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Close call

Expat goes on hunger strike after residency application is rejected due to Brexit withdrawal nightmare

A BRITISH man has gone on hunger strike over his ‘right to residency’ in Spain.

Mark Saxby is protesting the authorities’ refusal to grant him a resident’s permit because he did not have private medical insurance by the Brexit deadline.

Expat Saxby, who lives in Safor, near Valencia, has vowed to only drink water until the situation is resolved.

The 55-year-old teacher, from Birmingham, is now entering his fourth

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day without food.

He moved to the Valencia region at the beginning of 2020 with plans to work as an English language teacher, but returned to the UK just as the pandemic struck.

Once travel restrictions eased in the autumn that year he returned to Spain with an intention to become a resident. However continual delays in getting appointments resulted in his application only being sent in Decemberweeks before the Brexit Day deadline of January 1, 2021.

His application was eventually denied over the lack of private medical insurance, which Mark told the Olive Press could easily have been remedied without the delays.

“There were difficulties accessing websites to log in my details and then I kept being referred to different offices for appointments across the Valencia region due to Covid delays,” he explained, this week.

“We were promised a three-month period to deal with any problems which would have identified the insurance issue, but as everything ended up being submitted in December 2020, I was left with no time to do anything about it,” he added.

After Brexit Day and being told of his rejection, he immediately acquired the right medical insurance and informed the authorities.

“If this stipulation had been clearly flagged up in the initial application process it would have saved me a lot of time and bother,” he commented.

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BRITAIN’S former most wanted female fugitive, finally arrested last year, has had her jail sentence doubled after she failed to repay a seven-figure sum.

Former private school girl Sarah Panitzke will now spend 17 years in jail when previously being sentenced to nine. The penalty was imposed at the City of London Magistrates' Court after she failed to repay £2.4 million she stole as part of a massive VAT fraud scheme.

Panitzke had spent nine years on the run in Spain, living incog nito as a local thanks to her excellent Span ish, before being cap tured and returned

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