BACK ON LINE
TRAM services between Calpe and Denia are back on track after going off the rails in 2016 due to safety concerns.
The final piece of the jigsaw was the reopening of the section linking Denia and Gata de Gorgos, following two months of test runs.
Denia mayor, Vicent Grimalt said: “It felt like a jug of cold water being poured over you when the line closed in 2016, but this is a service that supports the region and connects the towns of the Marina Baja.”
Line 9 TRAM d’Alacant trains between Calpe and Denia were suspended because bridges and viaducts were unable to take the weight of new rolling stock. Old bridges were restored and work also included the ‘straightening out’ of the line to allow new electro-diesel trains to use it - including the ability to travel faster.
Money
Section by section, the line reopened with the Gata de Gorgos to Teulada link restored last July.
Over €150 million of Valencian government and EU money has been spent on the project including the purchase of six new trains.
Hourly departures from Denia start at 5.50am with the last tram at 9.50pm going to the other Line 9 terminus in Benidorm.
Critical care
Private hospitals and overtime being offered for weekend ops as waiting lists soar and ‘chaos’ returns to infamous hospital
PATIENTS waiting for elective surgery in Alicante are being increasingly referred to private operators to reduce the backlog of operations.
Provincial budgets for private hospital operations have been raised this year to €22 millionup €7 million on 2022. The rise comes after private referrals rose by 30% compared to 2021, leaving 23,733 people waiting for an operation as of January 1.
The total is 25% higher than in 2020 - the first year of the Covid pandemic - and a quarter of the patients have been waiting for
over six months.
Health has once again become a critical issue with doctors in the Valencian Community warning that
emergency wards have become ‘saturated’ with patients not being seen by primary care units. The regional president of the Society of Emergency Medicine, Javier Millan, told the Olive Press : “On some days we are getting an increased workload of up to 40%.”
Valencia’s Health Ministry pointed out that surgical waiting times do not apply to emergencies, and any other non-delayable procedures, such as cancer.
Surgery
Traumatology, General Surgery, and Ophthalmology procedures account for over two-thirds of those currently waiting.
The longest delays of up to 15 months are for hip and knee surgeries in Alicante, Alcoy, and Elche.
Besides paying private hospitals to take patients, overtime is being offered to staff to carry out procedures at weekends and evenings.
The amount of out-of-hours evening surgeries already went
up by over 60% last year. Controversy meanwhile, has continued over the running of Torrevieja Hospital, which returned to public management in October 2021.
It has seen a big rise in emergency waiting times and for elective surgeries since then and there has been considerable criticism in recent weeks with accusations of ‘chaos’. While the current funding did not affect waiting times for emergency departments, one woman in Orihuela said she waited more than nine hours at Torrevieja
hospital for her son’s broken arm to be checked.
The British expat mother gave up and paid €250 at Quiron private hospital, where her son was immediately checked and his arm put in plaster.
“I would pay every time for a private service because the public system just doesn’t work,” she said.
Torrevieja’s ‘Excellent Health Platform’ claimed that there had been ‘an obvious fall in health services in Torrevieja at the end of 2022’.
Platform president, Maria del Carmen Matteo, said: “The lack of staff in key positions, be it surgeons or emergency doctors, has created situations that we’ve
never seen before.
“Somebody in the Valencian government should assume responsibility immediately as what is happening in Torrevieja is unsustainable,” she added.
Termination
Private contractor Ribera Salud, which previously ran Torrevieja, faces a similar removal from the Marina Alta health department, which includes Denia Hospital.
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The Valencian government has to give a oneyear notice of the termination of their contract with Ribera, which is scheduled to end on January 31, 2024.
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LONG WAITS: at Alicante, Alcoy and Elche hospitals are being tackled with million of euros more for private surgery
Opinion Page 6
By Alex Trelinski
Rental rise
DEMAND for rental homes in Valencia from digital nomads is helping to push up prices to a record high, with rents rising by almost 10% last year.
Olde fair
BENISSA holds its medieval fair this Friday through to Sunday featuring 50 craft stalls together with food for all tastes and live entertainment.
Burgos link
RENFE has launched a non-stop high speed train link between Valencia and Burgos in Castilla y Leon. Six weekly services will run initially with a journey time of over three-anda-half hours.
Air dispute
AIR traffic controllers are going on strike at Alicante-Elche, Castellon, and Valencia airports on January 30, as well as February 6, 13, 20, and 27.
A BRUTAL gang of bogus cops is at large after torturing a businessman with an electric dog collar and threatening to cut off an ear belonging to his baby son.
Four hooded assailants said they were Guardia officers and wore vests identifying themselves as such as during the December 8 home invasion in Betera. They entered the Torre en Conill urbanisation villa belonging to a hospitality
Horrific ordeal
business owner and demanded money. The 53-year-old was repeatedly punched and given shocks from the dog collar before being thrown down the stairs leading to the basement. He suffered several fractured ribs and severe bruising.
His pregnant wife arrived home an hour later and after covering her head, the thugs threatened her and her 20-monthold son.
Again the demands for money continued and the robbers threatened to cut off one of the baby’s ears. The criminals eventually fled with some watches and the baby’s christening medallion.
Evil monsters
AN EVIL gang that drugged and raped vulnerable teen girls has been brought to justice after a victim’s mum turned detective to track her daughter down.
Teen girls drugged and raped by up to 15 men in week long ordeal
By Alex Trelinski
Police have arrested three men in Gandia and Murcia accused of plying two girls aged 14 and 16 with narcotics and then sexually assaulting them over the course of a week at a Gandia property.
Shell shock
A MAN is being investigated for keeping 27 endangered tortoises at his Valencia home.
Of these, 25 were from the species known as Testudo Graeca (Greek or Blackberry turtle) which is present in the Mediterranean area.
The other two were African spurred tortoises, which is the largest mainland species in the world.
It is native to the Sahara desert and is found in many northern and central African countries.
Investigators believe the youngsters may have been raped by up to 15 men. The mother of one of the victims pretended to be a child to meet one of the gang at the
Pension thieves
CALLOUS crooks that stole from elderly people who made cash withdrawals have been arrested.
Operation Mugger was launched after a victim was robbed outside a bank in Betera.
Police say two gang members ramped up bank surveillance on pension collection days to identify possible targets. The elderly bank user would be distracted by somebody seeking information while a colleague then snatched the cash.
It has not been disclosed how the 38-year-old man obtained the tortoises or whether he was breeding them illegally.
railway station. She found out where the youngsters were staying, and passed on the details to the Guardia Civil who raided the property and rescued the girls. But their abusers had disappeared.
Operation Alike was launched
in June after a report was received that two children had disappeared from a juvenile centre where they were living. The girls stayed for a week in Gandia in a property where the men were squatting. They were given psychotropic substances with a string of men visiting the house to sexually abuse them.
Abusers
Two of the abusers - aged 37 and 50 - of undisclosed nationalities, were finally tracked down and arrested in late October.
A 20-year-old man was detained in Murcia the following month, but details of the operation were kept secret until now. A 43-year-old inmate at Picassent prison is also being investigated.
The criminals operated in Valencia Province in Buñol, Betera, Riola, and Valencia City, plus Burriana in Castellon Province, and further south in the Murcia region.
Two Colombian nationals have been detained and arrest warrants issued against two others.
Bad habit
A DRUNK Franciscan monk knocked over a young boy in Torrent.
A breath test showed the monk - aged in his seventies - was over double the permitted alcohol limit for driving. The boy, said to be aged under five, was treated for a head injury at Valencia’s La Fe Hospital and went home after a period of observation. He was crossing the road, with his mother carrying her fourmonth-old, when the monk hit him in his Fiat Panda.
CRIME www.theolivepress.es January 26th - February 8th 2023 2 NEWS IN BRIEF
SHE has lived through two world wars, a bloody civil war, the Spanish Flu pandemic that killed millions and even pulled through unscathed when she caught Covid. Now Maria Branyas Morera has taken the title of the oldest living person at the ripe age of 115.
Maria, who lives in Catalunya, has inherited the accolade
Revenge is a dish best served hot for Shakira...but beware of your supercool ex
WHEN the Spanish tabloids’ golden couple Gerard Pique and Shakira split up, it seemed that everything was being settled amicably.
The Colombian songstress released a song, Monoto ny, whose lyrics and video conveyed heartbreak. But barely two months later, the dominant emotion in new track Session 53 is undiluted vengeance.
She takes aim at the ex Bar celona and Spain footballer and his new girlfriend Clara Chia and lets fly with both barrels.
The devastating lyrics include lines such as: ‘I was out of your league, that’s why you’re with someone just like you.’
And she follows up with ‘You left me with your mum as a neighbour, the press at my door and a debt with Hacienda’.
The latter is a reference to Shakira’s ongoing
THE GREAT SURVIVOR
following the death of French nun Lucile Randon, who was 118 when she recently died in her sleep in a nursing home in her native Toulon. Maria was born on April 4, 1907 in San Francisco. She returned to Spain in 1914 with the rest of her Catalan family, and has been living in the Tura d’Olot senior home for several years. In 2020, she contracted Covid-19 at the age of 113, but overcame the illness. The second oldest person in the world currently is Fusa Tatsumi from Japan, who is also 115.
Musical vengeance
SCORN: Shakira’s new song but Pique doesn’t seem to mind
By Simon Hunter
battles with the Spanish Tax Agency, which is taking her to court on allegations that she evaded €14.5 million in taxes by claiming she was not living in Spain.
But some of the most barbed lines of the song are reserved for Pique’s girlfriend, with
(Very) Material Girl
DUST down your wallets, Madonna is coming to Spain.
The American superstar has announced she will make an appearance at Barcelona’s Palau Sant Jordi on November 1 as part of her Celebrations world tour. But fans had better be prepared to pay for the privilege of seeing her perform - a VIP deal will cost €900 plus a €120 handling charge for The Immaculate Package, or €400 plus a €53 handling charge for the Gold Circle Early Entry Package.
Normal tickets cost an eye-watering €300 plus €40 handling charge for the best spots. The cheapest are a more manageable €40 plus €5.50 (binoculars not included).
Flamenco fashion
IF you are looking to update your flamenco look for this year’s ferias, head for Sevilla.
The 28th edition of International Flamenco Fashion Week (SIMOF) takes place in the Andalucian city from January 26 to 29, at the Conference and Exhibition Centre (FIBES).
More than 1,800 costumes from over 90 flamenco fashion design houses will be shown in 54 catwalk parades, with a total 50,000 spectators expected.
Shakira singing ‘You swapped a Ferrari for a Twingo, you swapped a Rolex for a Casio’.
CAN YOU SEE ME? THEN SO CAN ALL OUR READERS
Pique himself seems to have taken the attack in good heart - a few days after the song’s release he turned up at an event driving a Twingo and wearing a Casio watch.
End
The relationship between Shakira and Pique came to an end in June, and when the custody agreement over their two sons, Milan, 9, and Sasha, 7, was announced in November, that was the definitive end to their 12-year relationship. Shakira is due to move from Barcelona to Miami with her children, while Pique has been granted generous visitation rights.
Ana and Oscar
RISING Spanish-Cuban star and your dad’s favourite actress Ana de Armas has scored her first Oscar nomination in this year’s Academy Awards.
The Bond girl is in the running for Best Actress as the only Latina considered for an acting gong this year. She received the nod for portraying the original blonde bombshell Marilyn Monroe in the biopic Blonde
The 34-year-old started her career in her native Cuba, but moved to Madrid at the age of 18 to star in the popular drama El Internado. De Armas will vie with two-time Oscar winner Cate Blanchett for the golden statuette at the ceremony on March 13.
NEWS www.theolivepress.es January 26th - February 8th 2023 3 CONTACT US FOR INFORMATION ON OUR TARGETED ADVERTISING ON 951 27 35 75 OR SALES@THEOLIVEPRESS.ES YOUR BUSINESS COULD BE AS VISUAL AS THIS FROM AS LITTLE
AS €50 AN ISSUE
YOUNG: Maria (left) with family
Shocking death Eagle patrol BEACH PLEA
FINESTRAT council wants action to stop sand erosion from Cala de Finestrat beach.
The authority has asked the Provincial Coastal Service to do something about the problem but has so far not received a response.
The council says regeneration is needed from the mouth of the reservoir that accumulates water from the La Cala ravine to the Plaza del Anfora. Heavy storms in recent years have also contributed to the problem.
Wrap up well!
SNOW is likely in some areas of the Valencia and Murcia regions, with storms and hail also on the way.
Snow is forecast for areas above altitudes of 300 to 600 metres as the country as a whole is due to see several days of even lower temperatures than those it is already experiencing.
The chill blast is thanks to a weather front moving in from the Atlantic and a storm named Hannelore.
The mercury plummeted in the first few weeks of the year thanks to storms Gerard and Fien, with conditions expected to get warmer.
But the situation has changed, according to the AEMET state meteorological agency, and the thermometers will not rise until the end of this week.
Cold air
Monday night saw temperatures as low as -13ºC in Cerler, in the Spanish Pyrenees, and -18ºC on Aneto, which is the highest peak in the same mountain range.
The cold air that is passing over the Iberian peninsula, however, has very little humidity, meaning that snow is unlikely in most parts of Spain.
Rain is forecast on the Balearic Islands, which will fall as snow at altitudes of above 500 metres. Particularly heavy showers are also likely in the north of the island of Mallorca, according to Spanish press reports.
Carnival time!
TORREVIEJA’S carnival celebrations start tomorrow (Friday) but visitors to Madrid got a sneak preview last week.
It’s regarded as one of Spain’s best carnivals and some of the participants took to the capital’s streets to coincide with the Fitur tourism fair.
The Torrevieja festivities begin tomorrow night with an official proclamation at the Municipal Theatre, which will
IBERDROLA’S power distribution division has been fined €68,667 after a griffon vulture was electrocuted on a Valen cia Province power line where safety standards had not been met.
The penalty was imposed by the Valencian Community's Ministry of Agriculture.
The incident happened in 2021 and Valencia conservation and nature group Adensva says it's the first time that Iberdrola has been sanctioned over an electrocuted animal for nine years in the region despite there having been 2,500 fatal electrocutions of wildlife in the period.
DENIA is using shock tactics by getting an eagle to control the seagull population around the city's castle. Lokimica - which runs Denia council’s pest-control services - has spent the last three years puncturing seagull eggs to stop new birds being born in the castle.
That has reduced their presence by around 200 but has not totally solved the problem.
Lokimica has now resorted to hiring a professional falconer who will bring along an eagle to show the seagulls who's boss.
It’s hoped the bird of prey will frighten off the gulls before they lay their eggs.
Choppy waters
Beachgoers claim dolphins are disappearing as reckless jet skiers take over the seas
ALICANTE residents are urging local authorities to crack down on rogue jet skiers with beachgoers reporting multiple incidents, even witnessing one rider zip through the shallow waters and crash on the sand.
British expatriate Peter Brown, who lives in
By Anthony Piovesan
Calpe, between Javea and Benidorm, said he’s visited the Costa Blanca beach town for the past 30 years and always looked forward to seeing dolphins. Instead, the 73-year-old from Brighton said the
Bit of peace
VALENCIA’S Fallas festival in February and March might get a firecracker ‘quiet zone’ to offer some respite for both humans and their pets.
Mayor Joan Ribo has indicated he will look at introducing a time slot when firecrackers cannot be set off.
The Fallas start on February 26 culminating in Fallas week between March 14 and 19.
On a visit to the El Grao district of the city, Ribo was asked for his reaction to a petition calling for two hours a day from 2.30pm when firecrackers are not set off. Ribo said he was willing to look at any proposals.
“We live in a city where pyrotechnics are a fundamental element of culture but we are going to try to combine that with what people are asking for,” the mayor said.
Levi ‘kidnapped by Brits’
FORMER X-Factor star Levi Davis was ‘kidnapped off the streets’ of Barcelona by a British gang, believes his family. His mother Julie claims a private investigator received an anonymous tip that her son (above) had got into a dispute with criminals two years ago while playing rugby for Ealing, in London, in 2020.
He was last seen outside the Old Irish Pub on October 29 - while a signal on his phone was last detected the next morning at Barcelona’s Sants Estacio train station.
“We desperately need to know more because this could change the whole nature of the investigation,” Julie told the Olive Press.
Cagey
She added the tipster was ‘very cagey’.
“I do know of some difficulties he had with some people who showed up to his flat in Ealing but don't know what the disagreement was about or how serious it was,” she added.
Police found his passport in Barcelona port in September - but no other clue has been uncovered since.
The Davis family is offering €11,500 to anyone who could find Levi.
wonderful sea animals no longer grace the waters off the coastal town since ‘rogue jet skis’ started to take over. “The quiet of the sea is totally dominated by these relatively new, but growing menaces,” Brown told the Olive Press “They’re often in groups, showing no
respect for others enjoying the Mediterranean.”
The retired ecologist who has called Calpe home since 2019 said he’s seen multiple incidents of jet skiers ‘bullying and intimidating’ swimmers at Puerto Blanco beach.
“I’ve witnessed an elderly man in his canoe being repeatedly, virtually attacked by two jet skiers,”
Brown said.
“Just this summer a jet ski sped right through buoys and came right up onto the beach and had an argument with the lifeguard.
“As an avid swimmer myself, I've feared for my own life a few times, as I know others have done.
“They do things out there at sea you would never get away with on land.”
No legal issues!
LEGAL checks have now been completed on a deal to allow British expats whose licences have expired back on the road.
An embassy update confirmed that ‘checks have now been completed on both sides’.
U-T URN N O !W
It added the final step to sign the international treaty ‘are now underway’ and it will be ‘very soon’. Once the deal has been published in Spain’s official bulletin (BOE), residents who hold UK licences will finally be able to get back on the roads.
SNAKE EYES
A GIANT snake can see clearly now after a team of vets sorted out his eyesight issues at Benidorm’s Terra Natura.
Police said their investigation was still ‘open and ongoing’.
Movie move
A NEW Valencia Film Commission will coordinate with provincial and municipal film offices to attract big productions to the Valencian Community.
The move has been spurred on by last year’s reopening of Alicante’s Ciudad de Luz film studios.
An agreement has been signed with the Alicante complex - the largest in Europe - but it is not known where the Commission will be based and what staffing it will have.
It will be affiliated to Spain’s Film Commission and one of its functions will be to entice film and television productions into the Valencia region. It will also liaise with individual councils about location shoots happening in their areas.
also screen a video of last year’s highlights. On February 4, the theatre will host the ever-popular National Drag Queen competition with €1,500 going to the winner.
The city’s Parque de Las Naciones will be the venue the following day for the pet carnival parade from noon.
The Grand Carnival Parade is on February 12 with dozens of floats travelling through the city centre.
It will use a different route compared to previous years starting on Calle Ramon Gallud (by the cultural centre) and ending on Avenida Doctor Gregorio Marañon (close to the CEPSA service station).
The Night Parade on February 18 starts at the same spot at 6pm, and the carnival ends the next day with the National Competition of Chirigotas and Comparsas at the Municipal Theatre.
It took five people to carry Valencia, a 14-year-old Indian python weighing 29 kilos and over 3.5 metres long, into the vet surgery. There it was found that a mouth infection was causing the problem. Once he got some anaesthetic, a drain removed pus that caused the infection before he was treated with ointment and antibiotics, ahead of making a full recovery.
NEWS www.theolivepress.es January 26th - February 8th 2023 4
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Too much of
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.
Inspiration needed
WAITING lists for elective surgeries have inevitably stretched due to the impact of the Covid pandemic, when for a time health provision seemed to be just about one thing.
Unsurprisingly, the cumulative effect of delays on both consultations, treatments and operations have come home to roost.
The Valencian Community has - according to its own figures - people waiting up to 18 months for procedures like hip and knee surgeries.
They may seem minor to some bean counter but if you suffer such ailments, it's a serious problem, no matter what else anybody else says.
It's got to the stage of some patients being sent to private hospitals to ease waiting lists as medical staff cannot cope.
Unions say more doctors are needed as there’s a shortfall right across the system from local GPs through to consultants.
Money can talk though and administrators are offering overtime payments for staff to do weekend and evening operations.
That’s worrying as medical teams repeatedly report stress and being overworked.
What happens if there's a fatal error in the operating theatre because somebody has clocked up far too many hours but desperately needs some extra money?
It appears to be papering over the cracks when the only realistic answer is to employ more people and reward them well for their endeavours.
Spain’s health service is lauded with praise in international surveys that put it among the best.
But there appears to be no sustainable plan to lance the boil of waiting lists, much to the frustration of both medics and patients.
Even in a year of elections where you’d expect to hear some fresh ideas, the politicians appear to be bereft of inspiration to solve this crucial issue.
PUBLISHER / EDITOR
Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es
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ADMIN Sandra Aviles Diaz (+34) 951 273 575 admin@ theolivepress.es
ETIAS
TRAVEL TRIBULATION
Confusion reigns over new ETIAS visa requirements for Brits entering Spain
By Walter Finch
NEW travel requirements for entering Spain have sparked confusion over who it affects and when they actually start.
The introduction of the new ETIAS regime, as it is known, will complicate the visa-free entry to the EU Brits have enjoyed since freedom of movement ended in 2020.
Initially it was feared the system came in this month, prompting confusion among travellers about what they needed to comply with.
But last week, the EU confirmed that ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) would not come into effect until ‘later in the year’.
Initially insisting May, the European Commission’s Department for Migration and Home Affairs now states it will not start until November.
Permission
IT was described as ‘the first and only solar extracting and pumping station in Europe’ and, from the moment it was operational, it was a game-changer.
The village of Godelleta was rightfully proud when it was selected in 2016 as the trial site for an innovative sun-powered system to pump and distribute water for irrigation.
The local agricultural community witnessed some remarkable improvements and, with water being used more efficiently, the citrus, olive, and vine yields improved and job opportunities increased as a result. Thanks to batteries, the pump systems were able to operate at night and even on cloudy days, and, by reducing the village’s reliance on non-renewable energy sources, carbon emissions were reduced. It was a win-win scenario . . . until now.
The electricity powers a control panel and pump, sunk into a water source, which could be anything from a river to a well.
Water is then transported along a ditch or pipe, or, in Godelleta’s case, an ancient system of acequias (canals) first installed by the Moors.
The plan is to increase the number of solar panels to 91,000
The delivery is preset depending on irrigation requirements – it might be drip method, full flow or half flow, for example. A timer, and water pressure, level and volume, can also be preset. Godelleta is perched on the flat table of land above the citrus farms some 40km from the city of Valencia, and below the olive groves and vineyards on the higher land to the west towards Cuenca.
The dynamics of a solar pumping system are both pioneering and simple. Photovoltaic panels convert sunlight into electricity.
The town’s farmers are able to produce the crops grown in both areas (oranges comprise 40% of the total, grapes another 40%, the rest dominated by olives and persimmon), and the solar extraction system has been able to handle the varying irrigation requirements. For the most part, the community has been happy with it, and proud to be a
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Carretera Nacional 340, km 144.5, Calle Espinosa 1, Edificio cc El Duque, planta primera, 29692, Sabinillas, Manilva
So for the time being, Brits are still allowed to enter any European Schengen area country with just their passport for up to three months within any six month period.
In November however, travellers will have to apply for special permission to enter the EU before boarding the plane or boat. For a fee of €7, travellers will undergo a form of security check that will monitor irregular migration or high epidemic risks posed by visa-exempt visitors to Schengen states.
The background check will be automated against EU information systems for borders and security and, it’s claimed, authorisation will be issued within minutes for most. As such, holidaymakers who forget to apply for an ETIAS - or aren’t even aware of it - will technically be able to apply while waiting to board the aeroplane.
However, if additional checks are required, this could take up to 96 hours, making it sensible to apply well in advance.
It’s important to stress that expat residents of Spain will not be required to hold an ETIAS, although it will be advisable to have residency documents to hand when boarding.
Once an ETIAS is acquired, it will be valid for three years, saving travellers the hassle of having to apply each and every time they travel.
A total of 60 countries will be subject to the new ETIAS regime, including the UK, USA, New Zealand and Australia.
Largest ever haul of baby eels, worth quarter of a million euros, puts fish smuggling under the microscope
By Dilip Kuner
THE recent arrest of two men trying to smuggle 190 kilos of baby eels (known as elvers or anguilla) through the port of Algeciras has once more thrown the spotlight of this unusual but highly lucrative illegal trade. Border agents were shocked to find coolboxes filled with the live baby glass eels - 192 kilos of them, worth an astounding €250,000 - in a car coming from Tangier.
It was the largest haul of the critically endangered species since their import was banned into the EU in 2010.
But their high value for the Asian market has encouraged a rise in criminal gangs flying them to the Far East. Many end up in China to be fattened and then sold on to other countries including Japan where they are a highly prized delicacy.
Spain - itself a major breeding ground for the glass eel - has become a hub for the illegal trade, with elvers ‘harvested’ from across Europe and Africa sent here for onward shipment to Asia.
The eels are carried by ‘mules’ on scheduled flights in specially adapted checked-in suitcases. It may sound like a crazy amateurish scheme, but the trade is worth millions.
The Olive Press has previ-
ously reported on the vast profits, with one man convicted of smuggling an estimated €62 million worth of baby eels from Spain to East Asia via the UK. Gilbert Khoo (pictured bragging about his wealth by showing two gold bars), 67, from Surrey, was found guilty of six offences relating to the illegal importation.
UK Border Force officers found the European glass eels, concealed under a load of chilled fish at Heathrow Airport.
The live consignment, weighing around 200 kilos, had been transported from Spain to the UK in 2017 en route to Hong Kong. The creatures have since been returned to the wild.
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Deposito Legal MA: 498-2019
As the ‘industrialisation’ of solar power becomes ever more controversial, Jack Gaioni looks at how one small farming community was grateful for the installation that helped them pump water round the fields more efficiently – until the company announced plans to expand it tenfold
Taking the strain
New train route will take 48,000 lorries off the road
SPAIN is to get a new rail ‘superhighway’ aimed at taking 48,000 lorries off the roads. At the moment just 5% of goods are moved by train, compared to the European average of 20%.
But that is set to change as a new rail service between Algeciras and Zaragoza is put into action.
The public-private project will see a 1,074-kilometre route operating between the city in Cadiz province, which is home to the country’s main port, and the capital of Aragon, which is set to become a national hub for logistics.
At the moment, the vast majority of goods arriving in Algeciras are hauled away by lorries. The new rail link will take 48,000 lorries off the roads annually on the routes north from the Anda-
From oil to biofuel
AN old oil refinery in Huelva has been converted to produce biofuels, capable of reducing CO2 emissions by 90%.
Cepsa says that the upgraded facility is now capable of producing a sustainable diesel fuel, called hydrobiodiesel, from vegetable oil, vegetable waste and animal fats not intended for human consumption (sandach).
The plant was originally made to remove sulphur from mineral oil.
By Simon Hunter
lucian port. This is expected to dramatically decrease pollution: the forecast is a reduction of 9,000 tons of CO2 emissions.
The plan is for three services to run daily in each direction. Each train will have capacity for 30 wagons, which will be loaded with shipping containers. The Spanish Cabinet has authorised contracts worth
€45.5 million to refurbish signage on two new routes of the conventional rail network, to prepare them for this new train highway. The lines between Ariza and
Calatayud, and Guadalajara and Ariza, will be the first to get a spruce up. The total investment for the project is expected to run to €85 million.
FARM TO FUEL
OIL giant Repsol is joining forces with agricultural organisation ASAJA to transform agricultural and livestock waste into renewable fuels. They will pool their expertise to search for ways to improve the management of agricultural and livestock by-products in rural and sparsely populated areas where logistics can be a major obstacle. Repsol will analyse the potential to use farming waste and slurry as raw materials to make renewable fuels.
And on the flip side, Repsol will examine the possibility of reuse of by-products from the refining industry as fertilisers to increase agricultural yield and productivity.
Berta Cabello, Repsol’s Director of Renewable Fuels, explained: “Agriculture and livestock are key sectors in Spain. At Repsol, we are working with them to develop the rural economy and transform the by-products of this activity into renewable and circular fuels and materials, which in turn can be reused in the sector.”
Net Zero by 2050….at what cost?
THE question in the headline is easy to answer…. a lot! There is much talk in the media about ‘Net Zero’.
Simply put, this is that when CO2 emissions and CO2 removals are equally balanced, we reach the Utopian state of Net Zero.
It’s simple science. The world is warming to dangerous levels pri-
marily because of CO2 emissions. Last year estimates from the United Nations indicated that emissions exceeded 35 billion tonnes. The amount being removed was less than 10% of this total.
Getting to Net Zero is a massive global challenge.
Currently nearly all the world’s CO2 removal occurs through natural pro-
cesses.
That’s primarily trees and plants taking the CO2 from the air and then soil absorbing it. There are limits to how much mother nature can do. Even with increasing the amount of planting that has been promised (and when
it comes to promises on environmental action they are consistently broken) it still only amounts to 4 billion tonnes of CO2 removal.
THE SOLUTION IS TECHNOLOGY
To reduce and restrict the rise in global temperatures enormous amounts of money have to be invested.
Developing new technologies does not come cheaply. Many of these solutions are being developed:
● Carbon capture
● Incorporating CO2 capture into biomass based electricity generation
● Developing specially treated charcoal (Biochar) that locks in carbon
So, there are options. And there’s the rub. Developed nations contin-
ue to talk the talk, and not walk the walk.
My own view is that there is a danger here with the talk of expensive solutions.
All this does is delay and defer the urgently needed action required to minimise the use of fossil fuels.
To date, emissions from fossil fuels have yet to start a downward trend. The facts speak for themselves.
When you look at the hard evidence, there can be only one conclusion…. we are failing to remove the threat for future generations.
GREEN www.theolivepress.es January 26th - February 8th 2023 8 +34 951 120 830 | gogreen@mariposaenergia.es | www.mariposaenergia.es SOLAR PANELS GENERATE YOUR OWN ELECTRICITY Save Money • Save The Planet • Add Value To Your Home Martin Tye is the owner of energy switch company Mariposa Energy. +34 638 145 664 ( Spain Phone ) Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es Developed nations continue to talk the talk but not walk the walk
Green Matters By Martin Tye
BIOCHAR: A method of locking carbon away
TRADE: Algeciras is Spain’s main port
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STARS: of the show
Historic China
SPAIN will be the first place in the world to host an exhibition on the legacy of China's Qin and Han dynasties, after the communist country relaxed pandemic restrictions.
Alicante’s Archaeological Museum will host the display of over 150 items from March until January next year.
All exhibits have been loaned by nine Chinese mu seums.
Highlights will include nine warrior statues dug up in archaeological sites and an original terracotta horse. Alicante Provincial Coun cil's Julia Parra said: “The exhibition will become one of Spain's biggest cultural events of the year and will attract visitors from across the country.”
Flaming tradition
Horses ridden through fire as part of San Anton celebrations
By Dilip Kuner
A TRADITION where horses are spurred to leap through 20 flaming bonfires has been revived after a COVID break - and not everyone is happy.
Las Luminarias, which celebrates Spain’s patron saint of animals, San Anton, returned after the COVID-19
Eurovision time
BENIDORM will once again host the search to find Spain’s Eurovision Song Contest entry at the end of the month.
Benidorm Fest 2023 will stage the semi-finals on January 31 and February 2 at the Palacio de Deportes with the grand final on February 4. Tickets for all three nights were sold out within minutes of going on sale, with the event screened by TVE.
Some 18 singers and groups will fight it out to represent Spain in Liverpool this May.
After years of lacklustre entries, Spain moved to a festival format in Benidorm last year. The winner was SloMo sung by Chanel, which finished a very respectable third in Turin.
CRUEL?: No horses were hurt, claim participants
pandemic last year, but with pandemic restrictions still in force. This year the 200-year-old event saw 120 horses and donkeys going through the cobbled village streets of San Bartolome de Pinares, near Avila with no such restrictions.
The strange ritual is in memory of a devastating epidemic that wiped out a large part of the area’s cattle and horses. The bonfire smoke from bonfires is meant to drive away evil spirits. For an event that celebrates animal well-being, it has attracted controversy over the way the horses are treated.
The National Association for the Protection and Welfare
EYE OF THE STORM
A SPECIAL Ukranian art exhibition will be hosted in Madrid at the Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum.
The exhibit In the Eye of the Storm: Modernism in Ukraine, 1900-1930s can also be visited through a virtual tour. Deputy Minister of Culture and Information Policy of Ukraine Anastasia Bondar said one of the most important tasks for culture is to open national art to the whole world.
of Animals made its annual demand that horses should only pass by the bonfires to take in the ‘purifying’ smoke, rather than riding through them - a move backed by the town hall. But many of the riders ignore the official advice and charge through the flames.
Burned
Organisers said no horses were harmed during this year’s hour-long celebration. Precautions like clipping horse hair to avoid the animals being burned were also taken. Horse owners and riders had to be officially registered and take out civil-liability insurance.
OP QUICK CROSSWORD
“Exhibitions like this aim to show our art, unknown to the West, which embodies the difficult path of self-determination of Ukrainians, and on the other hand, prove the belonging and synchronization of Ukrainian art with the European context of those times,” she added. For more information, visit: www.museothyssen.org
Across
1 Cerne ---, Dorset village with a giant (5) 4 Betrayal (4-3)
8 About (5)
9 Little one in Liguria (7)
10 Nepalis upset dog (7)
11 Tithe (5)
12 Stopped flowing (3,3)
14 Experts (6) 18 Theme (5) 20 Opposes (7)
22 Employment vacancy (7)
23 Throw forcefully (5) 24 Hankered (7) 25 Eats to a plan (5)
1 Finger pointer (7)
2 Negotiate (7)
3 Hindu religious teacher (5)
4 Delicate in meaning (6)
5 Restricted (7)
6 Kitchen tear-jerker? (5)
7 Cog (5)
13 Brutal bully (7)
15 Wrap up (7)
16 Nuns (7)
17 Counterfeit (6)
18 Temperamental (5)
19 Perplexed at the Greek letter (5)
21 Holy war (5)
All solutions are on page 13
LA CULTURA January 26th - February 8th 2023 10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Down
OP SUDOKU
THE vast majority of people are not doing enough to ward off dementia in later life.
A feared consequence of ageing the number of people expected to suffer from dementia is only set to rise.
Already an estimated 55 million people suffer from it, with more than 60% living in low and middle income countries.
As the proportion of older people increases in nearly every country, this figure is expected to rise to 78 million in 2030 and then 139 million by 2050, according to the WHO.
To remedy the problem Alzheimer’s Research UK has
SLEEP TO DEFEAT OLD AGE
Plus another 11 great tips to avoid joining the 55 million people currently with dementia
By Anthony Piovesan
composed a new 12-step checklist to help avoid getting the condition.
SLUMBER ISSUES
A SURVEY called ‘Sleep and Well-being’ claims 54% of people in Spain have mood swings caused by a lack of sleep.
It found that 39% of the population endure either poor or very poor quality sleep on a daily basis.
The research was jointly carried out by the Monica Duart Sleep Foundation and Castellon’s Jaume I University.
Sleep problems are hitting the whole of the population, regardless of age, with 36% of those surveyed admitting to daytime drowsiness.
“These research results are further evidence of the importance of sleep,” said Monica Duart.
“The lack of rest affects all parts of our lives from mental health to work performance,” she added.
Collaboration between the Sleep Foundation and the university started last year.
They are now both promoting rest and well-being, in addition to raising general awareness of sleeping problems. Over the next year, further analysis will be made over sleep quality and its implications on health.
The number one factor on the checklist is to get at least seven hours of sleep a night. This is the optimal amount of sleep for most adults, providing the most benefit for cognitive and mental health. Step two is to regularly challenge the brain - this could involve anything from frequently doing puzzles, or playing crosswords to learning a new language.
Third is to stay socially active, while the fourth step is to maintain mental well-being.
The fifth and sixth steps recommend people look after their hearing and eat a balanced diet.
Staying physically active comes next, while quitting smoking also helps.
The ninth step is drinking responsibly, while number 10 is keeping a healthy level of cholesterol.
To achieve this, eat oats, barley and other whole grains, as well as beans, eggplant and okra, nuts, vegetable
VITAL: A good seven hours solid sleep as a minimum have limited efficacy and are primarily labelled for Alzherimer’s disease. There are, however, numerous new treatments in various stages of clinical trials.
oils, apples, grapes, strawberries and citrus fruits. The final two steps are maintaining healthy blood pressure and managing diabetes. Although age is the strongest known risk factor for dementia, it is not an inevitable consequence of biological ageing.
Trials
It also does not exclusively affect older people - young onset dementia occurs when symptoms develop before the age of 65 and accounts for 9% of cases worldwide. There is currently no cure for dementia. There are anti-dementia medicines and disease-modifying therapies, but they
Calming influence
CHILDREN stressed out as they wait for surgery are being given Virtual Reality technology so they can relax and watch videos while in a strange environment.
Doctors at the Clinic de Valencia have turned to modern technology to not just keep kids entertained but also teach them more about what happens before an operation and techniques for easier breathing and relaxation.
Department head, Rafael Badenes, said: “When children undergo surgery, there are times when they feel uneasy being in a strange place.
“At this time it is essential to offer them something that makes them feel more comfortable and enables them to forget where they are, as far as possible,” he added.
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Hopeful sign
INDUSTRIAL prices rose
14.7% over a 12-month period in December.
The National Statistics Institute said that was the lowest rise since April 2021 and was over five points down on the November figure. The decline was mainly due to a fall in energy prices, which dropped by 15% last month, and cheaper intermediate goods, whose prices dropped more than 2.5% in the same period.
Prices for non-durable goods rose just 0.1%, as a result of an increase in the manufacturing prices of vegetable and animal oils and fats.
Companies tend to pass on industrial price rises to customers, ultimately fuelling inflation.
ACCUSATIONS that the big four accounting firms were making their Spanish employees work 84 hour weeks triggered simultaneous surprise inspections by Spain’s labour ministry. The Madrid offices of PwC, KPMG, EY and Deloitte received visits from
Doesn’t add up
government inspectors investigating potentially abusive practices. The ministry said it was concerned about compliance with both labour
and social security law at the consulting giants.
The big four host 20,000 employees in their Madrid skyscrapers, many of whom are new graduates eager to get their accounting accreditation and a big name company on their CV.
DIGITAL DEBUT
Bank of Spain approves trial of new ‘electronic Euro’
THE Bank of Spain will allow a digital euro token to be tested by payment gateway firm Monei.
It will be the first use of a digital euro in Europe.
The EURM token will be limited to a small group of people during the initial testing phase.
Users will provide feedback in
QUANTUM LEAP
THE first trial of ultra speedy 25G PON technology has successfully been trialled in Spain on Telefonica’s existing fibre network, Nokia announced.
The trial demonstrated nose-bleed-inducing speeds of 20 gigabits per second - around 60 times faster than current high-speed internet.
Such speeds are considered necessary for some cutting edge cloud computing technology, as well as future applications such as Mark Zuckerberg’s Metaverse.
Unfortunately 25G is not a five order jump in technology for 5G mobile networks; the two are separate technologies - 25G refers to home broadband.
By Alex Trelinski
order to sort out any problems and transactions will only be conducted within Spain. Among the practical uses of the digital currency is that a merchant for example could digitise and schedule daily payments to suppliers according to what is needed on a particular day. Monthly payments could be made in daily instalments to spread costs and employees could get a choice of whether they get paid daily, weekly, each fortnight or every month.
Monei CEO, Alex Saiz, said: “The product is now ready and we will start marketing it immediately once the controlled tests are finished.”
In order to get the EURM deposited into their account, participants in the
pilot will be required to enter their phone number, verify their identity using video identification and deposit real euros into their wallet through the Bizum payment app. All euros deposited will be automatically switched for digital euros, which account holders can then send to other individuals or registered companies taking part in the pilot.
All funds will be kept in two designated bank accounts
CASH HAPPY
THE number of bankers in Spain who earn more than €1 million a year grew 73% to 221 just after the pandemic.
This is compared to the figure of 128 in 2020, according to figures just published by the European Banking Authority (EBA).
The list shows that Spain is fourth in Europe when it comes to the highest number of bankers with salaries over the million-euro mark, only below Germany (589), France (371) and Italy (351).
What’s more, a Spanish banker received the highest salary in the entire European Union in 2021, with a total of €14.67 million for the year.
Salary
with BBVA and CaixaBank, and participants will be able to exchange digital euros for physical euros at any time. The pilot testing phase is scheduled to last for six to 12 months.
Pilot
Once the success of the pilot has been evaluated, the Bank of Spain will make a ruling on whether to allow Monei to roll out tokens to the general public.
The average salary for million-earning bankers in the country was €2.16 million, compared to the European average of €1.8 million. In its analysis, the EBA pointed to the effect that the variable component of bankers’ salaries has on the yearly figures, meaning that when these lenders have a good year, pay can rise considerably.
Factors that had an influence on strong performance in 2021 include the lifting of many of the restrictions put in place the year before due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the relocation of staff due to Brexit and inflation.
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Choke on that US flight bid
ARTICHOKES grown in the Vega Baja region were shown off to their culinary maximum this week at Madrid Fusionthe International Congress of Gastronomy.
Almoradi chef Moises Martinez from the town’s El Buey restaurant demonstrated a range of dishes featuring the vegetable at the Costa Blanca Tourist Board stand.
Creations include an artichoke salad and a new dish called alcamole - a variation on guacamole.
Expensive ham
A SPANISH tourist in Australia barely had one leg in the country before he was sent back under beefed-up biosecurity laws over failing to declare ham and cheese in his luggage. The 20-year-old man had his visa cancelled and was fined $3,300 for carrying more than one kilogram of undeclared pork and cheese.
He was stopped at Perth Airport when 275 grams of pancetta, 665g of cured ham and about 300g of goat cheese in his luggage.
The Australian government had recently announced a beefing up of penalties for people caught with banned items to stop diseases and pests from entering Australia.
WORK has started on trying to establish the first direct air link between the United States and Alicante-Elche airport. Speaking at the Fitur tourist fair in Madrid, Alicante Provincial Council president Carlos Mazon said getting the new route would be the big tourism aim for 2023. He added that the council was talking to tour operators, travel agencies and tourist associations
plus airport operator Aena to establish a trans-Atlantic service. “We have decided to go directly to the North American market, because there is still no direct link between the United States and the Costa Blanca and we are going to work to achieve it,” said Mazon.
Positive picture
Bumper year for tourism as cash flows in
TOURIST industry body
Exceltur says that the sector has ‘totally recovered’ after the Covid pandemic and has predicted a bumper year for revenues.
Exceltur’s Tourism Outlook report says the sector’s GDP reached €159 billion in 2022 - up 1.4% on the previous year and 4.7% on 2018. The report adds that 61% of economic growth in Spain last year was down to tourism.
Exceltur says the first quarter of 2022 was marked by higher energy prices and problems with supplies due to the war in Ukraine, as well as the Omicron Covid variant, but that from April there was a travel recovery,
OP Puzzle solutions
Quick Crossword
Across: 1 Abbas, 4 Sell-out, 8 Circa, 9 Bambino, 10 Spaniel, 11 Tenth, 12 Ran dry, 14 Adepts, 18 Motif, 20 Objects, 22 Opening, 23 Heave, 24 Yearned, 25 Diets
Down: 1 Accuser, 2 Bargain, 3 Swami, 4 Subtle, 5 Limited, 6 Onion, 7 Tooth, 13 Ruffian, 15 Package, 16 Sisters, 17 Forged, 18 Moody, 19 Theta, 21 Jihad
By Alex Trelinski
especially in the leisure, meetings and congresses sectors.
The body believes that accumulated demand and the desire to travel have overcome the adverse effects on personal income caused by inflation.
Normality
Exceltur expects consolidation of an upward trend throughout 2023, and a return to normality in international mobility, especially that of Asian travellers to Spain, plus the loyal Latin American market. A special focus has been put
on Mexican trade, which rose by 80% last year. The report pointed out that a big increase in domestic tourism activity boosted the sector as the foreign visitor market continued to recover.
As for profitability, Exceltur said: “Business results will continue to be impacted by the still high energy and borrowing costs, inflation and increases in salary costs.”
Just Grand
THE Grand Hyatt group will open its first hotel in Spain following a franchise agreement with the La Manga Club and Resort in Murcia
The complex is at present closed for significant renovations, and the well-established 192-room resort property will relaunch as the Grand Hyatt La Manga Club and Resort this spring. Grand Hyatt claims La Manga’s facilities set a benchmark for sport in the Murcia region. They include three championship level 18-hole golf courses; outdoor tennis facilities; and the La Manga Club Football
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Flying the flag
CULLERA has been chosen to host a 36th anniversary celebration for Blue Flag winners in Europe.
Blue Flags are awarded annually by an international jury appointed by the Association of Environmental and Consumer Education(ADEAC). The flags acknowledge beach quality and were first handed out in 1987.
Cullera has the most blue flags in Valencia Province, and is second to Orihuela in the Valencian Community. The ADEAC has now picked Cullera Castle as the venue on March 24 to welcome representatives from every area in Spain and Europe that has won a flag each year since the awards started.
Just seven other Spanish municipalities, besides Cullera, have been annual Blue Flag winners, namely Alicante, Alcala de Xivert, l’Alfas del Pi, Calpe, El Campello, and Gandia - all in the Valencia region, along with Oleiros in A Coruña.
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FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL January 26th - February 8th 2023 13
WINTER WARMERS
There are three wise ways to pass the spare time in winter: hibernate, snow goose it down to the Southern Hemisphere, or move to a Spanish hotel with scenic views, the possibility of walks, and a warm fire in your bedroom
IT’S not hard to find casa rurales and mountain hotels in Spain where you can sink into a deep sofa in front of a warm fire in the library or lounge, but if you want a flickering fire you can enjoy in your pyjamas and the privacy of your own room, read on.
IF you want snow (and it’s winter), you have a good chance of finding it here in Aragon’s high Pyrenees, 1230 metres up and just 20 km away from the ski slopes of Cerler y Benasque.
The thick-walled 18th century house is exactly as a winter getaway should be, with wood-panelled rooms, plenty of charm. The multilevel suite El Torreon has its own cosy living room and fireplace as well as a hydro-massage shower, and there’s
also a good place for lolling in front of the fire with a glass of wine in the shared areas. The hotel (its full name translates as The Holly Tree of Maria’s House) is set in the beautiful glacial landscape of the Benasque Valley.
www.casamuria.com
PICTURESQUE though the other entries are, if you tried to imagine the perfect rural farmhouse, there’s a chance it would look like this family-run gem, with its old tower, and stone walls smothered in ivy and jasmine. It’s equally enchanting inside with flagstone floors, beamed ceilings and lovely rooms, several of which have fireplaces. The huge farm is in the Sierra de Gata in the western region of Extremadura (close to Portugal and within visiting distance of Salamanca, Plasencia and Caceres). It’s excellent walking, riding and birdwatching country, but you may want to just sit and gaze into space.
www.fincaelcabezo.com
STRIDE along the beaches of nearby Llanes or climb the mountains of Covadonga Natural Park or borrow a bike and explore the local villages, then come back and recover at this cosy place. Some rooms at the hotel have fireplaces, as have each of the apartments (just 400 metres away); there are views of the Picos de Europa – and you can even bring your dog. Perfect. lamontanamagica.es
ANOTHER charming Catalan house – this one from the 11th century, with atmospheric mediaeval architecture, antiques, paintings and many personal touches combined with contemporary, luxurious mod cons of a luxurious retreat. All rooms are gorgeous but one third of them – the Deluxe and Suites – are rendered heavenly with massive windows, open fireplaces, strategically positioned sofas and a supply of wood.
This gem is located in 300 hectares of farmland and forest in the pre-Pyrenees. www.hotelvellafarga.com
NORTHEAST of Benicassim (as a reference to all rocking hipsters) in the lovely village of Vilafames, in the Valencian Community, this lofty 17th century manor house has been lovingly converted to preserve its architectural features and character. Among the nine rooms are three suites with wood-burning stoves visible from the beds. The hotel looks down from ivy-covered city walls across plains of ancient olives and almonds (in flower in January) to the weird and mighty Penyagolosa mountain and natural park.
www.eljardinvertical.com
THROUGH the massive windows of this warm, calm, light and modern, ‘adults-only eco spa resort’ you can see wooded hills to be explored on foot or by bike. You could even drive to Biarritz, Pamplona, or San Sebastian as none of them are far. But if you are in
one of the apartments, with a deep bathtub and wood-burning stove, you may not care to – especially as the hotel also boasts a well-stocked wine cellar and gourmet restaurant.
www.arantzahotela.com
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL January 26th - February 8th 2023 14
Casa Muria, Huesca
La Montaña Mágica, Asturias
Hotel Vella Farga, Lleida
Finca el Cabezo, Cáceres
Jardin Vertical, Castellón
Arantza Hotela, Navarra
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
Hotel Consolacion, Teruel
WHERE is Teruel? Fair question. Not many people live here, few people visit, and hardly anyone has heard of it. A wild province, it belongs to Aragon in Spain’s northeast (halfway between Valencia and Barcelona, then in a bit) and, despite its splendid mediaeval villages, gorges, waterfalls and river trails, Consolacion is probably the best known thing in it – aside from the truffles and truffle hunters. The hotel is modern with striking, minimalist design and the most in-demand accommodation is in standalone cubes (called Kubes) offering uninterrupted views of nature, sunken baths, and hanging woodburners. www.consolacion.com.es
Encis d’Emporda, Girona
IT’S hard to beat a 17th century stonewalled, ivy-covered Catalan farmhouse for charm, especially when it’s well-heated. This is another adults-only escape, this time with accommodation offered in charming, art-filled suites, all of which have views, terraces, deep baths, and the all-important wood-burning stoves. There’s a fire in the library, too. The hotel is in the Emporda countryside, just 20-minutes from the beaches of Costa Brava.
www.hotelruralencisdemporda.com
SUNK deep in a valley carved by the Guadalquivir, this old-fashioned but special place is surrounded by a magical world of forests, deer and snuffling boar – and sometimes snow. The winding drive to the Sierra de Cazorla Natural Park in the under-visited province of Jaen is worth it: In summer, there’s swimming, camping and kayaking, while in winter it’s a top spot for long walks though the river valley, spotting birds, boars and deer – and over-eating hearty campo food at nu-
Convento Santa Maria de la Sierra, Sierra de Cazorla
merous cheap and cheerful bars. The Convento is very Spanish and very atmospheric, with fireplaces in many of the ground floor rooms, and ecclesiastical touches.
www.conventosantamaria.com
LOCATED 190 km west from Madrid, just south of the winter playground that is the Sierra de Gredos National Park, this is a popular and rather romantic weekend break spot. To keep that loving feeling, do make sure to book one of the suites with a fireplace in the living room. And, if it’s a special occasion, try to get the Valley suite which has floor to ceiling windows looking out over oaks and chestnut trees and one of those hydro-massage baths, as well.
www.hotelnabia.es
January 26th - February 8th 2023 15
Hotel Nabia, Avila
REuse REduce REcycle
Big pussy
A ‘big cat’ reported to be a ‘Siberian Tiger’ terrorising residents in Cadiz has turned out to be a household pussy, police report after days of surveillance.
Rotten plot
POLICE in Cordoba who arrested a gang which hid drugs inside fake tomatoes and used trucks to transport them to France, have seized 22,370kg of cannabis resin.
Maya gold
PABLO Picasso’s portrait of his toddler daughter Maya in 1938 is expected to fetch between €15 million and €20 million at an upcoming Sotheby’s auction in London.
O P LIVE RESS The
COSTA BLANCA NORTE / VALENCIA
A POLICEMAN has been suspended for moonlighting as a porn actor.
The cop in Sevilla had appealed against the six month unpaid suspension to the High Court in Madrid, protesting that he was unpaid for his starring roles.
But judges decided that he received ‘indirect benefits’ and threw out the appeal.
The Directorate General of the Police had imposed the suspension after it found the National Police officer had been advertising his extra-curricular activities on social media.
Police bosses decided this was ‘detrimental to the image of the force’.
DIRTY COP
By Dilip Kuner
The court ruled in its written judgement that ‘he advertised himself on social networks using a pseudonym as a pornographic actor.
“He was totally recognisable in several photos that he posted, some of which had a high sexual content.”
In addition, the officer provided contact details for hiring, as he apparently acted in ‘specialised rooms’, perform-
Bosom buddies
HABITUAL rows at a Spanish public swimming pool about women going topless might finally be settled after the town hall gave the practice its blessing. Previously the law in Cordoba was vague on the issue, resulting in frequent poolside blow outs between those who object to seeing breasts in public versus those who do not. What’s more, the Municipal Sports Institute has floated the idea of dedicated times for naturists to indulge in full-frontal nudity.
Policeman who stripped off to star in porn movies suspended
ing live pornographic shows and making videos.
The officer, who was stationed in the Macarena district police station, appealed the suspension claiming that the pro file he managed on social networks as a porn actor ‘was private, not open to the public’ and that he did not charge anything, ‘but did it as a hobby’. His image rights were assigned to the production compa ny and the police officer did not know if the company de manded payment for access to the con tent.
In a written sub mission to the court
No speaky English
his lawyer said: “He never worked as a professional, only as an amateur, without charging for image rights or identifying himself as a police officer and without using his own name.”
The policeman’s now ex-partner, who starred with him, told investigating internal affairs officers that she was paid €300 per scene, although the male ‘stars’ usually did not get paid. Judges decided that the officer would have indirectly benefited by ‘sharing expenses’ and that the scenes would not have been possible without him.
A WOMAN thought her foster dog was not obeying her demands because it was disobedient, but it turns out the pooch only understood Spanish.
Ariana Giampietro, 26, had been looking after American Pitbull pup Monty for about a week but he wouldn’t ‘sit’ when she asked him to in English.
When she asked the shelter she fostered him from, she then discovered he had previously lived on a farm with a Spanish family, and only understood Spanish words. Giampietro, an adoption case manager for children in care, from Florida then looked up the Spanish words for ‘down’ and ‘let’s go’ and when saying them aloud discovered how obedient Monty could be. She is now teaching him English words so he can become bilingual before he moves in with his new English-speaking adoptive family.
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FREE Vol. 4 Issue 98 www.theolivepress.es January 26th - February 8th 2023
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