something out for us,’ and only now are they realising the full impact of not being registered as residents,” she said from her home in Mijas Costa “I just can’t fathom why so many people left it until the last minute. There are those Brits who just had their head in the sand about the whole thing and ignored the warnings and have no-one else to blame but themselves,” she explained. “But there’s also a whole lot of people who tried to do things properly and went to lawyers or gestors and unfortunately were given the wrong advice.” She complains that different issues arise from region to region, province to province and often depending on different civil servants working within the same office. “We have a Spanish system that has just
7
Time’s up!
Olive Press online
By Kirsty McKenzie
become overwhelmed with applications and apparently confusing guidelines that means the decisions are often left to individuals behind the desk. “The decision on whether your residency application is accepted or rejected could come down to whether the clerk is having a good day or has skipped their morning coffee,” she said. Spanish authorities have not stated what measures will be taken for those who overstay or whether exemptions will be made for those affected by travel restrictions imposed during the pandemic. “No-one knows the real implications of overstaying as we have no real guidance about what will actually happen to people if they don't leave when the 90 days is up. Could they be fined and told to leave the country? Or will they be deported?” Hernandez asked. “Some of these people don’t have homes anywhere else and yet could be banned from Spain,” she said. “Brexit has caused a hell of a mess,” she concluded.
BUT The good news is…
B
RITISH holidaymakers can now claim back the IVA (VAT) on goods bought in Spain - as long as they are not resident in an EU country. As Francesca Cerqua, Knowledge Manager at Marosa VAT in Spain, clarifies: “If a UK traveller visits Spain and makes purchases where Spanish VAT is charged and the value of those purchases is above €90.15, he or she will be able to reclaim that Spanish VAT at the airport before taking the plane back to the UK.” In addition to spending a minimum of €90.15, a British holidaymaker shopping in Spain must: - Live in England, Scotland or Wales. - Take the unused goods outside of the EU within a three-month period. - Display their passport upon purchase together with a separate document providing proof of address. - Complete an electronic refund document while in EU territory and have it validated at EU customs.
When making the purchase, request an electronic refund form (known by the initials DER in Spain), which you must validate electronically before checking in your luggage at the airport. To do this, go to the indicated counters, or the offices displaying the tax free seal, and show them: - Your passport. - The goods for which you are requesting the refund. - Your boarding pass or ticket. This is a fully digital process, so you won’t receive a physical document after validation. However, people can check the status of their refund at any time by putting their CSV number (secure verification code), which appears on their electronic tax free form, into a search bar at the official website. And remember, if the goods are worth more than £390 in total, they will have to be declared at customs in the UK, incurring import VAT and possible duties. Happy shopping!
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THE START: The first edition of the
Olive Press in 2006
March 24th - April 6th 2021 Vol. 15 Issue 365 www.theolivepress.es
As the Olive Press reaches its 15th birthday, we recall a few of our favourite interviews and remember a couple of our top readers, such as ex-prime minister Rajoy (above) and prime joker Paul Gascoigne...
after a EXCLUSIVE: Private school warning moved to Spain, convicted British paedophile and found dodged criminal record checks work as an English teacher Spain INTERNATIONAL schools around a British have been put on high alert after most man began teaching at one of Madrid’s conexclusive colleges months after being victed in the UK. Lewis, Questions have been raised after Ben be31, was able to work at the school despite ing on the UK’s sex offenders register. Lewis, The Olive Press has discovered that sex ofwho is now awaiting trial for child V, fences at Centro Penitenciario Madrid and a managed to hoodwink TWO schools
NAMES: two different passports
Fiona Govan in Madrid
idenlanguage academy after creating a new tity, using forged documents. reFormer colleagues of the sex offender to dodge vealed that he created a new namerun sumcriminal record checks in order to to mer camps and teach private classes young children. after He had changed his name to Ben David and being convicted in June 2016 of taking in possessing indecent images of children England. As well as being placed on the sex offender list and being handed a two-year suspended sentence, he was barred from leaving the country or working with children. Yet within weeks he had moved to Spain and found work in Zaragoza as a livein au pair to a family with three young children. The following year he relocated to Madrid and began teaching children at a well-known language academy after getting a criminal record check from Zaragoza police to show he had no convictions in Spain over the previous 12 months. Then in December
Horrified
for 18 “We worked together at the school gomonths, took on private classes together for ing to the homes of some of the children summer extracurricular teaching and ran a said the camp at the school during 2018,”horror at Irish colleague, who is filled with the access he had to children. the day The Olive Press has discovered that his after sentencing in the UK he changed Lewis name by deed poll from Ben David just 15 to Ben David, in a process that takes minutes. a British He then applied for and received also prepassport in his new name, while he Israeli sented a doctored photocopy of his a passport stamped and verified by non-existent law firm that showed his name as Ben David Rose. The Olive Press has seen photocopies of these, plus a teaching degree and Qualified Teaching Status (QTS) certificates presented in the name ALL AREAS COVERED of Ben David Rose as well as certificates in his original name. 4G UNLIMITED What is amazing is that by April 2019 he had applied for a teaching INTERNET job at a leading private school in the IDEAL FOR upmarket Arturo Soria district that STREAMING TV teaches the British curriculum to the ALSO IPTV, children of Madrid’s elite. By now he also had a DBS certificate SATELLITE TV
X
Award Winning Rehabilitation Clinic
post DANGER: Lewis got teaching teacher 2017 he accepted a job as an English secat a leading semi-private (concertado)from ondary school that receives subsidies the state. David by “He was going by the name Ben another then and was offered the job aftera former teacher dropped out mid-term,” the Olive colleague Natasha Fitzsimons told Press. the posi“I think they were desperate to fill as tion so maybe they weren’t as thorough they should have been.
...meanwhile, we spend time at the home of the world’s most famous plumber as he announces he’s becoming a Spanish citizen, after 15 years here and losing €15m to his ex-wives...
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Opinion Page 6
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Vol. 15 Issue 365 March - April 2021
Getting things done
ROM its very first issue in 2006 the Olive Press has been campaigning for its community. Whether fighting for the environment or digging into crooks, we have taken some big scalps. Starting from Issue One (see top right) we highlighted the ridiculous plans to build 2000 houses, two golf courses and two hotels on UNESCO-protected land near Ronda, as well as exposed the madness of building a 350-room monstrosity on a virgin beach in Almeria’s Cabo de Gata. Both schemes - Los Merinos, in Ron- maverick Jeremy Griffiths, and Nigel da, and the Algarrobico hotel, in Alme- Goldman, a degenerate gold-dealing ria - went into reverse after our stories dirt-bag, who had a restaurant column made the UK AND Spanish national in a local newspaper, which he used to newspapers and green groups includ- cover his tracks. ing Greenpeace and Ecologistas en Ac- We also tackled timeshare crook Toni Muldoon, who certainly deserves a cion joined our protests. And then there were the crooks, like mention for conning thousands of peoCrimestoppers’ Most Wanted Daniel ple and eventually went to prison for Johnston, a bank robber, and Matthew setting up fake escort websites. Sammon, a dangerous paedophile, Meanwhile, our crime reporting on who we single-handedly tracked down missing teen Amy Fitzpatrick ‘blew open to a village near Sevilla and a car park the case’, to use the words of her grandmother, while our continuing investigain Fuengirola. And fraudsters like David ‘the dogman’ tion into missing Maddie McCann has yielded exclusive after exclusive, with its Klein, pet transport frequent links to Spain. DON’T MISS OUR 20-PAGE
ON ESTEPONA
Vol. 8 Issue 186
www.theolivepress.es
CONMAN FOUND
PEDDLING COINS
The Olive Press
A decade and a half of campaigning has scored some big wins for the Olive Press
Andalucía’s Fortnightly
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Issue 26, January 24th 2008
Where are they?
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On behalf of all at the British Embassy and Consulates, I want to wish huge congratulations to all at the Olive Press on your 15th anniversary. The English language press plays a vital role in keeping UK nationals in Spain informed. And we very much appreciate your help in getting key messages out to UK nationals here. After an incredibly difficult year for so many of us, including many businesses, it is great to see the Olive Press thriving. We look forward to seeing what the next 15 years bring. BRITISH CONSUL CHARMAINE ARBOUIN
Publication
HOW TO DEAL WITH A MID LIFE CRISIS
**Western Edition** PR ON THE PROWL
Living Consciously
page 16
We send our hot new columnist to interview designer Sophie Cranston
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The hulking shell SWATHES of set for a 311-room of concrete - once danger of beingrural Andalucia are in mega resort remained an eyesore has a new planning concreted over after for years after work was halted by the regional law was brought in Bunkers are also by the courts. Green groups government. 700-home golf being dug to stop a tas en Accion including Ecologisand Greenpeace Nerja, which course scheme, near joined with hundreds have ment of one will see the developof local associations to fight final stretchesof the Costa del Sol’s fronts opened on a series of new up during the And protestersof pristine coast. crisis. COVID digging in to in Mijas are also SOON LEGAL?: They are up Algarrobico used to build stop the law being called LISTA in arms over the so- one, but TWO in woods overlooking the new hotels on the lockdown law - passed during beaches in virgin Thesea at El Chaparral. - that is set to the dozens of previously allow ed natural park supposedly protect- took first of many planned protests of outlawed proj- The place outside ects to go ahead. first involves Cabo de Gata. council offices la in In particular, a 30-room hotel the green light for It Cala de Mijas this week. activists are outraged could also see about a controversial famous Bahia near the globally Valdevaqueros the controversial de Los Genoveses new golf beach, while course in Nerja, project of hundreds stand of woodlandas well as a final star hotel the second is for a two- of homes go up on a heavily-proclose tected in Mijas. They are also de San Pedro to the pristine Cala Under virgin beach, near Tarifa. furious about bay the recently not Protestors fear the(pictured above). resubmitted project, backed new law will now allow the legalization of also Rosa Quintana,by TV celebrity Ana nearby between the stunning Bolonia and Tarifa area El Algarrosee a series of would bico hotel, Ecologists are hotels get built. built also worried that dis- Los Merinos the gracefully project for on a virgin courses and hundreds two-golf of housbeach, near es on UNESCO-protected Carboneras, land near Ronda could be virgin due to a despite being quashed by revived, the Sup l a n n i n g preme Court. mix up. Fairway to hell: See page 6
GREEN CAMPAIGNS: Against golf courses (left and top) Tel: 952 147 834 in issue See page 24 one and coastal lopment (above) develast year
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Within an hour, team scrambled the Olive Press car, Sammon learning from to Fuengirola, and remainedcovered his face another builder silent when that he was currently questioned by the Olive camped He was out at the feria then bundled Press. ground. into the After a day working BMW and taken nearby, the be Londoner duly fingerprinted to Madrid to English-plated arrived in his for extradition. and prepared cream Moncayo campervan. Following the Parking up, he two Reid said arrest, father-ofas he took his looked relaxed to see Sammonhe was ‘relieved’ dog for a walk taken away. around the feria “As ground and the soon as I saw his face among spoke with neighbours. most wanted I felt sick,” Once identified, we called the said Reid, from Blackpool. Guardia Civil and Crimestop- “I let him hang around my pers and so began children, we took him in with a tense threehour waiting game, with Reid arms and at first were noneopen sitting in the car wiser. the Sky News crime beside us. reporter Mar- “But we always thought he tin Brunt was was a bit weird, he’s Eventually, assoon there too. never talks abouta real loner and his family. and truly fell, night had well “He creeped an unmarked my family out black BMW much that so plain clothes arrived and two Incredibly, I fired him.” detectives swiftly police moved in for the evidence from did not take any cating his passportarrest, confis- cluding his his campervan incomputer and Frisking him at and phone. other the side of the CONTINUES
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page 24
Exclusive story
Longest established British bar
Open
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EXCLUSIVE: snare one of Expat tip leads Olive Press UK’s most wanted team paedophiles to
EAGLE-EYED readers helped Olive Press snag one of BritWORDS AND ain’s most wanted By Rob HorganPICS Spain, just hours fugitives in and Laurence Dollimore after he had been named. Following a tip off to the paper, al Crime Agency, who arrived suspected paedophile the scene after at the arrest. Matthew “Well Sammon was campervan in dragged from his thanks done Olive Press and to the expat community time raid and a dramatic night- for tipping whisked away an unmarked police in son we run us off, this is the reathese car. Working closely The dramatic campaigns.” day had started Daniel Reid, with informant when Crimestoppers firstly track we were able to annual issued its to Fuengirola, down Sammon tives in list of most wanted fugiTorremolinos Guardia Civil tothen call in the day morning. on ThursOn the run for arrest him. two years, Sam- Leading to hundreds mon - a blackbelt of press stories around in Jujitsu the world and was wanted in the UK for shar-- on national television, ing indecent images the hunt was immediately on. His seizure came of children. But, it was to popular just 10 hours after he was named local newspaper the in Opera- that Olive Press tion Captura and expat plasterer recorded arrest is the quickest reached Reid, in the joint UK out to, trusting 40, and Spanish police us to SUCCESS: ‘do the job properly’. Reid, Horgan, “It was a fantastic operation. Reynolds and result,” said In a series of Facebook Brunt Steve Reynolds, from the Nation- sages, he announced that mes- as a labourer and was Sammon, 45, had worked for him living in a campervancurrently the Mijas and Fuengirolaaround area.
INVESTIGATIONS: Tracking 59€ down paedophile Matthew Sammon, probing missing Amy (right) and exposing animal cruelty (far right)
Fuengirola
21st 2020
page 3
19th 2007
the
olive INVESTIGATES press
AN ecological nightmare, hundreds of “This is ancient oaks parently stand ap- attempt a cynical and botched to create ambience Pulled up for dead. a huge golf mac- around the golf roproject, they course and create space,” line up in rie rows like said tree surwar graves in ee- geon Kit Hogg. Somme. “I am sure the very few of these Many centuries old, they have trees will survive. protected been sacrifi It is disgusting.” ced for Europe’s insatiable desire Despite ongoing holiday homes. for golf and stop the work, EU efforts to Part of investigations and – crucially costaficationthe unrelenting guarantee – no of Andalucia, of they sound Los Merinos,water, work at the death knell nature conservation near for continues unchecked. Ronda in southern Spain. This is the true price of golf.
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BANGED UP: into police carSammon bundled and (inset) campervan his
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Fortnightly News
EU steps in to investigate El Algorrobico hotel opening after Junta u-turn that “disgraces” Spain... while a pair of British pensioners watch as their house - which DID have a licence - is torn to the ground.
on page 3
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Last stretches by new law, of pristine coast endangered alongside inland beauty spots EXCLUSIVE
Full story on page 16
While Brits’ dream home is demolished in Almeria
can reveal that The Olive Press may the Russian President a multimillion have bought with a euro Marbella mansion group of six businessmen.
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See page 8 & 9
in the sun
Cartel behind Putin’s mystery costa home
IMPACT: Tracking down crooked Nigel Goldman (above) and covering the devastating Costa del Sol fire in 2012
legends Ferran Adria and Gordon Ramsey. And it was nice to chat to Ciudadanos leader Albert Rivera, as well as the only newspaper to be able to pose a couple of questions to Michelle Obama on her visit to Marbella a few years ago. Indeed, the positives far outweigh the negatives and we would prefer to be judged over 50 rather than 15 years. As far as we are concerned we have only just begun.
www.theolivepress.es
CAGED!
And were these men involved?
El Horrible opens
can Nigel
EXCLUSIVE: fraudster and By Tom Powell using reveal that convicted Jamie Micklethwaite is back in business Monte’ fraudster Ni- Goldman ‘Howard Del COSTA del Solis hiding out the false name gel Goldman last year country Goldman fled Spainof fraud, in a classic English Couling false name his partner Suzannewares via amid accusations cottage under the dozens of vicleaving behind peddling their mil‘Howard del Monte’. ‘Del Monte’ - are account called tims owed a total of €15 Goldman - aka to the busi- a joint Ebay lion. answer has also returned and selling ‘Bensons Emporium’. staff told the he refused to happy ness of buying antiques, it Village post office he regularly While he seems Olive Press that addressed to questions, Couling, her two coins, stamps and living with in the can be revealed. month lease collects parcels and also ‘sends daughters and two cats propRenting on a six Berkshire ‘Del Monte’, modest three-bedroom in the charming he and many packages’. erty. village of Kintbury, are Kintbury’s (top) with Suzanne While the pair conversation, UK bolthole and hottest topic ofseen and ‘keep HIDEOUT: Goldman’s a parking ticket. why he they are rarely themselves’. to say to you, with understand themselves to live nearby “I have nothing if a trafto meeting “I don’t hasn’t been arrested, but I look forward happier in Couling’s family find him then he called down. BRITS are stillreports sugfic warden can in Hungerford.secretive man you again,” can,” said Spain, despite have abansurely the police In fact, the who wished to is seemingly gesting 90,000 dream. the neighbour, from Del Monte leaving the Parking ticket doned the expatOlive Press remain anonymous. village only ever seen post office. An exclusive but “Everyone in the more than house to go to the Press conGoldman, whathair was disheveled, survey found that of our readWhen the Olivehis country- His did not have the mous- knows he’she goes under.” three quarters since makhe his claimed he ever name fronted him in refused ers are happier tache some haveas part of his Goldman, who deleted is side retreat, Goldman recently, door, instead now sporting ing the move. Facebook accountinvestigated to come to thehis head out of is disguise. Coul- currently being see No briefly poking to return millions For the full story, The previous morning, dream on leaving the for failing his fihis bedroom window. end to Spanish ing was seen load up their of euros to investors in page 4. house at 9am to Zafira with nancial companies. Olive silver Vauxhall off, possibly Various victims told the are practically boxes and head Press that they life after losing their to a car boot sale. Building explained that destituteto his schemes, that One neighbour Costa Del Sols Leading into the savings since 1996. Page 4 the day they moved warden arContinues on and Window Specialist, house, a traffic the couple rived and issued
It’s MORE fun
When it comes to corruption we were the first English newspaper to write about the ERE scandal at the Junta de Andalucia that cost an estimated billion euros to the taxpayers, while we also tackled town hall theft on a local scale on dozens of occasions. Animal cruelty has been a continual bugbear and we have exposed so many evil abusers, as well as the scoundrels who allowed hunters to kill innocent circus lions and tigers at a finca in Extremadura (see below). On a more positive front, it was great to interview everyone from Princess Diana’s ex-lover James Hewett to cooking
the olive press
14 2014
FROM ENGLISH
The man from Del Monte
EXPOSED: COSTA
on page 2
www.theolivepress.es
only English-language The original and in Andalucía investigative newspaper
April 30 - May
FREE
girls A PAIR of young Max Clifdophile PR guru on the ford sexually assaulted led to his Costa del Sol have conviction. visiClifford - a long-time and involved tor to the coast local events in charities and guilty of - has been found sexual assault, eight counts of mostly on minors.groomed on At least two were being lured in the coast, afterof stardom. with promises here with his He is pictured Kenny Lynch showbiz chum at a bash in Marbella.
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their rights
Diminished
Roughly half of the 800,000 British property owners in Spain have residency, but the rest, like Sue and Dave can now only spend a maximum of 90 days in the country during any 180-day period. Sue said: “It doesn’t make sense for us to become residents as we only spend three months a year here and the process of getting residency is long and complicated. “But now our hands are tied. We have to go back whether we like it or not.” Dave agreed: “Brexiteers say they voted for freedom but I don’t feel free. I feel diminished.” Due to coronavirus travel restrictions, the task of returning to the UK hasn’t been easy on the pair - or their finances. The couple shelled out nearly £800 in travel expenses and COVID tests and had four flights cancelled since the start of the year. “If we had failed our COVID tests or if the airline had cancelled the flight we would immediately have become illegal immigrants through no fault of our own. It’s daunting,” said Dave.
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turned to get help from The Ex- have access to social media or pat Centre based in Ciudad Que- trustworthy news sources, have sada on the Costa Blanca. been unaware of the recent and “Brexit has changed so many ongoing changes. things in a wholly negative way,” “This leaves Brits vulnerable and Moira Carmenate who runs at the mercy of hearsay – I really The Expat Centre told the Olive feel for them.” Press. Pressure on some Spanish auThe Withdrawal Agreement thorities has forced them to wasn’t properly amend the required thought through and documentation that the consequences A lot of elderly Brits would use to for some individuals prove their residenfolk living here cy status. and businesses have been catastrophic,” have not been It has emerged that she continued. the Foreigners Ofaware of the “After four years fice in Alicante will of soundbites and now only accept a changes false promises from copy of the 2020 pathe UK government, dron as proof that an those picking up the applicant was living pieces are the vulnerable Brits in Spain before December 31. right throughout Europe, not just Barbara Cobos is an established Spain. translator and residency expert “As a consequence a lot of el- based at The Expat Centre who derly folk living here who don’t told the Olive Press that the change in requirements was to ease the strain on the authorities that process residency applications. She said: “The strain on the system has been unprecedented since the new year, and the auShe may thorities just can’t cope. “Currently, there is still no forbe retired, mal agreement in place between but Anne UK and Spanish governments to clarify what the Third Country Hernandez ruling is regarding residencia eligibility,” said Cobos. has never
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HE Olive Press launched in 2006 and has just celebrated its 15 year anniversary (below left). This is the 366th edition of the newspaper in print and now we have some exciting news to share about our next project. While across the Costas our readers enjoy picking up their free newspaper every fortnight to be informed on the big issues in Spain and what’s going OLIVE on locally, our team of PRESS 15 YEARS journalists are also workOF FUN ing every day to bring up Lessons to date reliable news from needed across Spain on our website, which receives over 1 million visitors each month. We aim to serve our readers with not just the top news of the day from around Spain but explain the stories beyond the headlines and explore those issues that could impact your life and experience in Spain. It is here that we can provide the latest news from extreme weather warnings, to new travel restrictions as well as breaking exclusives and campaigning on those issues that are important to our readers. We will imminently be launching a new dedicated travel website that will provide detailed guides, re- FOOD,DRINK ILLA & TRAVEL SEV SPECIAL views, travel tips from our team of writers who want to share their experience of destinations across Spain and what we love about SNAPSHOTS them. reipaN anoI :OTOHP
LINES DRAWN: Britain and the EU are both looking after their own interests
A site well travelled
The
A
FTER spending almost every summer in Spain for 50 years, Sue Cronin and husband Dave Cronin (pictured below) couldn’t wait to buy their very own apartment on the Costa del Sol. Five years ago they found the perfect spot – an idyllic flat in Estepona overlooking the Med where the pair could leave behind rain and responsibilities in the UK and enjoy long, hot days in the sunshine. But their carefree retirement plans were short lived. Not long after they purchased their dream home, the UK voted to leave the European Union. “When Brexit was announced we were horrified,” said Dave, 73, who voted to remain. “We knew it would have terrible consequences for British people living in Europe, but no one could have predicted how much of a complete and utter disaster it would be. “I don’t think the British Government is fully aware of the hidden consequences of Brexit affecting the day to day life of people in Europe.” Now after five months riding out the pandemic from their holiday home, Sue and Dave are one of the thousands of Brits who wereforced to return to the UK by March 31. “It’s terrible timing. The restrictions are lifting and the sun has arrived, it really is the perfect time to be here,” said retired musician Sue, 69. “We’ve always been able to come and go as we please and now we are no longer able to stay in our own home. We had no choice in the matter. We would have become illegal immigrants on April 1.”
‘Spain’s best English news website’
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April 9th - April 22nd 2021
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ON PAGE 2
Bracing for Brexit
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Vol. 11 Issue 257
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January 18th
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THERESA May has vowed Britain won’t half out’ Brexitaccept a ‘half in, speech that is in a landmark likely to have long-lasting effects on Gibraltar and all expats in Spain. The Prime Minister issued 12-point plan to take Britaina out of the EU, ing Street looking with Downto scrap EU single market and current customs union access. In the biggest month tenure,speech of her sixclear, what I amshe said: “To be proposing cannot mean membership of the single market.” She added Britain would no longer give ‘huge EU, however she sums’ to the Parliament will conceded that vote on the deal. have the final Maintaining the common travel area between the United Kingdom and EXCLUSIVE Ireland is also the Republic of By Gabrielle a priority during Pickard-Whitehead the Brexit negotiations. and Laurence Dollimore However, the tar with Spainborder of Gibral- A BRITISH was not menexpat rushed to the tioned. after finding five has called in police vets he died 30 later. of her dogs executed minutes a late-night massacre. in An X-ray showed The Guardia in 2004, found Control shot through the he also had a bullet ing the horrificCivil are now investigatin their pens onthe five rescue dogs shot Meanwhile, roof of his mouth. “We want to attack that one of the Reyes (ThreeJanuary 6, the night of was migration fromcontrol our im- of Illona Mitchell’s horses also left one also attacked, Mitchell’s 12 horses Kings). with its eye Her beloved seven-year-old so savagely May. “We also the EU,” said gouged out. eye may have to be removed. that its of the friendliest Dizzy, ‘one Vets importance of recognise the The detectives from the have been struggling environment the brightest section Seprona meet’ and a puppydogs you will ever four-year-old, and the best coming to treat the told called Maisie shot dead at the here. We it was one of the worstMitchell, 48, that were he has become named Rocco, because recognise the attacks too nervous and Meanwhile Cocogates of their pens. have made.” contribution they seen and were visibly shocked they had Deeply traumatised skittish. They have put shot in their beds, and Domingo, were thankfully by the May is believed on extra patrolsby it. with Mitchell was not seen attack - that ing they had permit system to favour a work- an eye on the estate at weekendsto keep by her daughcowered in their believ- ter Ella, 11 - Mitchell before being killed and at kennels so angry continued: “I trigger Article 50as she looks to night. in cold blood. am that someone “I am sickened Coco, two, had would do someIt comes as the by March. thing as disgusting as to why range betweenbeen shot at point-blank animals.” as this to innocent published data House of Lords would carry out such a cruel someone the eyes, while and bar- week. year-old Domingo three- Mitchell, der closure withshowing a bor- baric attack on innocent, was shot through from side of his face. put 40% of jobs Spain would animals,” she told the Olivedefenceless The mother-of-one, the tack is linked Chester, believes the atPress this her at risk in Gito her recent They later found above, who bought braltar. ban hunters from decision to estate in mountains German Shepherd,Jack, a six-year-old estate her huge 173-hectare near Granada The 32 page-report, that sits in stunning having convulsions under a nearby based on Gibraltar the Sierra de Baza. scenery in tree, but despite government evibeing dence, estimates Continues on Rock’s 26,000 10,500 of the Page 4 the border daily.workers crossed Opinion Page Est 1984 6 “A frontier which necessary fluidity lacked the fore put directly would thereAntiques, Jewellers of 40% of the at risk the jobs For all your Gibraltar work& Pawnbrokers force,” said a spokesman. insurance needs! May’s speech A huge variety was cheered of over Leave campaigners, by 1 carat diamond pushing for a ‘hard’ who are jewellery. Brexit. She said:“We adopt a model do not seek to HIGH STREET PRICES: already enjoyed estepona@ibexinsure.com by other countries. Choose one of 7,000€+ our great We do not OUR PRICE: 1,500 seek to hold on lens offers or - 2,000€ get 30% bership as we to bits of memoff selected Fuengirola “The British leave,” said May. frames UNBEATABLE change. And people voted for PRICES GUARANTEED See our ad inside it is the governWE BUY, WE ment’s job to deliver for details. fuengirola@ibexinsure.com PAY MORE, WE it.” Diamonds@anthonys-diamonds.com PAY CASH Opinion Page 6
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18 January
Happy 15th anniversary!
April 7th - April 20th 2021
As the Olive Press prepares to launch a brand new travel website, we give you a preview by taking a look around Andalucia’s historic capital
Thanks
17
OF SEVILLA
STUNNING: Sevilla is a city noted
for its beauty, architecture, gardens
and lifestyle
in Spain. By Dilip Kuner In this four-page special, to celebrate our dedicated travel portal to Spain, the launch of HE streets of Sevilla are normally thronging at takes the this time of year. a look at some of the highlights ofOlive Press Sevilla. The first city to be spotlighted in Tens of thousands of people flock our new to the capi- website, tal of Andalucia to witness and savour in the coming months we will be travel the solemn taking pasos, or processions, that wend their way through a close look at Cordoba, Granada, Ronda, Madrid the historic heart of the city at Easter. and Valencia, plus all the other key destinations An extremely popular tourist destination around - equally Aside Spain. busy for the Feria de Abril a few weeks later - Sevilla dozensfrom the articles included here, there will be is famous for its beautiful architecture more vignettes and features on Sevilla and its outdoor lifestyle and terrace dining. as well as its wonderful province. But, as these pictures show, now This includes potted guides to the if you want to avoid the queues - is the time to visit mona, Ecija, Osuna, as well as key towns of Carand it is all down special features on to COVID-19 restrictions. the curious communist town of Marinaleda, mounOf course you may have to wait tain escapes like Cazalla de la Sierra and the wonthe restrictions to finally lift, but a few weeks for derful Roman city of Italica. you a taste of the treats in store these photos give At the moment, while many foreign tourists are when you CAN finally make a trip to one of the most missing out on their travel dreams, famous cities local at expats can make the most of whatleast the is easily Europe’s most diverse and colourful country. Watch out for the new portal which will be at:
T
It’s been a year with few opportunities to travel thanks to the coronavirus pandemic but we are optimistic that Spain will open up to tourism again soon, so we want to inspire you to plan your next trip. We are starting with a focus on that most fabulous of all Spanish cities, Sevilla, a firm favourite among our staff who have gone to great lengths to discover not just the highlights of the Andaluce capital itself but also places of interest within the province. We have eaten typical Andalucian delicacies, sipped sherry in squares filled with the scent of orange blossom and walked miles across cobblestones all in the name of journalism. You’re welcome! https://travel. theolivepress. es/
EMPTY: Sevilla’s streets are normally
packed at Easter (below centre)
The top five most read stories on www.theolivepress.es in the past two weeks are: Fury at Spain’s Alicante Airport as 40 Brits 1 -deported back to UK after clearing customs at Manchester Airport (55,057 views) No plans to deport British citizens as au2 -thorities in Spain urge calm over 90 day rule (views 5,070) away at UK boarding gate by 3 - Brits turned staff acting on behalf of Spain (views 3,956) Backlash as controversial new rules for 4 - Spain’s beaches are being reviewed within hours of starting (views 3,956) Semana Santa hats conical and 5 - Why arearethethey linked to the KKK? (Views 2,636)
Get in touch today at sales@theolivepress.es or call us at 00 34 951273575 for a special quote
8
GREEN
www.theolivepress.es
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
What is Bitcoin doing for our environment, asks Martin Tye
A
GOOD question when you consider Spain’s move to a renewable and sustainable future. We all prefer good news rather than bad. Sweet is better than sour. Positive better than negative. How inevitable when elections were looming in Spain in 2019, the Government raised its renewable energy target to 74% by 2030, with a goal of 100% sustainability by the year 2050. This is all conveniently in line with the climate neutral strategy set by the European Union. The main technologies to be employed to achieve this target are wind and solar. How are we faring so far:
WIND In 2020 wind power generation represented 28,000MW capacity. The target for 2030 is 50,000MW. So basically an increase of 78%.
IS THERE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL? So is this going to be possible? We would all like to think so, but as I have commented before, if we (the government and us) all do a little, we will only achieve a little. I really want to believe we are on the right track, but then I read an article that illustrates human madness in its finest form.
SOLAR In 2020 solar power generation represented 8,500MW capacity. The target for 2030 is 37,000MW. So an increase of 335%!
Bitcoin in the works
Green matters
By Martin Tye
No matter how many times my learned friends try to explain Bitcoin to me, my eyes still gloss over. It’s a bit like Ohm’s law and why Easter is a different date every year, and Christmas not. What I do understand though is that creating bitcoins uses more energy than Spain does, according to research by the University of Cambridge this year. In order to ‘mine’ Bitcoins, as you do, specialised computers (usually large numbers of them, even warehouses full of them) are connected to the cryptocurrency network. They all commune together for a period of time, using a lot of electricity, and, hey presto, a bitcoin is birthed! The problem is, do we really need to have them? Why can’t we just use the normal banking system? I can’t help but think all this electricity is being wasted in a lottery, fuelled by human greed. Is there light at the end of the tunnel? Or are we our own worst enemy? You tell me. SEND ME YOUR COMMENTS AT…..
Martin Tye is the owner of energy switch company Mariposa Energy. Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es
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Plenty of juice A SPANISH city is turning a squishy mess into green electricity. While orange trees are an emblematic part of Sevilla - with the heavy scent of their blossoms ladening the air at the moment - disposing of fallen and rotting fruit has long been a problem. The bitter oranges are not a popular choice for eating amongst Spaniards and are grown mainly for their fragrance and colourful display. Some of the fruit from Sevilla’s 50,000 orange trees are exported to the UK, to make ‘Seville’ marmalade, but most end up falling onto the city’s streets, where they rot and can cause people to slip as well as attracting flies and insects. Now, the city is turning this nuisance into clean energy. The city’s water utility company WE ALSO Emasesa has started a pilot scheme that uses the waste oranges INSTALL to generate clean energy that runs one of its purification plants. PVfruit PANELS The juice fromSOLAR the citrus is combined with sewage and left to rot. As the mix decomposes and ferments, methane is released. This in turn is burnt to power a generator to produce electricity. Results of the pilot show that a ton of oranges can produce up to 50 kilowatt-hours of electricity – enough to power five homes for one day. Emasesa says if all Sevilla’s oranges were harvested, they could create enough electricity to power 73,000 homes. The skin and pips of the fruit are used to make organic fertiliser.
ENERGY: Oranges are the new green
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Staying clean MORE than half of the energy generated in Spain during March came from renewables. Some 53.7% of power came from solar, photovoltaic and wind energy, and 76.9% was produced from technologies that do not emit CO2 equivalent, such as hydro and nuclear. Wind energy was responsible for 25.5% of the electricity produced and continued to be the leading technology in the national mix for the fourth consecutive month. Electricity demand grew 5.2% on the mainland to 20,835 GWh. and increased 1.4% in the Balearic Islands and fell 4.4% in the Canary Islands.
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL As the Olive Press prepares to launch a brand new travel website, we give you a preview by taking a look around Andalucia’s historic capital
SEVILLA SPECIAL
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
9
Snapshots of Sevilla
STUNNING: Sevilla is a city noted for its beauty, architecture, gardens and lifestyle By Dilip Kuner
T
HE streets of Sevilla are normally thronging at this time of year. Tens of thousands of people flock to the capital of Andalucia to witness and savour the solemn pasos, or processions, that wend their way through the historic heart of the city at Easter. An extremely popular tourist destination - equally busy for the Feria de Abril a few weeks later - Sevilla is famous for its beautiful architecture as well as its outdoor lifestyle and terrace dining. But, as these pictures show, now is the time to visit if you want to avoid the queues - and it is all down to COVID-19 restrictions. Of course you may have to wait a few weeks for the restrictions to finally lift, but these photos give you a taste of the treats in store when you CAN finally make a trip to one of the most famous cities
in Spain. In this four-page special, to celebrate the launch of our dedicated travel portal to Spain, the Olive Press takes a look at some of the highlights of Sevilla. The first city to be spotlighted in our new travel website, in the coming months we will be taking a close look at Cordoba, Granada, Ronda, Madrid and Valencia, plus all the other key destinations around Spain. Aside from the articles included here, there will be dozens more vignettes and features on Sevilla and its wonderful province. This includes potted guides to the key towns of Carmona, Ecija, Osuna, as well as special features on the curious communist town of Marinaleda, mountain escapes like Cazalla de la Sierra and the wonderful Roman city of Italica. At the moment, while many foreign tourists are missing out on their travel dreams, at least the local expats can make the most of what is easily Europe’s most diverse and colourful country. Watch out for the new portal which will be at: https://travel. theolivepress. es/
EMPTY: Sevilla’s streets are normally packed at Easter (below centre)
10
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
Barack Obama
April April9th 7th--April April22nd 20th 2021
Time travel
Uma Thurman
Columbus
Y
OU can easily picture Christopher Columbus setting off for the Americas as you stroll along the banks of the Guadalquivir in Sevilla’s central neighbourhood of El Arenal. The medieval shipyards here - which have existed since the days of Julius Caesar - are central to this ancient city’s history. Boasting a Gothic style, the galleys they built played an important role in the battle for the Strait of Gibraltar and the Hundred Years’ War - and more notably as the launchpad for Columbus’ explorations. (They also played an important role in the fictional world of Game of Thrones, posing as the crypts of the Red Fortress in the seventh season of the hit fantasy
There’s no better place to get lost in history than Sevilla, the city which hosted the departure of Christopher Columbus - just ask the likes of Barack Obama and Uma Thurman, writes Laurence Dollimore
series). the explorer’s plundering of South AmerTo this day you can sail along the river, ica, saw the country’s empire become just as the explorer did, and gaze in awe among the most powerful in the world. at the medieval marvels along the way. Between 1492 and 1681, gold and othAnd just a stone’s throw er minerals from the ‘New away in the Santa Cruz World’ catapulted Spain neighbourhood you’ll find into an era of wealth and Murillo and the tomb of Columbus at prosperity, with its literaVelazquez are ture and arts also flourthe Catedral. The largest Gothic church ishing (showcased best just two who in the world, covering at the Museo de Bella some 23,500sqm, it chose to live in Artes). was completed in the Just ask the greats Muearly 1500s before being the historic city rillo and Velazquez, who registered as a UNESCO chose to live in the romanWorld Heritage Site in tic city. 1987. The former has gorgeous gardens It is one of dozens of remnants from named after him while you can still visSpain’s Golden Age, which, thanks to it the birthplace of the latter tucked behind a narrow street in the Alfalfa neighbourhood. Luckily for us, the era also saw the Habsburg Dynasty solidify HE Alameda neighbourhood is the area surrounding and including the Alaand create some meda de Hercules, a long mall accompanied by bars, cafes and restaurants of the cities most on either side. stunning sites. Lying in the northern part of the city’s old town, the Alameda was once a These include meeting point for the elites in the 1800s. the stunning Real However following the Spanish Civil War, it quickly deteriorated into one of the Alcazar palace poorest barrios and was ravaged by drugs and prostitution - with up to 35 brothand gardens, just els operating in 1989. opposite the CatBut it is now back in action following a rescue plan in the early 2000s which saw traffic limited and the promenade edral. restored, and lined with poplar and hackberry trees. Declared a World Today it is the place to be for the young, cultured and anyone looking for a good time. Heritage Site by It also the most gay-friendly quarter of Sevilla, with bars like Dilema, Nua and 1987 acting as the warm up acts to nightUNESCO in 1987, clubs Holiday, Fun Club, Men to Men or Itaca. it is among the There are also great cocktail bars like Gigante (which does a great Moscow Mule) and a flavourful selection of restauoldest palaces rants, from the traditional to the nouvelle. in Europe having begun conEATING... struction in 913, If you’re looking for gastro-tapas then you cannot leave Sevilla without visiting Eslava (on Calle Eslava). You may have when the caliph to queue to be seated (opt for a spot at the bar for a shorter wait) but it is more than worth it with one of the quirkiest of Andalucia Abd and tastiest menus around. al-Rahman III first Among the classic pork ribs and solomillo or jamon, other highlights include Vaca Tataki (beef tataki), vegetable strudel and manchego cheese ice cream. For Middle Eastern fusion head to Arte y Sabor, situated along the Alameda promenade. Boasting a sun-kissed terrace it is unique in its wide range of vegetable dishes and innovative and creative salads. If you want something more traditional, stop at Casa Ricardo, which has been serving locals since 1898. Their melt-inthe-mouth jamon can be knocked back with a cold sherry while enjoying the old-school writing of orders with chalk on the bar and walls adorned with religious art. If you’re looking for something less Spanish, Nickel has some of the best burgers in Sevilla while Al Solito Posto has delicious pizzas. Or if you want a taste of gentrified London, head to the Cereal Cafe.
Potted barrios guide to... Alameda
T
decided to build a fort. However, it was along Calle Betis. over 500 years that the grounds were The riverbed comes alive with food and added to by successive Moorish, Chris- drink stalls lining the riverside calle while tian and finally Catholic rulers, making it during the day a centuries’ old competione of the most emblematic attractions tion known as the La Cucana sees parin a region characterised by its multicul- ticipants attempt to walk along a boat’s tural history. bow which has been slathered in grease And don’t miss the Giralda bell tower at- and attempt to catch a little flag attached tached to the Catedral, the top of which at the end - with prizes for those who is accessed via a series of ramps which complete the task. used to be ascended by Moors on horse- Back over the river, however, something back before calling citizens to prayer. new is brewing. But it’s not just the old town centre In the central neighbourhood of Alfalpacked with sites, with medieval church- fa, the Soho Benita area is proving this es, convents and centuries-old food mar- ancient city can also host 21st century kets around every corner. gems. No neighbourhood knows this more than Covering six streets (Golfo, Perez Galdos, Triana. Don Alonso el Sabio, Ortizo de Zuniga, Once home to sailors, potters, Flamenco Santillana and Jose Luis Luque), it indancers and bull-fighters, Triana’s rich corporates around 20 small businesses, history is as colourful as its buildings including a modern art gallery, nail salon which light up the river bank on its iconic and traditional barbers, and was recently Calle Betis. tipped as a must-place to visit by the New The barrio was once known as an arra- York Times. bal, the name given to areas separated The newest arrival is the RecoVeco from the centre of Sevilla. And many in restaurant on Calle Ortizo de Zuniga, the town still see themselves as strictly opened just this year. trianero and distinct from The Spanish ‘heritage’ the rest of the Sevillanos, eatery promises traditionoften referring to the al and seasonal AndaBelieved to neighbourhood as the lucia dishes but with an Independent Republic of Avant Garde twist - and all have been Triana. in a super-chic setting... founded by the the perfect place to treat Believed to have been founded by a Roman col- Roman emperor yourself or loved ones for ony under emperor Traa night. jan, it is entered by crossAnd you wouldn’t be the Trajan ing the Isabel II bridge, a first to want to hang out in landmark in itself. the Alfalfa barrio. It’s home to a traditional Former US President pottery and tile industry - with a museum Barack Obama was papped entering the paying homage to the crafts - vibrant fla- popular eatery Bache San Pedro after menco festivals and hugely popular mar- attending a climate change summit in kets and festivals. the city. If you’re braving the Sevilla heat between No one knows what he opted for, but the July 21 and 26, don’t miss the Vela San- pork with ‘special sauce’ is sublime, as ta Ana festival held every day and night is its famous cheesecake, made with
SITES….
At either end of the promenade you’ll find two Roman-style columns. The northern side features a lion atop each column while the other end features Hercules and Julius Caesar. The two lions and Hercules represent the emblem of Andalucia, which bears the Pillars of Hercules and, obviously, two lions. Legend has it that Hercules founded Sevilla while Julius Caesar also ruled it for a time. Head to Convento Santa Clara and marvel at its impressive cloister which is frequently used for exhibitions. While there, don’t miss the Torre de Don Fadrique, named after the late owner of the site and which offers a stunning example of early Gothic architecture in Sevilla. Built in 1252, the tower is also surrounded by beautiful gardens. Finally, the Convento San Clemente is adorned with fascinating frescoes and artwork from the 1500s and you can also buy some pastries made by the nuns who live there. STUNNING: The Moorish Alcazar is a must-see in Sevilla
A L L I V E S FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL L A I C E SP
April - April 21th 2021 April April 9th 7th8th --April April 22nd 20th 2021
11
OLD AND NEW: The architecture of Sevilla is stunning, whether it is the El Salvador church (far left) historic centre or the modern La Seta (above) payoyo cheese from the hills of Cadiz. Back in 2015, Uma Thurman dressed up as the Virgin Mary while drinking at the uber traditional El Garlochi bar - a watering hole like no other, with more religious art than wall space and only the holiest of music blaring through the speakers. Alfalfa provides the perfect snapshot of Sevilla, where centuries’ old traditions live in harmony alongside 21st century upgrades. Just head to the modern-day Las Setas in the neighbouring Encarnacion barrio. Officially known as the Metropol Parasol, the imposing structure boasts six parasols and is spread over four levels. It was designed by Berlin architect Jurgen Mayer who entered into a government-run competition to renovate the area in the early 2000s.
Repeatedly ranked as the number one tourist attraction in Spain by TripAdvisor users, the Plaza de Espana is truly a work of art. Designed by Caidon Fox for the 1929 Sevilla Expo, it was created to showcase Spain’s industry and technology exhibits at the historic fair. The complex is a huge half-circle with buildings continually running around the edge, boasting a mix of 1920s Art Deco, Baroque and Neo-Mudejar styles The buildings are accessible via four bridges - representing the
Plaza de España four ancient kingdoms of Spain - built over a moat which runs the whole length of the complex. In the centre sits the Vicente Traver fountain while by the walls are tiled alcoves, each depicting a different province of Spain. If you REALLY have time to kill, you can row a boat in the moat in what is possibly the most unnecessary tourist trap - although it does make for a nice photo.
New Tax Year, New APARI
H
APPY New Year! No we haven’t gone mad, or hopped into a time machine - we, of course, mean Happy New Tax Year! And a new year means a new start and big changes all around! With the spring budget announcement in March, new tax rates and allowances are now in effect, and it also looks as though we are starting to see the green shoots of recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic - putting an end to a year most of us would rather forget!
Alongside government and economic changes, APARI are also embracing that ‘New Year, New Me’ feeling with an amazing new look, new logo and, more importantly, at the end of April, we will be releasing our New Software! APARI has been a labour of love for our founders Sudesh & Anita Sud, and the whole team are really proud of what’s been achieved by the original APARI Product but staying ahead of an emerging market
It’s the time to be thinking about the UK tax year
means we have to adapt and adjust with our users and their UK tax requirements. As showcased during our March Webinar, the upcoming upgrade of the software includes enhanced features designed to make your transition to Making Tax Digital (MTD) as smooth as possible. APARI has been created with you in mind - it is not only a tool to calculate and submit tax, but also to manage your property and business portfolio. Our brand new mobile application will enable you to keep up to date on the go, and amazing features such as snap and save receipts along with bank feed connection, will make digital record-keeping near effortless. Some things will stay the same - APARI has always, and will always, remain free for the whole MTD submission journey, and we will only charge for enhanced optional features. So, how do you know that APARI is the right product for you? Well, to be honest, that’s something only you can decide but the joy of
APARI is that you can sign up and find out for free! And, even if you’re still unsure, it really is the best time to prepare and start digital record-keeping, ready for the official switch to MTD in the UK in 2023. But just remember, even though the new APARI software won’t be released until later this month, the current APARI software is always here to support you in the transition to MTD.
Find out more at www.apari-digital.com
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EVILLA S FOOD,DRINK FOOD,DRINK&&TRAVEL TRAVEL SPECIAL
April April9th 7th--April April22nd 20th 2021
IT is known as El Sarten, the frying pan of Spain because it’s location in a dip surrounded by the olive groves of La Campina means it regularly records the hottest temperatures in southern Europe. But Ecija is also dubbed the ‘City of Towers’ and ‘City of Palaces’, no surprise when you see the skyline interrupted by several dozen towers, some with detailed ceramic work and usually topped by a stork nest. Located 85km from Sevilla, a visit to this gem of a town is like stepping back in time. And if you are struggling under the weight of tourism in the provincial capital, or nearby Cordoba, you certainly won’t be here: It’s unlikely you’ll hear a single English accent, even after COVID. Narrow cobbled streets, white-washed
Fry away inland Ecija: A visit to the charming city known as ‘the frying pan’ of Spain, where ‘cat soup’ is on the menu By Fiona Govan
houses and alluring porticos reveal glimpses of bloom-filled patios within. While avenues are lined by orange
STUNNING: One of dozens of mosaics found
ROMAN CITY: Ecija is awash with historic monuments and priceless Roman statues
trees, their blossom filling the air with the powerful scent that screams this part of Andalucia. Once an important Roman settlement known as Astigi on the via Augusta, or A-4, the longest and busiest Roman road in ancient Hispania, the town became Madinat al-qutn (City of Cotton) when it fell under Arab rule in 711 and was renamed Ecija when Christian settlers moved in after the reconquest in 1240. This is the place to visit churches, even just to raise your eyes to admire towers such as Las Gemelas (the twins) of the Iglesia de la Purísima Concepcion or the exquisite triple bell tower of Iglesia de San Juan. For fans of the Baroque style, don’t miss a visit to the Church of Limpia Concepcion with its fabulously ornate plasterwork ceiling, decoration that was added in the 18th century and the Iglesia de los Descalzos with an altarpiece which is said to rival that of Sevilla’s cathedral. Then there’s the palaces. In the 18th century the city was home to 40 noble families whose patronage saw Ecija transformed under a golden age that is still possible to see glimpses of today, with some open to the public. At the Palacio de los Palma the rooms
are preserved as they were in its heyday with all the original furniture, while Palacio de Peñaflor is the place to marvel at frescos - some of the best in Spain - stretching across 60 metres of its exterior walls. The Palacio de Benamejí is home to the tourist office, a good courtyard restaurant Las Ninfas (with its Roman statues) and the Museo Historica which boasts a series of breathtaking mosaic floors from Roman times. It also housesthe 2,000-year-old Amazona Herida, a perfectly preserved statue which was discovered in 2007 when digging out a car park under the city’s Plaza España. Dine out with locals at one of the many restaurant terrazas in Plaza España or around the fountain in Plazuela de Santa Maria or grab a table on the little Plaza del Nuestra Señora del Valle and enjoy views across to the magnificent half ruined Iglesia de Santa Cruz, which was damaged in the Lisbon earthquake of 1755.
WHERE TO EAT
B
eing the capital city of Andalucia, the dining scene in Sevilla is unsurprisingly diverse. Famous for its central tapas bars, where locals typically tapear at up to five or six different bars in a session, it also has a bustling restaurant community that is as competitive as it is var-
ied. I first found the likes of Tribeca and Abantal over a decade ago, buzzing joints that I included in my book and website Dining Secrets of Andalucia. They are still around today, with the latter now with its own Michelin star, thanks to the hard work of its chef Julio Quintero. He himself had trained at the legendary Taberna del Alabardero, a glamorous grand dame of the local dining scheme that had its own culinary training scheme, but is, to be fair, a little stuffy. I also picked Vineria de San Telmo in a great location next to the Alcazar, which brilliantly combines good food and wine. Its Argentinian boss Juan
MIX: duck ham tapa at Casa del Tigre and La Sal terrace
MY TOP FIVE IN SEVILLA Jon Clarke shares his dining secrets in the Andalucia capital
Tarquini skillfully manages to provide both at excellent prices, and it’s still around today. But you should also look next door where there is a brand new hip joint freshest seafood on offer called Bar la Sal, serving up the very and changes by the day with best local seafood - particularly tuna a new menu. - that you can imagine. It’s not cheap, but it’s the Opening in December 2020, its dy- place to have shellfish, namic owner Charo Alvarez already such as razor shells, which has another restaurant in the city were served with a delicious and a famous joint in cream of algas Zahara de los Atunes, soup or the on the Costa de la Luz, amazing puntilA wonderful in Cadiz. litas with fresh With this place she peas and an mix of flavours wanted to make it more onion caldo. informal, less punishBut its piece de from around ing on the pocket, yet resistance was Spain and still serving up the best the medley of bluefin tuna you will cuts of Mero, Spain’s abroad ever eat in a dozen difmost popular fish ferent guises. known as ‘grouper’ At least three of her in English. We had tuna starter dishes have won prizes an amazing trio of belly, fillet and as the best tapa in Zahara’s famous spine, some of the tastiest fish I annual tapas competition. have ever eaten. It’s the most buzzing spot around this The wine list is great and you can Spring and you will need to book one have Bollinger champagne by the of the excellent terrace tables that glass at €10. sit next to the For a totally different take on dinc e l e b r a t e d ing, head to the recently opened Jardines de La Casa del Tigre which is one of Murillo park the most romantic, original diners with its amaz- in Andalucia. ing trees. Opened by four friends just before A n o t h e r the COVID lockdown in December amazing fish 2019, it got its name after an old restaurant - zookeeper who infamously kept a probably the tiger upstairs in his flat for years. best in Sevilla It is sumptuously decorated with and, among acres of velvet, but also stylish the best I patterns and artworks, doffing have eaten at their hat appropriately to African in Andalucia - wildlife. is Canabota. The food is hard to describe as This minimal- anything other than eclectic, but ist joint only it is a wonderful mix of flavours has the very from around Spain and abroad, in-
cluding fish cheeks, beef mollejas (glands next to the heart basically) and the most amazing Taco de Puchero, basically an unreconstructed grandma-style croquette. Don’t miss the cool foie and duck ham starter that comes on a bed of lettuce, while the wine list was exceptionally good, with plenty of wines by the glass. Finally, if you’re looking for gastro-tapas then you cannot leave Sevilla without visiting Eslava (on Calle Eslava conveniently). You may have to queue to be seated (opt for a spot at the bar for a shorter wait) but it is worth it for one of the most original menus around. Among the classic pork ribs and solomillo or jamon, other highlights include Vaca Tataki (beef tataki), vege• La Casa del tigre table strudel • Canabota and manchego cheese • Bar la Sal
• Esclava • Vineria San Telmo
LA CULTURA Floored! ONE of the biggest Roman mosaics ever found has been unearthed. The El Altillo Roman Villa complex was discovered in an olive grove near the village of Rus in Jaen after fragments of the floor were spotted. A team from Jaen University led by Marcos Soto Civantos and Jose Luis Serrano Peña excavated the site to reveal an extensive villa dating mainly from the 4th century AD. Within the villa, a mosaic measuring 18 metres by nine was discovered. It consists of geometric designs and guilloche patterns. Next to the villa, archaeologists also found a cemetery, a tile kiln and an olive oil mill. Rus Mayor Manuel Hueso now wants the site to be declared an Asset of Cultural Interest allowing the town council to secure grants for future digs and to preserve the remains.
Do you have a what’s on?
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
Send your informa tion to newsdesk@theolivepr ess.es
IT is one of the most famous and popular beaches on Southern Spain’s Atlantic coast. Its kilometres of white sandy beaches have proven to be an irresistible draw for families bringing their children for a fun day by the sea. But it would seem that there is nothing new in this – proof has just been discovered that Neanderthal man did just the same thing 106,000 years ago.
Footloose
Modern humans following in the footsteps of Neanderthals
Play
Fossilised footprints from what appears to be a family group – young children included – have been found that scientists believe show the youngsters skipping around – as if at play around a lagoon. The discovery was made by chance. Two biologists from the nearby Doñana national park - Dolores Cobo and Ana Mateos were taking a stroll along the Matalascañas beach
PRINT: Proof that the beach has long been popular By Dilip Kuner
when they came across a section of beach in front of the Asperillo Cliff that had
OP Puzzle solutions
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been washed away by winter storms. Revealed were numerous footprints made by deer, wild boar and dogs. But what really caught the attention of the team of researchers from the University of Huelva who came to study the site was the presence of hominid footprints. After months of analysis, the results of the study have just been published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports. In addition to studying the shape of the feet of the Neanderthals who made them,
they have been able to establish the biological and social characteristics of the group that set foot on the beach of Matalascañas millennia ago. Researchers believe the footprints were made by nine adults, 15 adolescents and seven children. The presence of children and women indicates that the lagoon could have served as a playground for the youngest members of the group, while the abundance of mammals and the proximity to the coast made it a very useful place for hunting and fishing.
Love of music A RECORD number of people gathered at a concert hall in Barcelona to watch the Spanish band Love of Lesbian perform, marking Europe’s largest musical event since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some 5,000 packed into the Palau Sant Jordi hall as part of the government sanctioned concert to test whether events in controlled settings could restart again without contributing to the spread of coronavirus. Ticket holders were asked to take a high-speed antigen test ahead of the sold out show, with ticket prices covering the cost of the test as well as a face masks which had to be worn for the duration of the show. People with heart disease, cancer, or those who have been in contact with someone infected by COVID-19 in recent weeks were asked not to sign up. The concert was backed by local authorities .
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I
All change LIBERTY SEGUROS explains the new changes with respect to the so-called Green Card
A
S of April 1, the green card -which verifies the validity of Compulsory Liability Insurance for vehicles- was no longer green and will now be sent by email to policy holders by their insurance provider. In a move that will see more of the sector enter the era of digital transformation, drivers will be able to print their own green cards, with black and white prints on standard A4 paper. This change has been driven within the decision of The Council of Bureaux, the organisation acting for the protection of cross-border road traffic and coordinating the activities of the different EU members of the Green Card system, to check the validity of Third Party Liability Motor Insurance through a new centralised single platform. Now, using advanced security measures, its centralised web platform will allow insurers of its member countries to generate “QR-coded” Green Cards, which will then be sent to policy holders as downloadable PDFs. So, these documents no longer need to be printed on the traditional, green-coloured paper and as such, the traditional Green Card may simply become black and white. These changes mean that when you are driving in a Bureaux member country, the authorities will be able to check automatically, through this platform, if a vehicle is duly insured. But, despite these changes, LIBERTY SEGUROS reminds that when you are visiting countries that are not part of the European Economic Area (such as the UK and Gibraltar), the green card document, although now a printed version, will be mandatory as it always has been. In the same manner, insured vehicles from countries OUTSIDE of The Council of Bureaux and those that are not part of the European Economic Area (including, UK and Gibraltar-registered vehicles) will also be required to carry the document whilst driving in Spain.
COLUMNISTS
NEVER thought I’d hear myself say ‘I wish I was busier’. When I set up my PR company I worked round the clock; weekends, and holidays were always interrupted with me having to respond to emails or calls. But since the pandemic has slowed my business right down I’m at a bit of a loss. It’s been a year now since we moved to Mallorca and we were just three weeks in when COVID hit. As the death figures soared and businesses plummeted I didn’t have much else to do but enjoy being a newbie on the island. And enjoy it we have. We’ve been to many different places on the island, spent many a day on the beach and savoured long leisurely lunches in the sun, just because we could. So why is it that I miss being busy? What is so good about being busy? We are so fickle, us humans. When we have this, we want that, and when we have that we want this! Why can’t we just be happy in the moment? I do feel so much luckier than family and friends of mine back in the UK. The weather makes such a difference when we can go out for a bike ride, or a hike in the beautiful countryside when everything has been shut. My son and I often swap views from our windows and man, is his view bleak compared to mine. I wouldn’t want to be in the UK during the pandemic that’s for sure.
Welcome For LIBERTY SEGUROS, no longer having to print and post Green Cards in a specified colour and format will be a welcome change. For policy holders, LIBERTY SEGUROS assures drivers that the new process is as easy as printing an airline boarding pass. With the changes that surround Brexit, LIBERTY SEGUROS understands that there’s a real need for clear and transparent information regarding changes to driving in Spain, and it remains on-hand to keep you informed with regard to your obligations as a driver. The expat’s preferred insurer, LIBERTY SEGUROS offers a wide range of covers for car insurance that can be tailored to your individual needs, with advantages that stand out against competitors. For example, with LIBERTY SEGUROS, there’s no need to declare vehicle accessories if they have been fitted by the manufacturer; and, in the case of a claim, any luggage or personal belongings are covered up to 500€. LIBERTY SEGUROS also offers extended cover in case of Total Loss or Total Theft at 100% of the value ‘as new’ if the vehicle is less than 2 years old, or at 80% of the value ‘as new’ if the vehicle is between 2 and 3 years old. A courtesy car is included as standard for up to 45 days (35 days for vehicle breakdown) and policy holders are free to choose a garage of their choice in the event of a claim. What’s more, LIBERTY SEGUROS has specific cover for electric vehicles too. There are other benefits as well. With LIBERTY SEGUROS there’s no maximum age for drivers – provided they have a valid driving license – and Roadside Assistance is available from Km.0. Furthermore, with LIBERTY SEGUROS you can also take out car insurance for UK-plated vehicles (except for vehicles registered in Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney and Gibraltar), as well as cover for classic vehicles and Spanish and UK-registered motorhomes! With an extensive network of more than 300 expatriate brokers and agents that speak YOUR language and who are at YOUR disposal for friendly and expert advice that’s tailored to you, it’s easy to see why LIBERTY SEGUROS has become expat insurance provider of choice in Spain with over 175,000 expat clients.
To find the location of your nearest broker/agent, simply visit: www.libertyexpatriates.es or call 91 342 25 49
April 9th April 22nd 2021
Make a wish Do we really enjoy being busy fools?
So why am I feeling flat? Why Terenia Taras does working and being busy Telling it like it is seem important compared with just being able to enjoy our lives? I guess it’s because we’ve which has been on the go now become hard-wired to work- for years! ing and being constantly busy But I’m afraid to, because nothat without a full weekly list one will want to publish it, or of things to do, at work and read it, and then what do I have left to pull out of home, we feel a the bag? bit adrift! You’ve got to My other conHow will we keep some cern is when feel about dreams going things do come because it gives back, how will resuming the you hope that we feel about resuming the old normal way you might just write that bestold normal way of life? seller, climb Evof life? We’ve all erest or take that had more time trip to Antarctica with family, time to just enjoy the basic things you’d always planned to do like cooking a nice meal and when you had A, the time, and B, the money. plenty of time to reflect. So do we really want to work as And hope right now is somehard as we were used to? My thing we’re all clinging on to. dream is still to sit in the sun But when we’ve got through and write my book, a project this pandemic and can look back and think ‘what the hell, we’ve survived that so I’m not going to be afraid to do the one thing I’ve always wanted’. I really hope so because we don’t really need to be busy fools working flat out just to give ourselves a false sense of purpose. I know having a year out from that has been a gift and a curse at the same time, but ultimately when my time is up, I think I’ll be somehow grateful for the past year.
YOU CAN FOLLOW ME DREAMS: Terenia says goals keep us motivated
SOFA SUDS
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@tereniataras
HEN I was young, 'online' meant pegging your washing out to dry. Never thought that one day this innocent household word would signify the demise of high street shopping. Today, with the aid of an iPhone or laptop the world is yours without even leaving your living room. checks, cancelled flights, lost luggage, and walUsers have access to every product, or service king miles to find a loo. Go-direct with `Amaunder the sun, ranging from Bovril to Bolivian zon Travel´ without even stepping outside your holidays, wills to winter woollies, or even popfront door. up Karma Sutra books. Nothing is out of their Take a virtual reality trip to Australia, land of reach and that of course includes the latest surswinging corks, Roo-burgers, and picturesque ge in popularity, home food deliveries. upside-down landscapes, or maybe Link all these trends to the latest delve into the depths of the Borgovernment survey that shows neo jungle? Sample genuine canover 80% of office workers on nibal soup or collect a souvenir COVID leave who say they preOLD HAC K IN shrunken head (Note: 'Sold Out': fer working at home. So, the THE SUN Emmanuel Macron and Ursula big question must be, are we in Benny Davis von der Leyen; only two Angedanger of becoming a nation of Rambling s of an 80-something expat la Merkels left, but Boris back in couch potato home-bound herstock). mits, or in my language, Sofa If you want that touch of sheer luxury and Spuds? Will online technology eventually incorindulgence, take a virtual sea cruise to the maporate a three-dimensional virtual reality video gic destination of your choice, including realistic with online sales to enable would-be purcharough seas, and 16 meals a day (per person) sers to get a closer tactile examination of goods delivered to your door complete with a midniprior to credit card commitment? ght buffet and sick bags. Suffering from a bit of Just imagine the sales pitch: Through the magic fecal impaction at the moment, the posh name of VR, be transported to a restaurant environfor constipation, so off to the loo with a 3D virment that suits your food mood. Or how about: tual reality video of 'The Shining'. That should Holidays around the globe from the comfort of do the trick! your couch? Avoid the hassle of airport security
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL Last orders RECORD breaking chef Pepe Becerra has passed away at the age of 70. He had become a symbol for Spanish gastronomy,and was regarded as a hero in his local town of Castellon. His many successes include Guinness World Records for the largest ever potato omelette, the biggest fideua – a typical Valencian fish and noodle dish – and the largest salad in the world. Although originally from Badajoz (Extremadura), Chef Becerra was linked to Castellon Province for the whole of his professional career. After running several top restaurants in the 1970s, Becerra was best known for preparing giant paellas for thousands of people over the years.
April 9th - April 22nd 2021
Getting back to normal
SPAIN’S Tourism Minister has said that she is ‘confident’ that the new EU vaccine passport will be ready by July. Reyes Maroto (pictured) says it will play a key role in allowing foreign holidaymakers to return this summer. “The digital passport will hopefully be ready by July and will help everybody to be safer,” she commented. Officially called the ‘Digital Green Certificate’, the pass will be free and bilingual in
BOTTLED water sales in Spain have risen by 8.5% between 2015 and 2019 with higher increases in regions where people don’t like the taste of their tap water. A survey compiled by the Sustainability Observatory showed that in 2019, which offers the last available annual figures, the average Spanish bottle spend was €62 per annum. People in the Canary and Balearic Islands spend up to €140 each year on bottled water. The Costa Blanca region
Look east
EU vaccine passport in July but UK not included By Alex Trelinski
the language of the issuing EU member state and English. It will be available in either digital or paper formats and will have a QR on it to guarantee security and also the authenticity of the certificate. Maroto said that her de-
Tapped out has shown a 12% hike in bottled water purchases in the four years up to 2019, with an average annual spend of €85. Murcia’s average is just below €90 per annum. At the other end of the scale, the northern Basque Country comes in at €20, which the survey concludes is a strong endorsement of their local tap water taste.
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partment had done surveys that show that ‘travellers want to come to Spain’ and that the pandemic had ‘not damaged the brand’. The minister added that previous mooted plans for ‘safe tourist corridors’ would not be needed as the digital passport was now the way forward.
SPAIN is to finally get its very own Chinatown. The plans were unveiled after the project attracted the fourth highest number of votes in a scheme known as ‘Decidim’ (‘We decide’), in which residents of Valencia chose from a list of proposals. Chinatown Valencia will follow the footsteps of other similar developments in London, New York and Sydney, with Oriental-style gateways welcoming visitors. The arches will be built by artists involved in the construction of the Fallas monuments and will reportedly be located around Calle Xativa in the city centre, at the intersections with Calle Pelayo and Calle Convento Jerusalen. This area is home to up to 100 restaurants and businesses run by the Chinese, and already hosts the extremely popular Chinese New Year celebrations.
Promoting
Work is expected to begin over the new few months, with an initial budget of €14,000 for the planning process. City Hall sources highlight the promotional benefits of the project, as Chinatowns usually become a magnet for visitors. Spokespeople for the local Chinese Cultural Association have applauded the plans, revealing that they have been promoting the area among their countrymen for several years. There are currently an estimated 20,000 residents of Chinese origin in Valencia city.
Summer
“It may not be the summer that we all want but are getting ready to welcome back tourism on a gradual basis,” she stressed. The vaccine passport works ‘both ways’ and will therefore allow people living in Spain to travel freely to other EU countries. The UK, as a non-EU member, still has to decide on whether it will introduce a similar scheme.
PLAN: Valencia hopes Chinatown will be a draw
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FINAL WORDS
WHILE most of us can’t wait to forget all about coronavirus, it seems some people want a permanent reminder, with the numbers of COVID related tattoos featuring bats and masks on the rise, according to tatooists in Malaga.
Boar on NIGHT time curfews have given wild animals the chance to roam further than before, with many towns and cities now hosting growing populations of boars totalling 1 million, according to Madrid University.
Strike a light A DAZZLING meteor has been filmed soaring across the Spanish sky at 96,000km per hour, with it being spotted streaking from Castilla-La Mancha to Jaen (Andalucia).
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Your expat
voice in Spain April 9th - April 22nd 2021
Job’s worth BOTCHED restoration work on a historic Spanish monument has been slammed by critics, comparing the work to a jobbing builder. The renovations completed at Antequera Dolmens in Antequera, Malaga have been lambasted as sloppy by experts from the Department of Prehistory and Archeology of the University of Seville. The professors, who were asked to review the work done on the 6,000-year-old monument, said the damage to the complex
was ‘urban cruelty’. Expert Leonardo Garcia Sanjuan quipped: “An architect who builds terraced houses cannot intervene in a 6,000-yearold monument.” Garcia Sanjuan, along with co-author Coronada Mora, warned that the excavations in the Menga dolmen between 1842 and 1847 by Rafael Mitjana and Ardison already ‘changed the appearance’ of this megalithic construction, with ‘the presumed accumulation of the tumular mass extracted in
HISTORIC: The dolmens date back 6,000 years another area different from the original one. They continued that by beginning in the 1980s, ‘there were
Turtley dangerous
PEOPLE are being warned to be on the lookout for a potentially dangerous breed of turtle whose beak can snip of fingers. The Andalucian Environmental Agency (AMA) is investigating the discovery in Huelva of a snapping turtle, an exotic, large freshwater species, originating from America.
Experts blast bodge job restoration
It was found in El Portil, on the coast of Huelva. The turtle is approximately half a metre long and belongs to a species that is potentially dangerous. While rare, a snapping turtle can bite off human fingers or toes with its impressive jaw strength of over 1,000 pounds.
also interventions that affected the physical integrity of the monuments’ including ‘the brutal exterior transformation of the Viera dolmen in 2004’. The experts also blasted the renovations done between 2001 and 2003 on the interior walls of the Menga dolmen, which they note was done ‘without geologists who knew the properties of the rocks or specialists.’ The authors added that today there is an ‘urban fierceness’ in the Antequera dolmens, which ‘is an intensely urbanised area with concrete paths and squares, parking lots and a visitor centre’.
A CYCLIST crossed paths with the law after giving his bicycle extra speed by attaching an engine to it. The 41-year-old man redefined the meaning of pedal power as he whizzed up an incline on the CV-905 in Torrevieja (Costa Blanca). A Guardia Civil patrol was bemused by the bicycle’s speed especially as the cyclist did not appear to be pedalling. They also thought they heard a purring-noise coming from the two-wheeler. The cyclist realised he had been spotted and decided to revert to peddling the bike himself in the hope of continuing his journey, but to no avail. He was pulled over and the Guardia patrol discovered that he had gone to a lot of trouble to convert his bicycle into a moped. A small engine was attached to the bike’s frame and the diesel tank was hidden underneath a T-shirt so as not to attract any attention. The handlebar had been modified to include links to an accelerator and a brake. The Guardia seized the bike and took it to the ITV test station in Torrevieja who confirmed it had a two-stroke engine capable of going over 50 kilometres per hour.