Olive Press Costa Blanca North and Valencia - Issue 99

Page 1

SNOW has caused the closure of a series of schools in the hilly areas of Castellon. An emergency protocol was activated in the interior areas of Alt Mallars, Alt Maestrat, l’Alcalatan and Els Ports. Classes affecting around 900 children in Portell de Morella, Vistabella del Maestrat, Jerica and Viver were suspended on Wednesday due to Storm Isaack covering the province with snow.

QUAKE RELIEF

Valencia firefighters on ground in Turkey in search for survivors

A SPECIALIST response team from Valencia is already digging through the rubble to help rescue victims of the Turkish earthquake disaster.

The firefighting unit flew to Istanbul within hours of the devastating quake and were joined on the same flight by celebrity chef Jose Andres.

The founder of World Central Kitchen - who is setting up a base in the affected area - stated he was ‘proud' to see the Valencia fire-

fighters on board.

DEVASTATED: Swathes of Turkish cities have been reduced to rubble

The 15 members of Valencia’s Emergencies and Catastrophes Rescue Unit are working with sniffer dogs in Adana, near the epicenter of the quake.

The team has experience of working in areas with collapsed

buildings and will aid in finding victims. They have linked up with volunteers from the Valencian IAE charity.

By yesterday the death toll from the disaster had reached 11,000. Search dogs will be deployed

along with specialist equipment including cameras to detect people who are under the rubble.

Firefighters have also brought vital health and medical supplies with them.

President of the Valencia Firefighters Consortium, Maria Josep Amigo said: “We express our solidarity with Turkey and Syria after the terrible disaster that the region has suffered.”

Help

“Our thoughts are with the people and our firefighters who will be there to provide help,” she added.

Spain is also sending amphibious assault ship Juan Carlos and a landing platform dock laden with emergency supplies.

FREE Vol. 4 Issue 99 www.theolivepress.es February 9th - February 22nd 2023 O P LIVE RESS The COSTA BLANCA yorkshirelinencostablanca.com Jávea · Altea MORAIRA PLUMBING HEATING www.morairaph.com PLUMBING & AIR CONDITIONING SPECIALISTS tel: +34 620 523 613 / +34 966 498 993 email: info@morairaph.com Calle Mulhalcen 3, Ctra Moraira de Calpe 142b, Moraira Teulada 03724, Alicante New location further down the road towards Moraira town centre, next to Gemisant & Kostas Restaurant Air Conditioning | Bathroom Fitting Gas and Oil Central Heating | Electrics Certification & Inspection | Pool | Solar Energy SPECIAL OFFER Giastu Aroma 2 2,5 kw R32 gas refrigerate A+++20db 3 years warranty including standard installation and material 599€ (inc IVA) SOLAR ELECTRIC ENERGY NOW BEING INSTALLED SALES&RENTALSSPECIALISTS 966491883 www.moraira-hamiltons.net Moriara•Calpe•Jalon•Javea•Denia•Altea PARTNERING OWNERS FOR OVER 20 YEARS Specialists in Luxury Villas Holiday Rentals and Sales Javea - Denia La Sella Golf Area tel: +34 966 424 505 mob: +34 647 575 152 www.vacationvillas.es INFO@VACATIONVILLAS.ES PROPERTIES WANTED ALL YOUR LEGAL ISSUES DEALT WITH! Centro Comercial Arenal, Avenida del Pla 126, Office 217, Javea 03730 tel: 966 943 219 www.mylawyerinspain.com Here to help with your life in Spain including wills, residency, tax returns, buying and selling property We speak your language! SOLAR PANELS www.mariposaenergia.es Serious savings on currency transfers to and from Spain Scan here for your customised quote: See page ??
GET DIGGING: Snowplough out in Portell (far left) See Chilling out on page 6
School’s out!
The food of love... Discover our guide to romantic treats
page 14
See
HEROES: Valencian firefighters at work

Double trouble

A VALENCIA woman, 23, punched a policeman after testing positive for excess alcohol following a car accident. She was charged with assault as well as drink-driving.

On track

THE Valencian government will spend €85 million on improving Line 3 of the Metrovalencia line between the airport and Rafelbunyol.

Fatal fire

AN 81-year-old woman died in a fire at her Benetusser flat, with her husband, 86, treated for smoke inhalation along with two police officers.

Fare enough

MULTI-TRIP bus ticket discounts of 50% until June 30 have been introduced on services operated by Avanza in Benidorm, Alfas del Pi, Altea, Finestrat, and Villajoyosa.

THE owners of a Valencia pet shop that sold ‘an avalanche’ of sick puppies have been given the longest ever sentences handed out in Spain for animal abuse.

The trio have been put behind bars for six years for showing a ‘complete disregard’ for animal welfare and being responsible for the death of 30 dogs.

A judge at Valencia’s criminal court

PET SHOP OF HORRORS Not singing anymore

heard police found the animals huddled in tiny overheated spaces surrounded by urine, faeces and vomit. Most of the animals had endured an arduous journey in the back of vans from Slovakia and were often sick and were never put into quarantine.

Pet passports were forged to falsely show they had been vaccinated, before the pups were sold to unsuspecting customers for €400 a time. The previous longest sentence for animal abuse in Spain was five years and six months.

We must bare it

THE Valencia high court has ruled in favour of a man fined for walking naked through his local town.

Alejandro Colomar, 29, from Aldaia, near Valencia, was turned away from court in September when he arrived naked to appeal a fine for nudity.

There are laws against nudity but Valencia man slips through the crack

Colomar, who arrived without a stitch on minus his boots, was ordered to put

Too good to be true

A TRIO of Alicante scammers have been arrested for selling cheap but counterfeit tickets to festivals and concerts across Spain.

The online fraud prompted over 100 police complaints from duped purchasers who only found out when they got to the venue.

Investigators believe many more people were defrauded but did not report it due to the low sums involved with ticket prices ranging between €15 and €60 each.

The fraudsters - all from the same family - made a 'full-time living' from their

more clothes on to enter the building, which he did. While he was initially fined €3,000, the regional court has now rescinded it on appeal, ruling the fine in -

enterprise.

Tickets were sold for music festivals and even musicals, including ' The Lion King ’ in Madrid. Online buyers were sent genuine-looking tickets with QR codes on them. They had images of artists, along with details of the venue and the price paid. The scammers posted ads on social media and internet platforms to lure in customers. They also trawled through sites where people were looking for tickets to specific events and offered deals at a low price to lure them in.

fringed on his ‘right to ideological freedom’. The court acknowledged a ‘legal vacuum’ in Spanish law regarding public nudity. It has actually been legal in Spain since 1988, when it was ruled that anyone can walk naked down a street without being arrested. The issue is that some regions, such as Catalunya, have introduced their own laws to regulate nudism, especially away from the beach.

Naked

The court noted that Aldaia itself has no specific law prohibiting nudism. The Valencia court ruled Colomar had not in any way endangered local residents or created a public order by walking through Aldaia’s streets naked.

A FARMER from Mutxamel has been arrested after he set up an intricate trap to illegally capture finches and get them singing.

Police said the man, 78, was apparently breeding and training the birds to sing in competitions.

He caught them in a net after encouraging them in through a drinking fountain.

An unspecified number of birds were taken to the Santa Faz Wildlife Recovery Centre in Alicante, with the aim of reintroducing them to their natural habitat.

Tourists targeted

A GPS tracking device in a victim’s laptop helped police catch a gang that was targeting tourists arriving at Valencia airport for a string of thefts, including €20,000 cash.

A trio of well-dressed men trailed recent arrivals until they could snatch their luggage - usually in the arrivals area or car rental zone. Their luck ran out when one of the men stole a GPS enabled laptop and took it to a storage company for safe keeping.

Police traced it, recovered the stolen goods and waited for the thief to return.

CRIME www.theolivepress.es February 9th - February 22nd 2023 2 NEWS IN BRIEF

FAITH IN PALOMA... TO AVOID ‘NUL’ POINTS

SINGER Blanca Paloma will represent Spain at the next Eurovision contest in Liverpool after triumphing at the week-long Benidorm Fest.

The 34-year-old from Elche won the final with her song Eaea - a special take on flamenco composed in tribute to her grand-

mother, Carmen.

Paloma said: “Folklore is universal and there is something in the essence of it that is understandable to everyone.”

It’s a leap of faith for Spain, as the last time it picked a flamenco-based song back in 1984, it got zero points.

LAST LAUGH

An expat comedy club that hosted the like of Eddie Izzard and Michael McIntyre closes after 18 years

BACK in 2005, a new comedy club arrived in Madrid and Barcelona. The brainchild of Irish promoter Stephen Garland, the idea was to bring top-flight comedians from the Edinburgh Fringe to Spain for the first time.

Legendary Irish comedian Jason Byrne was the first to appear. His outstanding show, performed at the Giggling Guiri in both cities, was a taste of things to come.

Nearly two decades on, another top stand-up comedian, England’s Seann Walsh, became the final act at the club.

“I’ve got the jackpot of multiple sclerosis,” Garland tells the Olive Press, explaining his main reason for throwing in the towel. “It’s ‘primary progressive’, and generally that’s a fast-track to the end.”

Having studied music and media management, Garland arrived in Barcelona in 2002

EXCLUSIVE

and soon ‘had the bright idea of making an Irish festival’. The multidisciplinary event was planned around Saint Patrick’s Day, 2004 but, unfortunately for him, the date coincided with the 11-M terrorist attacks in Madrid. As Spaniards came out onto the street to protest in response to the atrocity, the crowds stayed away from the shows.

Wounds

“So I went back to the drawing board, to lick my wounds, and the following year I decided to make a comedy club in Barcelona and Madrid,” he says. The result was a consistent run of award-winning shows. Among the major names that were tempted over were Eddie Izzard, Michael McIntyre,

Star visit

Stephen K. Amos, Reginald D. Hunter, Arj Barker and even Howard Marks, the notorious Welsh drug smuggler-turned raconteur.

As well as health issues, the pandemic has also played a part in the decision to call it a day.

The shows that were the stock in trade of the Giggling Guiri were no longer pulling in the punters. “The world has moved on, and now the pandemic has pushed everyone to watch their

HOLLYWOOD star Nicole Kidman has been posting photos of herself on Mallorca. She is among other stars, including Morgan Freeman, who are filming a series called Lioness for Paramount+. Filming is set to continue until the start of March.

Lioness is based on true events and tells the story of a young marine recruited by the CIA to befriend the daughter of a terrorist group in order to bring down the organisation from within. Paramount+ is working in collaboration with Balearic studio Palma Pictures, as well as SurFilms.

Winning smile

STAR of Chocolat and The English Patient, amongst many other films, Juliette Binoche is to be honoured at the Goyas. The French actor and twice Oscar winner, 58, will be presented with an International Goya at the prestigious ceremony, being held in Sevilla on Saturday.

The academy described the Parisienne as ‘one of the most admired and recognised names in European cinema’.

Last year Cate Blanchett received the first-ever International Goya Award.

comedy on streaming.”

Another major issue for Garland is the need to pro mote gigs via social media channels: “I no longer have the patience for them!” he complains. “They’re so time consuming.”

Seann Walsh blew the crowd away in Barcelona and then proceeded to do the same in Madrid on the following night for the very last show.

Emotional

Garland took to the stage before the main act and gave an emotional speech, clearly somewhat unsteady on his feet due to the MS.

After Walsh’s show was over, the promoter got back up and said more words. This time he was very unsteady on his feet given he was, as he puts it, ‘hammered!’

But no one in the crowd –some of whom were at that very first gig back in 2005 –could blame him. They were just very grateful for all the laughs he’d brought them.

IN COMMON: Binoche and Blanchett - both Goya winners

Date with Beyonce

SINGING superstar Beyonce will be hitting the stage in Barcelona.

The American’s Renaissance World Tour will make a stop off at the city’s Olympic Stadium on June 8.

The Barcelona date is her only stop in Spain and will mainly showcase songs from her al bum Renaissance, including hits like Cuff it and Break my soul

Beyonce has previously performed at the Olympic Stadium in Barcelona in August 2016 to present her album Lemonade, and in July 2018, on that occasion with her husband, Jay-Z, as part of the On The Run II tour.

www.theolivepress.es YOUR BUSINESS COULD BE AS VISUAL AS THIS FROM AS LITTLE AS €50 AN ISSUE CAN YOU SEE ME? THEN SO CAN ALL OUR READERS Paseo Maritimo de la Patacona n 14, 46120, Alboraya, Valencia I T. 96 372 40 95 I 618 356 043 info@casapatacona.com Enjoy Mediterranean cuisine in a beautiful environment CONTACT US FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ADVERTISING ON 951 27 35 75 OR EMAIL US ON SALES@ THEOLIVEPRESS.ES
SPECIAL GUEST: Garland (left) with Eddie Izzard

2,000 victims exhumed

OVER 2,000 victims of Franco’s dictatorship have so far been dug up in the ongoing campaign to give them decent burials in Valencia.

About 70% of the identified mass graves in the region have so far been explored. Of the 2,166 bodies exhumed, some 225 have been identified.

“We have advanced a lot and want to achieve a region free of these mass graves,” said minister Rosa Perez Garijo. Around 80% of the graves in Alicante Province have been exhumed, with 61% in Valencia and 75% in Castellon. This year’s aim is to locate a further 421 victims across 49 cemeteries.

A new Valencia Democratic Memory website outlines all the work going on, including a map of all the mass graves.

The web portal also includes information on stolen babies and minors, the identification of victims and how to access the DNA bank.

On track

ONE of Spain’s most complex rail engineering projects has been given the green signal at an onsite signing ceremony in Valencia.

The train line running from the south of the city to Giorgeta bridge will be moved underground, allowing a ‘divided’ part of Valencia city to be reunited after 170 years.

There have been calls for a tunnel since 2003 and over €440 million has been budgeted for the work, which includes a section of AVE high speed line.

Half of the money will come from the Transport Ministry with the remainder split between Valencia City Council and the Valencian government.

The project will be undertaken in nine phases over five years, without causing disruption to train services.

Hurrah for Hannibal

AN exhibition is to follow the 35-year career of a Venezuelan born designer who moved to Alicante aged 15.

The Palacio Provincial show paying homage to Hannibal Laguna will be announced at Madrid Fashion Week, next week.

Hannibal’s label has strong ties to the city, with the exhibition seen as ‘an opportunity to showcase the career of one of the most renowned couturiers in our country’.

“He has carried the name of Alicante all over the world,” said Carlos Mazon, president of the Diputacion de Alicante.

Laguna has become a benchmark in the industry for its luxury and femininity.

LEFT IN LIMBO

‘Sharp’ and ‘shoddy’ practices land dozens of foreign villa buyers millions out of pocket

LAWYERS have been joined by mortgage brokers and agents to slam a giant construction firm that has left up to 100 foreign buyers ‘likely tens of millions’ of euros out of pocket.

So far countless contractors and hundreds of workers have pulled off building sites after Otero stopped fulfilling its payments on January 25.

The company, which started in Malaga in 2017, claims to have developments all around Spain, including Malaga, Valencia and the Balearics.

The Olive Press knows of dozens of victims who have called in lawyers demanding to know what has happened to their luxury villa investments.

One law firm, Martinez-Echevarria, confirmed it was repre-

senting ‘around 20 clients’ who had bought properties costing between €500,000 and €2 million on the Costa del Sol.

“The majority are foreign, English, Dutch and Belgians, etc, but what links them is they have all paid a lot of money,” lawyer Fermin Siguenza told the Olive Press.

“We don’t know how much we will be able to recover or even if the clients are protected.”

Mortgage broker Tancrede de Pola revealed he was currently helping four clients, who have lost out.

“They are royally screwed, especially as the unpaid con-

Fag ban stays

A SMOKING ban on terraces looks like staying in place - at least for the time being.

The 2020 law was introduced in Valencia to combat the spread of the pandemic via droplets through smokers coughing.

Valencian president, Ximo Puig, says the restriction will be kept for now despite complaints from hospitality associations.

On a visit to Alicante hospital he explained he ‘understood’ the concerns and said talks were planned between them and the regional health ministry.

Taking root

BENIDORM council is in the middle of a tree-planting initiative running until the end of March.

The CV-753 dubbed the ‘tourist highway’ has already seen 55 new mulberry trees and 31 Tipuanas and Jacarandas.

Benidorm mayor, Toni Perez, said: “All these plantations create biodiversity in the green fabric of Benidorm as they absorb carbon dioxide and therefore reduce the local carbon footprint.

In total 200 trees will be planted.

tractors are taking everything moveable, including windows, and even kitchens.”

He continued: “I didn’t like the way Otero operated and I tried to tell agents not to work with them due to their sharp practices.”

The Olive Press has spoken to workers from at least three companies removing their materials from one site (above), called Oceanic, in Malaga. One employee claimed that ‘well over a million euros’ is owed to firms at this site alone.

His firm Fartech is owed ‘at least’ €150,000 for security equipment for the 24 homes, 20 of which have already been sold at up to €1.8 million each. “But there are loads more suppliers who have lost more,” said the Argentinian builder. “Some are owed €500,000, others up to a million.”

The Olive Press has learnt Otero first failed to pay its suppliers the previous month in December, just a month after

BRAVE GENERATION ACADEMY NOW IN SPAIN

• For learners aged 12 to 18

• Lower Secondary, IGCSE and A-Levels

• Learn at their own pace

• Flexible, personalized schedule

• Project-based learning

• Critical thinking

• Problem-solving, and teamwork

• Extracurricular activities and clubs

• Develop new skills and gain knowledge

boasting how it had won no less than eight awards at the Newbuild Awards Costa del Sol. “We rocked,” a press release screamed above a picture of boss Ruben Otero (above) holding a gong for ‘Best Property Developer’. This week, however, an employee at Otero’s head office in Marbella confirmed ‘all projects were stopped around 10 days ago’. “We are trying hard to solve the problems, which are tough,” she admitted. Sales agent Mario Ballesteros, was more forthcoming. “I’m also in limbo and while I’m not directly responsible I feel sad for all the buyers, but I may be out of a job too.”

He continued: “I don’t know exactly what happened but I have not seen the owner Ruben for months.”

Contact newsdesk@theolivepress.es if affected

Brave Generation Academy is a new choice for students to achieve their full potential. At BGA we inspire learners to explore their passions.

A LIFE-size recreation of a space module is the star attraction of a new exhibition called ‘Apollo 11: Man's arrival on the moon’ at Valencia's CaixaForum.

Running until June 11, the exhibition uses real objects taken into space, meteorite remains and replicas to tell the story of the Apollo mission that gripped the world in July 1969. It has a two-fold aim, namely to appeal to adults who were alive at the time to jog their memories over what happened and to introduce younger generations to the historical event.

Space exploration expert, Rafael Clemente, who helped put together the exhibition said: “The aim is to humanise a story that is almost beyond human comprehension.”

One small step… Waste deep

RESIDENTS in Valencia are making more waste, prompting authorities to scratch their heads about where to dump the excess rubbish.

New data shows residents of Valencia produced an average of 134.5 kilos of waste in 2022, an increase of 15% on the previous year. The largest amount was organic waste with 46.33kg per inhabitant, followed by paper and cardboard (28.87kg).

NEWS www.theolivepress.es February 9th - February 22nd 2023 4
For more information, visit our website: www.bravegenerationacademy.com Contact us at: contact@bravegenerationacademy.com
*Data extracted from process closure surveys after using our roadside assistance and breakdown services. 952 147 834 TheOlivePress-256x342-MP1122.indd 1 17/11/22 11:31

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.

Voted top expat paper in Spain OPINION

Always ask experts

WHEN the property bubble finally burst in Spain in 2008, the fallout had far reaching effects on the economy.

Tens of thousands of people were left in negative equity as home values plunged.

Developer after developer went under, with billions of euros disappearing into a financial blackhole.

Thousands of people who had paid substantial deposits for off-plan property not yet built were left in financial limbo for years. They were out of pocket with no house to show for it. Many of them still are.

So big was the scandal that new regulations were brought in to prevent prospective home-owners from suffering the same fate again.

These included the requirement for bank guarantees to protect the deposits of purchasers, so at least they would get their money back if their property dreams were shattered. Thankfully, most developers appear to abide by this and the industry is in a far healthier state and on a far firmer foundation than it was back then.

But this is not to say that every firm is untouchable. Some clearly still go bust leaving clients, suppliers and employees in the lurch.

The full reasons why construction company Otero has seemingly shut up shop are not yet known. Nor is it known if the five-year-old company abided fully by the rules.

What we do know however is that dozens of contractors, agents and builders are owed millions of euros over unpaid bills, while an unknown number of purchasers - thought to be in the hundreds - have been left wondering if and when they will get their home completed or if they will get their cash back.

Unfortunately, among the more unscrupulous developers old habits die hard - and there are certainly still some shady firms who try to get round the rules to maximise their profit. Another recent example is Bynok, an Estepona developer, which folded last year, with the case still going through the courts.

This is why it is important to always seek competent, qualified advice from real estate professionals.

The best have been on the coast for years and know the market inside out - and more importantly know which developers to trust.

Since we broke the Otero story online, last week, several of these property professionals have told the Olive Press they refused to touch the company and would not recommend Otero to anyone.

As they told us there was clearly something ‘not quite right’. They were spot on.

PUBLISHER / EDITOR

Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es

Dilip Kuner dilip@theolivepress.es

Anthony Piovesan anthony@theolivepress.es

Jo Chipchase jo@theolivepress.es

John Culatto

ADMIN Sandra Aviles Diaz (+34) 951 273 575 admin@ theolivepress.es

CHILLING OUT

Simon Hunter simon@theolivepress.es

Alex Trelinski alex@theolivepress.es

Cristina Hodgson cristina@theolivepress.es

Walter Finch walter@theolivepress.es

OFFICE MANAGER Héctor Santaella (+34) 658 750 424 accounts@ theolivepress.es

DISTRIBUTION ENQUIRIES (+34) 951 273 575 distribution@ theolivepress.es

NEWSDESK: 0034 951 273 575

For all sales and advertising enquiries please contact 951 27 35 75

HEAD OFFICE

Carretera Nacional 340, km 144.5, Calle Espinosa 1, Edificio cc El Duque, planta primera, 29692, Sabinillas, Manilva

DESPITE the start of 2023 being unseasonably warm, the mercury plummeted in mid-January and it has stayed there with more snow forecast in the hills this week.

After a string of cold weather warnings, locals and expats alike have been deploying thick blankets, padded coats and fighting an urge to hibernate. Those of you with wood burning stoves or open fireplaces have been racing through the

logs.

Mountainous areas, such as La Calderona, the Sierra Nevada and the Maestrazgo, frequently experience minus zero temperatures and with many expats choosing to live in the campo and frequently at altitude, there are plenty of daily challenges.

I’ll always remember a visit to Granada in the winter in 2003 when I found the pervading cold creeping right into my bones.

So why on earth did I end up living on an isolated farm at 1,700m in the Sierra Nevada?

Charming as it is in Spring and Summer, in winter the property is above the snowline and the nighttime temperature regularly plummets to MINUS 8 degrees!

That’s fine with the wood burning stove in the lounge, but as soon as you venture into the bedrooms or bathroom you’re hit by an icy blast of cold, with the thin walls providing poor insulation.

Living this high can really affect your daily routine. Any water lying static overnight will freeze – including, on one re-

ICY: The pool freezes each winter

HOME: Jo lives above Cañar, while (top) her horse and garden view

cent occasion, water in the kitchen sink. Forget your morning shower or using the washing machine when it’s minus zero. The water supply is frozen until the midday sun defrosts the outdoor pipes. It’s detrimental to personal hygiene, although some mountain dwellers will happily remain unwashed, even for a fortnight particularly as laundry ends up frozen on the washing line. And remember, if you buy butane gas, be aware that it freezes at 0C, while propane freezes at -44C. Buy the wrong type and your gas appliances simply won’t work. I’ve been there.

Motoring is also a challenge above the snowline. To drive safely, you need a 4×4 with tyres made for tarmac and off-road. In the morning, you’ll sometimes find your car doors are frozen shut and thick frost always needs removing from the windscreen. The starter motor also might be reluctant, and batteries can suddenly die.

Other dangers include black ice – this is far from fun when going downhill. There is also frequent fog.

The high life - the easy way!

To get a flavour of the High Life - head up to Trevelez, the second highest village in Spain at 1,476m.

It’s famed for its cured ham, as well as its ascents to Mulhacen, the Iberian peninsula’s highest peak. Trevelez residents live on the snowline and they are used to the white stuff in winter. In fact, they love it.

As mayor Adrian Gallegos told the Olive Press: “Being on the snowline is wonderful. It’s very cold but it offers a wonderful landscape and we really enjoy snowy days – especially the village children.”

When there are serious white outs, the snow ploughs arrive quickly to restore access.

Years ago, I got stuck in the Hotel Alcazaba de Buquístar, because our van couldn’t drive up the steep exit slope, which was covered in 10 cm of snow.

Eventually a snowplough arrived to liberate the trapped cars.

NEWS FEATURE www.theolivepress.es 6
AWARDS Best expat paper in Spain 2016 - 2020 2020 Best English language publication in Andalucia 2012 - 2023 Google News Initiative gives the Olive Press a substantial grant.
Deposito Legal MA: 498-2019
Yes, it’s suddenly chilly outside, but spare a thought for Olive Press journalist Jo Chipchase who lives at 1,700m, above the snow line

IT was marketed to high-earners from Northern Europe as the opportunity to come and live the Spanish dream.

To escape the dreary weather and own a luxury villa on a coastline that gets over 300 days of sunshine a year.

Buyers who dreamt of packing their lives up and moving to the Costa del Sol were lured in with glossy promotions and slick computer-generated images of ultra-modern glass homes perched on hillsides above the sea.

Founded in 2017 with just a dozen employees, the rapid expansion of Otero Group, the company responsible for making these dreams a reality, understandably raised eyebrows.

Starting on the Costa del Sol, by 2022, they claimed to be opening developments all around Spain, including the Balearics, Madrid and Alicante, with half a billion euros under management and more than 130 employees - plus a whole constellation of suppliers and contractors.

Its owner Ruben Otero coined the slogan ‘Focus on Excellence’ and described this breakneck growth as ‘meaningful’ and ‘sustainable’. He also listed his company values as ‘transparent, agile and results-oriented.’

The problem is the recent results can only be described as poor, at best, as the company suspended all developments and looked to be heading towards bankruptcy.

An employee in its head office in Marbella told the Olive Press this week that ‘all projects had been suspended 10 days ago’.

Neither she, nor the main sales agent in the Manilva area, could explain what had happened or indeed when construction would begin again. In the words of agent Mario, is also ‘in limbo’.

Taking Manilva as a snapshot of the developments that Otero has been working on over the last few years, things are not looking rosy.

Dozens of units were planned overlooking Duquesa Port in a giant valley scheme dubbed by a marketing wizard as ‘the Duquesa Valley’ in 2021. Next door, came La Paloma, then Don Amaro and finally the Oceanic scheme, with its 24 stunning individual homes, each costing between €1.3 and €1.8million.

Come early 2022, Otero announced that some of the homes were finished and ready to be lived in.

But when the excited Brits, Belgians and Scandina-

‘LIKE LIVING IN THE WILD WEST’

vian buyers began to move in, the first inklings that all might not be well with Otero and its business model started to sink in.

“I don’t think there is one unit that doesn’t have an issue, be it with basements, electricity or water,” Michel Katic, 57, told the Olive Press.

The South African moved into his Don Amaro property in June after selling up his courier company in Cape Town and retiring with his wife and daughter to Manilva.

“It seemed absolutely stunning and looked like a fantastic opportunity,” he said of the ultra modern unit.

“But since arriving it’s been problem after problem.”

Quite simply, the Spanish dream has turned into a nightmare. The list of problems has been endless; from a swimming pool sliding down a slope, to water seepage causing power cuts and even missing floor-to-ceiling curtains, which he insists he has paid over €5,000 for.

And it gets worse - Katic’s property is now totally overshadowed by an unfinished shell rapidly thrown up that has totally blocked his view.

“You might find this funny - but Otero sold us this villa with sea views,” he said laconically. “Now we can hardly see the sea.”

All repairs are currently coming out of his pocket, as Otero has ignored him since his final instalment. Thinking of moving? “We actually have nowhere else to go. We sold up and moved to Spain permanently.

So there’s no leaving now.”

After disaster struck last month and Otero stopped paying the contractors, in the words of one resident, the developments have ‘become like living in the Wild West.’

The English woman, who asked not to reveal her name, claimed to be in a group of 30 homeowners demanding action from Otero and the town hall.

Alarmingly, she was so terrified of the unfolding di-

saster that she was too scared to meet the Olive Press despite begging us to help.

“They’ve robbed us, they’ve lied to us, they bully us - it feels like dealing with the mafia,” she said.

“Two of my neighbours are so upset they feel suicidal about it.”

She revealed how over the last fortnight, she and her fellow neighbours have seen a series of shadowy figures prowling the unfinished units and abandoned construction sites.

She added that she had ‘seen looting, scavenging and attempted break-ins’ to the nearly finished properties. “There are

teenagers, old people and random men wandering around in our gardens - we are living in fear here.”

Yet incredibly, she claimed owners have been subject to a remarkable demand from representatives of Otero for a further €120,000 retroactively to ‘pay for an increase in the cost of building materials’.

“And they have threatened to cut off our water supply if the residents, who already have their keys, refuse to pay up,” she added.

But on top of that, she claims that the company has not even been paying its own water bills, but instead was illegally tapped into the communal water.

Other neighbours arrived in Spain last year to find they were unable to move into their supposedly finished villas and were forced to rent apartments in the meantime.

One couple from Belgium, Danny and Sandra have a home full of defects, from dents and scratches in appliances and to walls, as well as shoddy workmanship and even structural problems.

They had been told their villa was ready in February, but when the couple arrived from Antwerp the house was nowhere near ready. They had to spend three weeks in a rented apartment at a cost of €2,000. “The company reps were continually lying and that is a big problem,” claimed Danny.

After signing for the property and getting the keys, Otero kept adding new costs to the final bill.

After adding €23,000 for a kitchen, €35,000 ‘due to Coronavirus’

socket for the television.

It all meant the overall price of their villa ballooned by €110,000 above the originally-agreed price to €640,000.

And just last week they received another letter from Otero demanding a further €84,000 - ‘for building material cost increases’.

If they refused to pay up, Otero would be able to withhold their first occupancy licence which they needed to legally move in. “I hate them!” Sandra admitted near tears, as she recounted the ordeal they had gone through at the hands of Otero.

“I was sick from the stress - as were so many other people.”

Danny believes the company’s downfall was caused by selling properties too cheaply and then trying to make up for it by cutting corners on materials and workmanship.

Many of the other buyers who are facing the biggest losses were too afraid to speak to the Olive Press, or were advised against it by their lawyers.

One British buyer who is remaining more optimistic is Chris Morris, 35, a builder, who put down €700,000 in February 2022 for his Otero-built property in Valle Romano, in Estepona.

He insisted that because he owns the plot of land, he also owns the home on it, which is now 75% completed.

“Well it was 75% until the contractors took back the doors, the aircon, the windows, and so on,” he said.

“But I don’t blame them, I would have done the same in their shoes.”

He added: “We’re in talks with the company now to try and get windows and doors put back in to keep the unit secure.”

He added that Otero will be in breach of contract if it fails to finish his property by May.

“Some people said Ruben Otero (left) had fled to Venezuela with all our cash, but my architect - who’s been very helpful - said he saw him in a restaurant in Marbella on Saturday

An experienced constructor back in the UK, his advice to fellow buyers is sim“No one has lost their money yet. Until it’s final, don’t dwell on it. Just keep

The Olive Press had not received any comment from Otero despite regular requests from its lawyer David Sanchez, based in Malaga.

February 9th - February 22nd 2023 7
The Olive Press discovers how the spectacular fall of the ‘half a billion euro’ Otero group is anything but a surprise to its beleaguered clients
DESERTED: An Otero site in Manilva PROMISE: The dream (above) and the reality (below) ENDLESS PROBLEMS: for Michel Katich who has also lost his sea views
‘I was sick from all the stress - as were so many other people’

People power

Solar project on school roof in Valencia to power 170 homes

POWER firm Iberdrola has launched its first ‘solar community’ on a school roof in Valencia.

Some 233 panels producing 105 kilowatts have been installed at Sagrada Familia in Benimaclet.

Iberdrola says the new set-up on top of the sports hall means that 170 local homes will be able to use the 100% renewable and low-cost energy.

People living up to two kilometres away can also take advantage of the option without having to pay for their own installations.

The system will generate 146 megawatt hours of electricity each year saving some 686 tons of carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere over 25 years.

“This is an important innovative project providing energy solutions, sustainability and commitment to a local neighbourhood,” said a spokesman.

Potential users can go online to work out the environmental and cost benefits via the Iberdrola Solar Communities

Sticky situation

CLIMATE activists glued themselves to the microphones at the lectern in the Congress of Deputies.

It was the latest protest by a group called Futuro Vegetal (Vegetable Future) to demand action to save the environment. Members had staged a similar protest in November when they glued their hands to the frames of two Goya paintings in Madrid’s Prado Museum.

‘This is a climate emergency!’ the group said in a tweet announcing the demonstration.

website.

More than two-thirds of Spain’s population live in high-rise buildings and so community initiatives are seen as vital for driving an up-take in domestic solar energy usage. Iberdrola estimates that as much as 70% can be saved on a home energy bill in a single-family home.

FURIOUS residents have protested against CEPSA’s plans to install a solar farm the size of 150 football pitches in the Serrania de Ronda.

The green campaigners chanted ‘renewals yes, but not this way’, as executives from the oil giant revealed the plans for the mega-project. The proposal, which has an investment of €62 million, would produce clean energy to supply 64,000 homes and contribute to the elimination of 84 million tons of CO2 emissions per year.

WHEN it comes to environmental news there are always surprises. Sadly some are not pleasant.

Shell, the oil and gas giant, last week reported outrageous annual profits of $39.9 billion in 2022.

These figures are the highest ever recorded in Shell’s 115 years of existence.

Quite frankly this corporate greed leaves me feeling sick.

Energy prices soared following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Meanwhile households struggle with escalating prices and are having to make some very difficult choices.

Shell shocked!

Heat your home or eat? Scandalous Governments have talked about levying windfall taxes. This at first sight seems a sensible approach……. until you look at how small these taxes are.

The UK government billed Shell a windfall tax in 2022 of $134 million.

How does that sit with profits of $39.9 billion?

Laughable

And it gets worse when you peel back the layers. Shell is a UK headquartered company. It pays more to its shareholders than it spends on renewable investments. How can that be right?

In the UK, Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt both indicated that there are no plans to increase windfall tax .

And they allow corporate giants like Shell to consistently avoid paying tax. They allow them to offset against taxable profits things like decommissioning North Sea oil platforms. They should be taxed for lack of investment in renewable solutions…particularly wind and solar.

It’s criminal that fossil fuel companies making bumper profits are let off the hook.

Green projects boost economic growth

Not only is investing in renewable technologies the right moral choice, it makes economic sense. The CBI released a report last week claiming that 840,000 jobs have been created through investment in the fight to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

And that’s just in the UK.

PROFIT: Billions have poured in

I’m not the biggest fan of Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey, but he nailed it last week when he declared ‘No company should be making these kind of outrageous profits out of Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine’.

In America, landmark legislation called the Inflation Reduction Act has set aside $369 billion to tackle climate change.

It’s about time Spain and other so-called developed countries got their finger out.

GREEN www.theolivepress.es February 9th - February 22nd 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 THE Solheim Cup 2023 has joined the Costa del Sol Zero footprint project in a bid to offset the carbon emissions of tourists attending the tournament. Visitors will be able to calculate their carbon footprint via the Visita Costa del Sol website. The project aims to raise awareness of the environmental cost of tourism and allows users to offset their carbon emissions by requesting that trees be planted in the province of Malaga. So far the scheme has planted over 340,000 trees. Green greens Martin Tye is the owner of Mariposa Energía, a green energy company specialising in solar panel installations. Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es or call +34 638 145 664 Oil companies making mega profits out of Putin’s Ukraine war
Green Matters By Martin Tye NO PLANS: From Sunak and Hunt to raise tax

Trophy hunt

A DISCOVERY in a Spanish cave suggests that Neanderthals collected trophies. That’s according to a study published this week in the magazine Nature Human Behaviour.

Researchers from Spain’s CSIC public research institute found a total of 35 horned skulls from large herbivores on the site in Madrid’s Pinilla del Valle.

They believe that the bones served as trophies, something that would, for the first time, prove that these primates had the capacity for symbolic actions.

This kind of intelligence had, until now, been attributed only to humans.

“There is nothing like this in the world, it’s exceptional,” the coauthor of the study, paleoanthropologist Juan Luis Arsuaga, said.

QUITE A FIND

AI discovers unknown play by Spanish master

ARTIFICIAL Intelligence (AI) has unearthed a previously unknown comedy penned by one of Spain’s greatest writers, Felix Lope de Vega. AI was being used by researchers to transcribe 1,300 uncredited manuscripts and books at the library to save many years of human work. Another aim was to find out the authors by checking each work against a selection of words used by different writers. After a year of verification, it

THREE small towns in the Spanish Pyrenees have staged the ancient festival of Joaldunak to ward off evil spirits and to waken up the ‘forthcoming spring’. The celebration is held on the last Monday and Tuesday of January in Ituren, Zubieta, and Lantz and is recognised by UNESCO as

an invaluable part of Europe's cultural heritage. The event is believed to be con-

has been confirmed that an uncredited manuscript was a Lope de Vega work called La Francesca Laura (Frenchwoman Laura) - written some five or six years before his death in 1635.

One of the people involved in the AI project, German Vega from Valladolid University, said that it was not an original Lope de Vega manuscript, but a copy - perhaps even of the

Spring beckoned

nected to the ancient rites of changing the seasonal cycle and celebrating the winter solstice. Bell wearers, or Joaldunak, as they are known in Basque, dressed up in thick sheepskins and tall colorful hats, clanging large cowbells tied to their backs to scare away the bad spirits and the witches.

A shepherd holding the chains of a huge carnival ‘bear’ with ram-horn ears accompanied the Joaldunak on their march, taking swipes at the crowd and ordering the sea of monsters to step aside to let them pass.

original.

It also had notes for theatre companies intending to put

Back home

TWO 15th century paintings looted from Poland during World War II that ended up in Galicia, have been returned after 79 years. They were on display at Pontevedra Museum following the 1994 purchase of an art collection owned by collector Jose Fernandez Lopez.

Pontevedra Provincial Council vice-president, Cesar Mosquera, said: “We’re helping to restore an injustice, helping to restore plundered art, helping in whatever way we can to make the world a better place.”

Stolen

FESTIVAL: Villagers celebrate

VERY IMPRESSIVE

Afremov magic comes to Valencia and it can be yours too

ANEW art gallery has opened in Valencia named after a modern impressionist artist with the aim of selling affordable works that are very accessible.

The Leonid Afremov gallery celebrates the painter - who died in Mexico four years agowith his unique painting style as his works reflected his travels around the world featuring vivid colors on his eye-striking canvasses.

The Valencia gallery on Carrer de Sorni, 32, was opened in December in partnership with the Afremov family and is the second official physical gallery in the world dedicated to the painter, and the only one in Europe.

This will give everyone a chance to buy his paintings and delve into the art of this world renowned artist with the gallery philosophy being that a work of art needs to speak to you, to make you dream, and to inspire you every day when you look at it and you need to feel it.

Besides paintings by Leonid Afremov, the gallery sells works done by a team of professional

artists trained by the painter himself over the years, using his technique oil with palette knife. Leonid’s paintings are extremely well suited for any setting, be it modern or a more classical style, with an appeal for interior design projects with their vibrant colors and volume texture adding personality to any space and lightens up areas that need a splash of color.

If it is just for decorating your house or making a present, Leonid’s paintings are inspiring and emotional and can be appreciated in any property, with the team of experts at the gal-

lery able to advise you on picking the best painting based on the style, the interior colors, and of course preference and taste. Such has been the big early interest so far, that the Valencia gallery is looking to plan special Afremov events across the region. There are three categories of paintings for sale,

on the play.

The manuscript has been in the National Library since 1886 and had classified it as an ‘anonymous comedy’. The library said the words used in the text were ‘closely aligned with Lope’s, and not with those of the other 350 playwrights who were part of the AI experiment’.

Mature

Experts then used traditional research resources to corroborate the findings.

“La Francesa Laura is a remarkable play, with the dramatic force expected of a mature Lope de Vega,” the library said.

Mosquera and a Polish government representative signed a formal restitution agreement last month. The works - Mater Dolorosa and Ecce Homo (below) - were part of the 700 piece Czartoryski collection stolen by Nazi forces from the Polish village of Goluchow.

starting with limited edition originals painted by the artist himself that were used for exhibitions ranging between €1,500 and €3,000 each, which are all numbered and signed by the artist.

There are only 10 copies of each, in the world, made by the artist.

Studio oil paintings done by a professional artist trained by Afremov retail between €350 and €500, while some printed studio originals are available in the €150 to €300 price range.

A key philosophy at the Leonid Afremov Gallery is that buying art should not be hard and should be done based on emotions and the connection a purchaser makes with it, with staff helping you choose the best painting that can fit in well with your house or giving

www.afremovarte.es

Carrer de Sorní, 32, 46004 València

you some advice if you are buying one as a present for somebody.

For complete peace of mind, a 14 day full return guarantee is offered and a 30 day exchange policy so you can always make the right choice, and there is free delivery for all purchases within Europe.

The gallery is currently working to set up an online store where you can buy anything direct and get it shipped to your door if you don't live in the Valencia area.

There’s also a special offer running until Valentine Day’s (February 14) with a 20% discount for all paintings with couples!

www.facebook.com/AfremovValencia

www.instagram.com/afremov_valencia

February 9th - February 22nd 2023 9
LA CULTURA

7

Off the dole

Nearly 80,000 fewer registered as unemployed at end of 2022

THE jobless total fell by 79,900 people in 2022 - a decrease of 2.6% on the year before. Over the same period, 278,900 jobs were created – an increase of 1.4% on the previous year – most of which were taken up by foreign workers. Both of these figures were an improvement on 2020, the year that the coronavirus pandemic hit and dealt a severe shock to the Spanish economy, according to the National Statistics In -

-

stitute (INE).

That year saw the worst figures for unemployment since 2012, when the country was being rocked by the consequences of the global financial crisis and the bursting of the property bubble.

But the latest data is a far cry from 2021, when 840,700 jobs were created and unemployment fell by 600,000 people.

Minimum wage boost

THE minimum wage in Spain will be going up from €14,000 a year to €15,120, a rise of 8%.

Assuming a worker receives 14 payments over the year, which was once the norm for most Spanish salaries, that is an extra €80 a month for someone working a 40 hour week.

The measure will be retroactive, meaning that anyone receiving minimum wage will be paid extra for the month of January.

The secretary general of Spain’s CCOO union, Unai Sordo, said that 2.5 million people will benefit from the measure.

In particular, female workers, young people, temporary employees and those in the service and agriculture sectors will be better off.

At the end of 2022, the unemployment rate was at 12.87%, just 0.4 percentage points below the figure in 2021 but the lowest end-ofyear figure since 2007. Just over three million Spaniards were out of work at the end of last year, with 20,463,900 people employed. The Economic Affairs Ministry stated that job creation slowed in the last quarter of 2022 ‘in line with the slowdown of the global economy’.

Control

The INE figures also showed that the number of home workers fell by 1.7 million in the last quarter of 2022 compared to the same period the year before, as employers encouraged staff back to the office now that the coronavirus pandemic is seemingly under control.

BUSINESS 10 February 9thFebruary 22nd 2023 OP QUICK CROSSWORD 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 26 27 28
solutions are on page 14 Across
Spotted (7)
La Scala cry (5) 8 Basra native, perhaps (5) 9 Type of pasty (7) 10 Energetic (7) 12 Bristles (4) 14 Conclusion (3) 16 Puzzling Tower of --- (5) 18 Sticky substance (3) 19 Froth (4) 21 Dixie city (7) 24 Marsh marigold (7) 26 Boredom (5) 27 Part of a cake mixed early (5) 28 Family line (7) Down
Superficial (4-4)
Small hard particle (5)
Victory (7)
Sawbones (3)
Inception (5)
Permanent (7)
All
1
5
1
2
3
4
5
6
Hawaiian island (4)
Cuban dance (5)
Solitary juggler sup
ports the King (8)
Portal (7)
Ailment (7) 20 Grinder (5) 22 Present time (5) 23 Dieter’s measure (4) 25 Cushion (3) OP SUDOKU *Data extracted from process closure surveys after using our roadside assistance and breakdown services.
TheOlivePress-256x170-MP1122.indd 1 17/11/22 11:31
11
13
15
17
952 147 834

UPS AND DOWNS

Central bank rate decisions inspire volatility in the pound, euro and US dollar

STAYING on top of the latest currency news can help you time your transfers more effectively, so find out what you should be looking out for over the next couple of weeks…

LATEST CURRENCY NEWS

The pound, euro and US dollar all traded with notable volatility over the past fortnight, following the latest rate decisions from the Bank of England (BoE), European Central Bank (ECB) and Federal Reserve.

During this time GBP/EUR fell from almost 1.13 to a four-month low of 1.11, while EUR/GBP climbed to 0.89. At the same time, GBP/USD slumped from 1.23 to 1.20, , and EUR/USD touched a nine-month of 1.10 before slipping to 1.07.

WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING?

A dovish assessment of the BoE’s first interest rate decision of the year sent the pound sharply lower over the past couple of weeks. While the BoE raised rates by 50bps GBP investors appear convinced the bank is nearing the end of its hiking cycle. It was a similar story for the euro over the past two weeks. The ECB also opted for a 50bps hike, but undermined this after implying it will pursue just one more increase before pausing its tightening cycle.

Meanwhile, USD exchange rates witnessed some of the most volatile movements. After falling to a multi-month low in the wake of a dovish 25bps rate hike from the Fed, the US dollar skyrocketed as a bumper payroll print revived Fed rate hike expectations.

WHAT DO YOU NEED TO LOOK OUT FOR?

The UK’s upcoming GDP release will be a key focus for GBP investors over the next couple of weeks. The pound is likely to soar if the UK managed to avoid slipping into a recession at the end of 2022.

Meanwhile, the threat of an escalation of the war in Ukraine may cast a long shadow over the euro through the first half of February.

Across the Atlantic, the

spotlight will be on the latest US consumer price index. Could a sharper-than-expected drop in inflation dent Fed rate hike bets?

Transferring currency to or from Spain? Make your money go further

If you’re buying or selling a Spanish property, transferring a pension or wages or moving money to cover living costs, you’ll want to get the best possible return.

Currencies Direct have been helping individuals and businesses save time and money since 1996 with excellent exchange rates and no transfer fees.

Get a quote now to find out how much you could save.

With a team of over 550 currency experts and 20+ branches across Spain, Currencies Direct are never far away when you need them.

They’ll keep you up to date with the latest market movements so you can pick the right time to move your money. They also offer a range of specialist services that can be tailored to your individual requirements.

Fix a rate in advance – if you’re buying or selling a Spanish property and are concerned the exchange rate could weaken you can use a forward contract to fix the rate in advance of making your transfer. While you would miss out if the market strengthened you’d be protected from any negative shifts. Target an exchange rate – if you have a particular exchange rate in mind you can target it with a limit order. Simply set the rate you want to achieve, and your transfer will be triggered automatically if the market moves to that level. You can also use rate alerts to notify you when exchange rates hit target levels.

24/7 transfers – you can use the Currencies Direct online service and app to check live exchange rates and arrange transfers 24/7, keeping you in control. Your personal Account Manager will also be on hand if you want to discuss your requirements over the phone or face to face.

Buy currency in advance – with a Currencies Direct account you can buy currency when the exchange rate is in your favour and hold it in your digital currency wallet until you need it.

If you have a currency requirement coming up, get a quote now or reach out to the Currencies Direct team and quote Olive Press.

WANT TO SAVE TIME AND MONEY ON YOUR CURRENCY TRANSFERS? CALL, EMAIL OR VISIT US IN BRANCH!

MORAIRA

Carretera Moraira, Calpe 5, Edificio Benidorm, Local 7, Moraira, Alicante, 03724 moraira@currenciesdirect.com

+34 966 265 072

JAVEA

Block 5, Local 2A, Avenida de la Libertat, Playa Arenal, Jávea, Alicante, 03730 javea@currenciesdirect.com

+34 966 265 072

ALBIR

Local Numero 2, Calle Ruperto Chapi, El Albir, Alicante, 03581 albir@currenciesdirect.com

+34 966 265 072

VALENCIA

Consulat del Mar 5, Bajo izquierdo, Valencia, 46005 valencia@currenciesdirect.com

Discover hassle-free currency transfers

+34 960 130 841

Authorised by the Bank of Spain Excellent exchange rates Award-winning service 24/7 payments online or by app 20+ local branches in Spain Bank of Spa n registration No 6716
or from Spain?
you need to send money overseas, using a reputable currency provider is a must. © Currencies Direct Ltd, One Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5AA, United Kingdom. Registered in England & Wales, No.: 03041197. Currencies Direct Ltd is authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority as an Electronic Money Institution under the Electronic Money Regulations 2011. Our FCA Firm Reference number is 900669. Our EU services are provided by Currencies Direct Spain. © Currencies Direct Spain, E.D.E., S.L., Avenida del Mediterráneo, 341, 04638 Mojácar, Almería, Spain. Registered in the Commercial Registry of Almería under the Spanish tax ID number B04897930. Currencies Direct Spain, E.D.E., S.L. is authorised by the Bank of Spain as an Electronic Money Institution under Law 21/2011 of 26 July and Royal Decree 778/2012 of 4 May. Our registration number with the Bank of Spain is 6716.
’s talk currency SP18939EN Scan here for your customised quote
Local Numero 2, Calle Ruperto Chapi, El Albir, 03581, Alicante +34 966 265 072 albir@currenciesdirect.com
Moraira, Calpe 5, Edificio Benidorm - Local 7, Moraira, 03724, Spain +34 966 265 072 moraira@currenciesdirect.com
Sending money to
If
Let
Albir
Carretera
5 Local 2A, Avda de la Llibertat, Playa Arenal, Javea, Alicante, 03730, Spain
966 265 072
C M Y CM MY CY CMY K ai167578498315_SP18944EN - Olive Press Half Pg Advert - Costa Blanca North v1.pdf 3 07/02/2023 15:49:44
Moraira Javea Block
+34
javea@currenciesdirect.com

Boob job stops squatter eviction

A WOMAN accused of squatting in a property has tried to get out of a court date claiming she had to have surgery on her breast implants on the same day.

Lawyers for the Swiss owner of the occupied home revealed that their client was ‘wondering if he had purchased a house in Spain or in a banana republic’ in the wake of the incident.

The victim had decided to buy a property in Malaga, having fallen in love with the city and wanted a home for long stays, and eventually to live in.

Lock

He discovered however, it had been taken over by a squatter when he arrived one day last year and found that the key no longer fitted the lock.

Police were called but could do nothing more than to identify the alleged squatter. She was eventually called to court for an eviction proceeding, but the case has been put on hold after defence lawyers presented a document from a clinic that stated that she was scheduled to have surgery involving the ‘elevation of mammary implants’.

The lawyers for the victim believe that the appointment is nothing more than a ruse to drag on the trial, and have called into question the authenticity of the document.

CASH IN

AN Andalucian town is giving an ‘aid’ package of €750 to families in an attempt to avoid depopulation.

Canillas de Aceituno in the Axarquia is giving the cash to families that have lived permanently in the village for at least a year.

Border bargain

NIGHT SALE

Night Manager estate sold by British lord for staggering €62m

A STUNNING Mallorca fortress that became internationally known as the setting for BBC thriller The Night Manager, has a new multi-million owner.

Norwegian billionaire Ivar Tollefsen paid an incredible €61.8 million for La Fortaleza, in Pollensa.

While the purchase went through a year ago, the details have only recently been made public.

The protected castle was previously owned by Brit Lord James Lupton, who the

SPAIN is hoping to attract more British women with digital nomad visas and tax perks this year.

The country wants to attract female entrepreneurs because the country is widely viewed as a safe place to live for women.

A digital nomad’s visa and tax concessions for start-up companies in Spain are coming into force as part of a new start-up law.

JUST 130 kilometres out of the Spanish capital the small and quaint town of Alcaudete de la Jara is the cheapest pueblo in the country.

Average property prices in the village in the province of Toledo are at 284€ per square metre.

If you’re willing to do some renovation

A DESERTED village on the Spain-Portugal border, has been sold for €300,000.

The new owner of Salto de Cristo is a Toledo businessman who intends to open a rural tourist business.

In the end the price paid for the village that includes a school, church, bar and hotel, was €40,000 over the asking price.

"We had offers from as far and wide as Saudi Arabia, Russia and Brazil with investors from more than 20 countries,” said Romuald Rodriguez, of agency Royal Invest.

As the Olive Press previously reported, the Zamora province village was built to house workers at a nearby dam but was abandoned in 1989 after the dam was automated. Covering 4,000 square metres, there are a total of 44 homes, a swimming pool, sports area and even an old Guardia Civil barracks.

Salto de Cristo was bought in 2000, but attempts to make it a tourist centre floundered and previous asking prices of millions of euros brought no response.

Call for rates freeze

SPAIN’S deputy prime minister, Yolanda Diaz, has called on banks to freeze mortgage interest rate rises after one of the country’s lenders announced record earnings.

BBVA, which is Spain’s second-biggest bank, showed a 38% increase in net profits, which came in at an all-time high of €6.42 billion in 2022. This was partly due to a double-digit rise in lending income, as well as the bank’s performance in Mexico, which accounted for more than 60% of the lender’s net earnings. The figures came just a day after the Euribor interest rate, the benchmark used for the calculation of most mortgages in Spain, hit 3.337%, the highest level since December 2008.

Diaz, said that the current costof-living crisis ‘cannot be an excuse to earn more’. “While the rise of the Euribor will make the average mortgage €250 a month more expensive, BBVA’s profits grew 38%,” she said.

Expat growth

Olive Press revealed paid €45 million in 2011.

The 350-year-old estate was declared an Asset of Cultural Interest in 1993 and will continue to host functions and be used for filming.

Tennis star Rafa Nadal and footballer Gareth Bale both got married there.

Digital future

“We don’t want digital nomads, we want residents,” said Digitalisation Minister Carme Artigas.. “Our hope is that the nomad visa is very attractive but then they stay in our country and put down roots.” Some 22% of Spain’s economy is digital-based, with start-up hubs growing.

It has long been popular with foreign owners, with Argentine painter Roberto Ramauge buying it in 1919 and turning it into a luxury residence.

However, it was seized by Franco’s forces during the Civil War and legal wrangling meant the Ramauge family did not repossess it until 1984.

The next owner, a Brit, John Ogden, purchased it in 1989 spending millions on renovating the 232 acre site. He eventually put it on the market in 2008 for an unbelievable €125m before selling it three years later to Lord Lupton for a third the price.

CHARMING AND CHEAP

work, you can find large apartments for as little €12,500.

The town sits in central Spain in Castile-La Mancha and encapsulates the true, authentic spirit of the country, but

it is within easy reach of Madrid and other larger and more cosmopolitan areas. According to 2018 Census data, the town has a population of just 1703 people.

TORREVIEJA and Orihuela are Alicante’s top areas for foreign property buyers.

Valencia’s Notary Association show the two municipalities accounted for over a third of all overseas home deals in the province, last year.

Torrevieja recorded 4,854 foreign sales between January and September - up 96% on the same period in 2021, when the pandemic severely depressed the market.

The total was 57% more than in 2019. The largest group of overseas buyers came from Sweden (787) followed by Germany (484).

Orihuela mirrored Torrevieja’s big rise - 85% more than in 2021, and a 53% increase on 2019’s foreign sales.

In contrast, British purchasers dominated with 823 buyers, followed by Belgians on 504. Alicante City was the third biggest in the region with 2,231 foreign home sales led by Algerian, Russian, and Ukrainian buyers. Calpe was fourth on the list (804), closely followed by Santa Pola (766).

Nearly 80% of second home buyers in Valencia last year were foreigners.

PROPERTY February 9th - February 22nd 2023 12 yorkshirelinencostablanca.com COME AND GET INSPIRED! Follow us on Facebook and Instagram NEW SPRING COLLECTION OF BEDDING AND MORE! JÁVEA · ALTEA
STAR: Hugh Laurie filmed at the estate

SOME SARNIE

THE 10th Snack Competition jury at Madrid Fusion gastronomy summit have voted a sandwich featuring pickled partridge to be the best in Spain.

Other ingredients include beer bread, oregano paste, ham, mustard seeds, IPA beer, sugar, red wine, leeks, seasonal mushrooms, mustard leaves and radishes.

Chef Javier Ruiz Portillo from the El Parque de la Milla restaurant in Marbella pocketed €1,500 in prize money for his creation.

FLOCKING IN

International tourist trade up 130% in a year

THE number of tourists visiting Spain rebounded by 130% to 71.6 million in 2022, compared to the previous Covid-hit year. According to the Spanish statistics office (INE) the strong recovery was still not enough to match pre-Covid 2019, remaining 14% down.

This was despite a strong recovery in the first half of the year, with foreign visitors at 92% of their preCovid level by July. But the recovery dipped in the second half of the year, possibly due to high inflation and energy prices hitting spending power.

New wings

RYANAIR will add more routes between the UK and Valencia this summer.

The Irish carrier announced this week four new flight routes, with the origin or final destination, at Valencia airport. The airline launched a special deal, for a limited time, offering passengers to fly between April and October for just €30.

The new schedule will include two new planes based in Valencia, raising this figure to seven and representing an investment of €186 million and creating €60 new jobs.

On the other hand, domestic tourism has recovered much faster, throwing a lifeline to the industry.

Tourism industry body Exceltur’s Tourism Outlook report said the sector’s GDP reached €159 billion in 2022 - up 1.4% on the previous year and 4.7% on 2018.

The report added that 61% of economic growth in Spain last year was down to tourism.

Exceltur said the first quar -

ter 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, especially in the leisure, meetings and congresses sectors.

Inflation

The body believes that accumulated demand and the desire to travel have overcome the adverse effects on personal income caused by inflation. The report pointed out that a big increase in domestic tourism activity boosted the sector.

Smoother security

AN expanded passenger security check area has almost been completed as part of an overall revamp of Terminal 1 at Valencia Airport. Airport manager, Antonio Garcia Aparicio, said that improvements were aimed at improving the quality of service provided.

Three extra automatic boarding pass gates are being installed to take the total to 13. As a result, three new security lines will be created with three additional x-ray scanners being brought into service.

Strike threat

Leonid Afremov was one of the most distinguished contemporary artists known for his unusual painting manner and a powerful emotional impact his artworks have on a human soul. He was a man of great talent and imagination, he tried to find inspiration in simple things that can sometimes hold more meaning than the loudest words. He was looking for new impressions and fresh ideas, Leonid has travelled to numerous countries taking-in everything he saw to tell it in the language of colour on one of his bright, eye-striking canvasses. Creative, cheerful and dreamy like himself, they convey a strong positive message filling your heart with peace, harmony and delight.

More info: www.afremovarte.es

Follow us:

AIR NOSTRUM pilots have voted 92% in favour of indefinite strike action in their on-going pay row. The decision follows seven days of strikes over the Christmas and New Year period. Pilots union Sepla said it was a response to Air Nostrum's ‘immovable’ position in preventing negotiations to sign a new agreement ‘that sets fair working conditions and wages for workers’.

Air Nostrum said that if it caved in to Sepla's ‘exorbitant’ requests for a 30% salary hike over two years, the firm’s financial viability would be threatened.

FOOD, DRINK
20% OFF for readers of OLIVE PRESS GRILLED MEATS, TAPAS AND WINE reservas@verarestaurante.es Tel: +34 625 361 511 Avenida de Navarro Reverter, 8 46004 València www.verarestaurante.es
& TRAVEL

FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

Food of love

HONEY OYSTERS

ONE of the things that makes people fall in love with Spain is the food. The Mediterranean diet, rich in fish and seafood, nuts and fruit, is famously good for the heart.

And not only the heart: the diet is full of ingredients known for their aphrodisiac properties.

With a very important date coming up (February 14, in case you forget), a dinner date should prove a win-win situation.

These foods provide both psychological and physical stimulation because they trigger an increase in the release of serotonin, the socalled happiness hormone. The practice of using food to increase sexual desire dates back to the 4th century BC and takes its name from the Greek goddess Aphrodite. Aphrodisiac foods aren’t always as exotic as ginseng. You might already consume them on a daily basis and not even realise.

THOUGH you might need to eat half a jar to get the effect, honey contains boron, vitamin B, and nitric oxide, all of which are good for stamina.

In addition, nitric oxide is released in the blood during arousal and helps men achieve erections, while vitamin B is said to stimulate hormones associated with sexual desire. Some men even use honey as a natural treatment for premature ejaculation. Anyway, get sensual and creative this Valentine’s day by finding something that’s packed full of honey (but perhaps not a hive).

CHOCOLATE

entine’s Day with chocolate?

Well, chocolate is quite effective in increasing serotonin levels and libido, especially in women. Cocoa beans contain phenylalanine and theobromine, chemicals that help blood circulation and lung function, and they combat fatigue as well, making this a powerful and useful aphrodisiac. Give your partner a big box of chocolates this Valentine’s Day and enjoy the results.

AVOCADO

AS our brains already assume oysters are an aphrodisiac, we get a double stimulation, psychological and physical, as soon as they appear on the table.

In addition, the high protein and zinc content helps to improve sperm production in men and lubrication in women. It is a food that provides a great energy boost, guaranteeing good performance and sexual drive – as long as they’re fresh.

THE potassium the fruit contains is tied up with the body’s capacity for producing sexual hormones, and is more effective in increasing sexual desire in men than women. It’s also one of the oldest aphrodisiac foods in the book – indeed, it predates books. Surprise your partner with an avocado cocktail; the result should please the eye and stimulate the imagination (and more).

CINNAMON

THE only natural aphrodisiac recognised as such by medical science, the spice is known to stimulate blood flow, especially in the abdominal area of the body. This improves blood sup-

ply to the genitalia, resulting in sexual arousal.

Generally, if your partner goes to make a cup of tea during sex it’s not a promising sign.

But if it’s cinnamon tea, don’t lose hope: even inhaling its steamy aroma is said to combat loss of sexual desire.

In men, like most things on the list, cinnamon helps achieve and maintain an erection.

RED WINE

FIGS

APPARENTLY the insides of figs bear some resemblance to a female reproductive organ, and this exciting thought has, through the ages, proved very arousing.

However, it’s probably the high beta-carotene content involved in the production of sex hormones which gives figs their aphrodisiac properties.

The high sugar content makes figs a good source of energy if you are planning a long night.

CHICKPEAS

UNLIKELY as it sounds, chickpeas can also be a powerful aphrodisiac and a very suggestive dish. But they need to be prepared properly – go for hummus rather than a winter stew. Being spreadable, a bowl of hummus is perfect for kicking off some spicy games (or eating with celery).

OP Puzzle solutions

Quick Crossword

NUMEROUS investigations have been carried out to discover the link between red wine and sexual desire. The main reason red wine seems to increase sex drive is that it helps ramp up blood circulation. But also worth a mention is the fact it contains alcohol.

The greatest known disinhibitor, alcohol stimulates the part of the brain where the controls for inhibition and relaxation are kept.

Across: 1 Sighted, 5 Bravo, 8 Iraqi, 9 Cornish, 10 Dynamic, 12 Hair, 14 End, 16 Hanoi, 18 Goo, 19 Foam, 21 Atlanta, 24 Cowslip, 26 Ennui, 27 Layer, 28 Descent

Down: 1 Skin-deep, 2 Grain, 3 Triumph, 4 Doc, 5 Birth, 6 Abiding, 7 Oahu, 11 Conga, 13 Royalist, 15 Doorway, 17 Illness, 20 Molar, 22 Nonce, 23 Kcal, 25 Pad

February 9th - February 22nd 2023
As Valentine’s Day approaches, we provide the perfect ingredients for a very romantic dinner

HATE CRIME

A PUBLIC prosecutor in Valencia is seeking a twoand-a-half-year jail term for a man who blamed the LGBTQ+ community for being the origin of the monkeypox virus.

The man is facing charges of a hate crime, and could also be forced to pay a fine of €3,600 if eventually found guilty.

The case dates back to May 2022, when the accused published an article titled ‘El Chueca Virus-22’, in reference to the well-known gay quarter of Madrid.

In the text on a far-right website, the author said that the LGBTQ+ community was the origin of the virus and used a series of offensive expressions.

HEARTY EATING

How the Mediterranean diet helps Spaniards live so long

NUTRIENTS and chemicals in the Mediterranean diet drastically improve heart and lung health, according to a new study. And it could be the reason behind Spain’s rich history of people

person. The Food Research International study looked at elderly Mediterraneans and how certain substances called microbial phenolic metabolites (MPM) in a diet involving a high intake of nuts, legumes, fruits, vegetables, extra virgin olive oil, and moderate quantities of wine was linked to improved cardiovascular health.

In Spain, 7,447 participants were recruited

SPANISH pharmacies have reported long delays in hundreds of different kinds of medication as Europe grapples with a drug shortage.

Spanish pharmacies had a hard time supplying 403 different types of drugs last year, including for cardiovascular, neuromuscular, digestive, and respiratory diseases, according to the General Pharmaceutical Council of Spain (GPCS).

The problem is 150% worse now than it was in 2021, the Madrid-based council said, as procuring those drugs takes up to four to five weeks longer than it once did.

GPCS Director Antonio Blanes Jimenez said the drug shortage problem had been felt since 2019.

"The situation had improved during the pan-

Waiting game

demic and grew worse again in 2022," he said. Limitations placed by China and India on the export of raw materials needed for drug production and shipment and output-related problems caused by the Russia-Ukraine war were the main drivers of the shortage.

Calm

Also pointing to the role of low drug prices in Spain, Jiminez said current data and trends did not paint an optimistic picture for 2023. Patients should remain calm, however, as pharmacies can still provide generic medications in most cases, he added.

between October 2003 and December 2010, for the study. Spain currently has the oldest living person following the death of French nun Lucile Randon, at the age of 118. Maria Branyas Morera, who lives in Catalunya, at the ripe age of 115 now holds the title. She is one of nine Spaniards in the top 100 people who have been the oldest in the world.

Oldest

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. There have been three women, and six men throughout Spain who have been the oldest people in the world.

Ana Maria Vela Rubio, who died in 2017, was the oldest person in the world at 116

Mask-free

years. She’s followed by Maria Branyas Morera at 115, Martia Antonio Castro (114), Joan Riudavets-Moli (114), Francisco Nuñez Olivera (113), Saturnino de la Fuerte Garcia (112), Josep Armengol (112), Jesus Mosteo (111) and Antonio Urrea (111).

MASKS are no longer mandatory on public transport. The Covid measure ended yesterday, with the obligation being ended for passengers on buses, trains and taxis. However, you will still have to wear a mask in health centres and pharmacies Industries such as the travel sector had been calling on the government to do away with the use of face masks on transport in Spain, which is one of the few European Union countries that still had any kind of coronavirus restrictions in place.

HEALTH February 9th - February 22nd 2023 15

Romantic Ronda

COSTA BLANCA NORTE / VALENCIA

Hard to swallow

POLICE are hunting thieves who stole gold-covered sex toys worth €80,000 from the largest distributor of erotic toys in Spain, Dreamlove, located in an industrial estate near Sevilla.

Boob job

A WAITRESS in Spain has denounced a potential employer for demanding that she send him photos of her cleavage before considering her for a job, telling her it ‘was very important’.

Good deal

THE council of Cumbres de Enmedio in Andalucia, with 50 inhabitants, wants someone to rent the town’s only bar for €20 per month. The council will pay for electricity and water.

Pearl of a find

Waitress finds €4,000 gem in plate of clams

A DECISION to overrule her boyfriend at dinner and order clams paid off for a young woman when she discovered a valuable pearl worth €4,000 in the first one she opened.

Waitress Natalia Freire, 22, had a ‘huge craving’ for a plate of the shellfish when she went out to eat with her boyfriend. “He’s a shellfish gatherer and is sick of eating them. So I ordered a plate for myself. And

PURR-FECT REWARD

A PET owner desperate to find her beloved cat offered a whopping €1,000 for its safe return.

Alba, a 19-year-old student, plastered signs offering the reward all over Arroyo de la Miel (Malaga) when her furry

as I work here they gave me extra!” she revealed.

“Our kitchen makes them so well,” she said about the dish, which she ordered in the very restaurant she works in A Coruña, in Galicia.

friend Tokyo vanished for 11 days. “My cat is like my daughter,” she told the Olive Press “Money was not important, I just wanted her to return”. But Alba didn’t end up stumping up the huge reward as she herself found Tokyo hiding inside the basement of her neighbour’s house!

Given the purple color of the pearl, Freire initially didn’t realise what it was, and it wasn’t until she’d finished her meal that she looked it up on Google “I’d heard about pearls in oysters, but not in clams,” she said. But it is that very color that made her find so valuable. Purple pearls, which are traditionally associated with artistry, wisdom, complexity, nobility and passion, are rare and in high demand. Natalia has not decided whether she is going to sell it or keep it.

If she does cash in, it is not known if her boss at the restaurant will want a cut.

RONDA has been named ‘the most romantic city in Spain’ by Hello! magazine. “There is not a single one of its ancient streets, decorated with stately palaces, that does not have a legend or a love story to tell,” claimed the famous UK publication.

It has published its 20 must-see cities in Spain, each overflowing with romantic nooks and dreamy locations for Romeos to discover with their Juliets. The other destinations include Siurana, La Albufera, Aranjuez and Castillo de Pubol, in Girona.

Famous

It also lists certain specific spots like the famous San Nicolas viewpoint in the Albaicin of Granada as well as the Santa Cruz barrio of Sevilla.

It particularly sings the praises of the ‘kissing corner’ of Iznajar, in Cordoba, and Vejer, in Cadiz, as well as Gaudi’s amazing Parc Guell, in Barcelona and the Lovers’ Mausoleum in Teruel.

We use recycled paper REuse REduce REcycle FREE Vol. 4 Issue 99 www.theolivepress.es February 9th - February 22nd 2023 O
LIVE
The
P
RESS
FINAL WORDS

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.