HAD ENOUGH!
GIBRALTAR’s Chief Minister has announced he will step down after his current term.
Fabian Picardo told a popular podcast things had gotten ‘a little stickier’ and ‘I’ve had my fill of this job’. His words in The Rest is Politics come as an inquiry gathered steam over the early retirement of Gib’s former police boss.
Ex-Commissioner Ian McGrail told Gibraltar Court this week how Picardo had ‘questions to answer’ over his involvement in an alleged criminal conspiracy.
He claims he stepped in to effectively quash an investigation, called Operation Delhi, that threatened Gibraltar’s national security.
It came after Caine Sanchez, John Perez and Tommy Cornelio were arrested in 2020 over a scheme to fraudulently transfer a €840,000-a-year border security contract to a company called 36 North Ltd.
Picardo allegedly had full knowledge and ‘owned 3%’ of the company, which was set up specifically to take on the government contract, the court heard.
His friend, James Levy - the boss of the Rock’s leading law firm Hassans - injected a ‘considerable sum’ into the company for a 33% stake.
“I would not classify [the Chief Minister] as a suspect,” McGrail told the hearing. “But he had questions to answer.”
In the end, Operation Delhi was discontinued in 2022 over ‘matters of national security.’ McGrail’s lawyers ‘allege corruption’ and that Picardo forced their client’s retirement after the Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) carried out a search warrant at Levy’s office and took his phone and tablet.
The teacher and motherof-two, from Texas, was found dead inside a holiday apartment in Malaga on April 6. Her common law husband, Jose Betancourt, 50 (right), ran into a square at 5.30am calling for help, saying his wife was unconscious.
He is now being investigated over the death which he claims came after they engaged in ‘rape roleplay’ and after she took an unspecified ‘substance’.
Yet, Valerie Dullnig, a
AMERICAN MYSTERY
Was Valencia based expat teacher killed by her husband during sex game gone wrong?
close friend, told the Olive Press that drugs were ‘never’ a part of her life.
The Texan revealed: “She was an art teacher and a photographer. She was my best friend, she was happy and smart and encouraging, everybody loved her, everyone who met her felt better for being part of her life. “Her students loved graduated, she was such a popular figure.
her and kept in touch with her after they
FLED: Bianca (centre) who lived in Xativa with her two children had come for ‘new life in Spain’
and ‘seemed happy’ with her new life.
“She was very close with her children. Her daughter is best friends with my daughter. She had a great relationship with them… everybody is shocked by this.” She revealed how Bianca had been teaching English at a school in Xativa, in Valencia,
During various conversations on Snapchat, she sent videos of her new neighbourhood and friends. She added she didn’t understand how and why Bianca, from San Antonio, had come south to Malaga to meet her ex-partner.
Valerie insisted she had ‘fled’ the
States to start ‘a fresh new life’ in Spain - and more importantly, did ‘not want Jose to know where she was’.
When emergency services arrived at the flat in Plaza de Camas, they desperately tried to revive Bianca, but she was pronounced dead at the scene.
Enjoyed
Police sources said Jose told investigators he and Bianca had enjoyed a horse-drawn carriage ride through the city before having dinner, ‘lots of tequila’ and sex until dawn.
When police quizzed Jose, he also claimed that Bianca had ‘consumed a substance’, the details of which remain unknown.
Jose was first arrested for reckless homicide before an autopsy revealed signs of asphyxiation due to strangulation.
He is now being probed for domestic violence and will remain in prison without bail while the investigation continues.
Authorities now must determine whether the strangulation took place during a sexual ‘rape roleplay’, or whether it was intentional and planned.
Scooter aware
BENISSA’S Policia Local has launched a campaign to inform electric scooter riders about traffic laws and the penalties they face for breaking them.
Tree shock
VALENCIA City
Council has ordered an inspection of all trees in the Market Square area after one collapsed on three women on Tuesday, causing only minor injuries.
Strike threat
OVER 200 Valencian region forest firefighters protested in the region's capital on Tuesday, threatening strike action if staffing levels and pay isn't improved.
Youth attacks
JAVEA residents say the police should stop youths hiding next to the Cami del Riu Gorgos so that they can throw oranges and rocks at passing cars.
NOLOTIL IN THE DOCK
SPAIN’S High Court will finally investigate Nolotil following dozens of deaths officially linked to the country’s most popular painkiller.
It comes after a judge rejected an appeal by a lawyer representing the Spanish Medicine Agency (AEMPs).
German drug firm Boehringer Ingelheim has also been summoned with the judge aiming to ‘find those responsible’.
Both parties will have to present evidence to evaluate
Killer drug will finally be investigated at the High Court
By Yzabelle Bostynif Nolotil poses ‘a risk of adverse effects for health’. It comes after an Olive Press campaign was launched following numerous deaths of northern Europeans given the drug in Spain.
Advocacy group, the Asso-
Fatal dispute
A DISPUTE over a fallen wall in Calpe may have prompted a Frenchman to shoot dead his Spanish neighbour before turning the gun on himself.
The Guardia Civil discovered the bodies at around 10am on Monday after a resident reported hearing a gunshot on the Maryvilla urbanisation.
The Franch national, 45, shot the Spaniard three times before killing himself.
The victim, Josep Pinada, 32, previously worked as an architect for Calpe council and was a residents community president for some of the Maryvilla properties.
The two bodies were discovered in separate homes, after the Frenchman broke into Pinada’s house to confront him.
ciation of Drug Affected Patients (ADAF), filed a lawsuit against the Spanish Ministry of Health and AEMPS for ‘failing to properly regu-
Fallen hero
A BENIDORM ambulance driver has been arrested for stealing a bag containing jewellery worth €4,500 from an elderly couple he was taking to hospital.
late Nolotil’, last year. They believe the painkiller has led to over 40 deaths of British and Irish people alone in Spain. They also filed a criminal complaint with the Spanish public prosecution office. Spain’s Patient’s Defence Association also flagged up the issue to the High Court in February. Its report slammed the negative side effects of Nolotil, which has been banned in around 40 countries.
KILL THE DRUG
Initial proceedings will investigate if the drug ‘provokes harm’ and to ‘find those responsible’. ADAF campaigner Cristina del Campo told the Olive
big
Press: “This is big news. Nolotil is the most sold medicine in the country so it’s a big step in the right direction.” In 2018, AEMPs issued an informative note stating the medicine should not be given to patients without a thorough background check and the possibility of follow ups. This effectively means foreigners and tourists should not be given the drug.
Last issue we reported how dozens of hospitals and clinics along the Costas had stopped using the drug. Over 750 people have so far signed our petition on Change.org.
The couple - in their seventies - from Barcelona were staying in a hotel when the husband complained of feeling unwell. An ambulance took them to Villajoyosa’s Marina Baixa Hospital and they kept the bag as they were worried about the contents falling into the wrong hands.
It had €230 in cash inside it, as well as the expensive jewellery. After being discharged from hospital, the couple discovered the bag was missing and the Guardia Civil detained the ambulance driver, 38, as the culprit.
Thieves pocketed
A GANG of street thieves have been arrested in Valencia after robbing a group of Chinese tourists.
The four women operated in a popular sight-seeing spot by the City of Arts and Sciences. The Valencia Policia Local said they used accessories like glasses and bags as signals to communicate with each other to mislead victims. They had struck previously in the same area and the police mounted a special operation to catch them.
PEAS TO MEET YOU
SIX-TIME Grammy winners, the Black Eyed Peas, will perform in Spain three times this year.
The hip-hop group featuring will.i.am are famous for songs like I Gotta Feeling and The Time, and have recorded a dozen albums.
The prolific Peas have sold 120 million singles and 35 million albums in the 25 years that they have been together. They will be performing at the Malaga Forum as part of the Selvatic Malaga Fest summer programme on July 21.
Before that they will feature at the Gran Canaria stadium on July 5, and then the Benicassim Festival in Castellon on July 18.
“Many years ago, I moved for love. I moved for a Spanish girl”, he tells the Olive Press.
“My plan was to come to Spain, make her fall in love with me and then take her away forever, but it actually worked the opposite way around. I came here, I fell in love with Spain, and then when she was eventually ready to move on and head somewhere else, I actually wanted to stay. I’ve been here ever since and it’s changed my life”.
Swapping the melancholy of Birmingham for the bustling busyness of Madrid was, the former Leeds University student says, ‘the best decision’ of his life.
Almost a decade on, we speak as Tom is walking along the
Camino de Santiago, leading a group of 20 members of his own carefully nurtured community along one of the world’s great pilgrimage routes in one of three expeditions planned this year.
The Peas have been regular visitors to Spain down the years and last August performed at Marbella’s Starlite festival and the Brilla Torrevieja festival.
Taking ownership
Tom, now 31, is the founder of Guiris de Mierda, a successful lifestyle brand based in Spain that organises real-life ex-
Meet the young British expat behind Guiris de - a lifestyle brand which reclaims the ‘offensive’ term for foreigners
European descent - was used in anti-tourist graffiti plastered on walls in Malaga as tensions between local residents and visitors came to the boil.
By Ben PawlowskiPOP sensation
Dua Lipa has confessed that she would ‘love it if Almodovar
are currently working on Almodovar’s first full-length English-language feature.
Some deem the word, which more often than not is a term of endearment, to be a derogatory slur. Tom, who has proudly embraced the phrase, labelling himself a
called me to do a movie. Pedro loves women’. Whether or not the recent Brit award winner’s celluloid dreams will come true is yet to be seen.
AMANCIO Ortega, the founder of fashion chain Zara and Spain’s richest person, has made his latest eye-watering purchase - a €182 million luxury yacht.
The 88-year old Galician businessman’s new
tourists and locals in Spain, or at least there can be. But obviously with waves of mass tourism, and even immigration from people outside of Spain, there are always going to be some people who are rubbed up the wrong way by it”, he explains. “We try to set a good example that not all guiris are the type that get smashed, get battered, and drink for five days straight. Some guiris want to give back to Spain, and so we are working with charities now, organising charity events and promoting the integration side of things”.
But she did at least get to enjoy the company of the Oscar winner when they dined together in one of Madrid’s most exclusive eateries: BiBo, one of the restaurants that renowned Marbella chef Dani Garcia has in the Spanish capital.
Making up a foursome in BiBo were Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore, both of whom
Titled The Room Next Door, the movie is described by Almodovar’s production company as ‘the story of a very imperfect mother (Tilda Swinton) and a spiteful daughter separated by a huge misunderstanding. In between the two is another woman, Ingrid (Julianne Moore), the mother's friend, who is the repository of their pain and bitterness’.
Message
Just a fortnight ago, the word guiri - used by Spaniards colloquially to describe foreigners, particularly of Northern that the work he does with his brand can help to heal divisions and show that mass integration is something valuable and precious.
“I think most of the time there is a good relationship between
, was built by Feadship, the industry-leader for constructing superyachts for the super-rich.
The 564-square-metre boat includes all manner of luxurious amenities, including a jacuzzi, super-fast wifi coverage, a helicopter pad, a swimming pool, a children’s playground and a stunning master bedroom.
RACIST SLURS
THE attitudes of Spanish football are once again in the spotlight after the decision to ban a black player who confronted racist fans in a third division game. Senegalese goalkeeper Cheikh Sarr jumped into the crowd to confront the spectators who had been abusing him during a match between his team Rayo Majadahonda and Sestao River Club in the Basque Country.
Last edition the Olive Press reported how Ortega had sold his previous yacht Drizzle for €76 million - a loss of €19 million over the purchase price.
Not that he will be bothered too much - Ortega has an estimated net worth of over €67 billion.
He adds: “We organise events around the idea that everybody has been a guiri at some point in their lives. Especially in the modern world, people live in other countries and we feel that is something worth celebrating, so we try and bring people together”.
Recently, the company has made a successful venture into clothing, selling t-shirts and other accessories with the motto: ‘Embrace your inner guiri and stop taking yourself so seriously’.
“2024 has been a great year for us so far - we have launched the clothing brand and we are having so much demand for the events so we want to do more of them and create these real-life experiences and connections between Spanish people and foreigners, and keep spreading our message”, he says.
The referee showed the keeper a straight red card with the score poised at 2-1 in the 84th minute.
Sarr’s teammates refused to finish the game and walked off the pitch with him.
Among the insults hurled at him were ‘eres un puto (you're a f***ing monkey) and ‘corre, puto negro de mierda’ (run, you f***ing black
The authorities banned Sarr for two matches and awarded his club a 3-0 defeat. Meanwhile, their opponents were fined €6,001.
But the decision was met with outrage by social media users, who labelled it ‘disgraceful, disgusting’ and ‘embarrassing’.
TOURIST KILLED
THE Guardia Civil have arrested a man for the killing of Singapore tourist Audrey Fang, who went missing from her Javea hotel on April 9.
The suspect is also a Singapore national and Audrey’s body was found the following day - 150 kms away in a Murcia lorry park at Abanilla.
She had been stabbed but her body was not identified at the time.
The suspect was detained by the Guardia in Alicante on Tuesday and transferred to their colleagues in Murcia.
A family friend said that Audrey had told some acquaintances that she was going to meet somebody during her visit to Spain but did not know the identity.
Her disappearance had been widely reported in the Singapore press before the body was positively identified to be Audrey (below).
FARM waste can’t be burned until mid-October in the Valencian region in the wake of a Marina Alta fire caused by ignited waste that forced 180 people to be evacuated. The restriction has been imposed due to the combination of low rainfall, high temperatures, strong winds, and bonedry vegetation. The blaze started on Sunday lunchtime
EXPERTS are warning against ‘mutant’ cockroaches as numbers of the bugs soar due to genetic mutation.
Climate change has accelerated the metabolic cycles of certain species, leading to a huge expansion of the bugs across the globe.
They have also become ‘resistant’ to insecticides, making it ever more difficult to combat their rising numbers.
As well as tiger mosquitos, more cockroaches are expected in coastal areas including Valencia and Malaga.
The Blanca is the perfect breeding ground for the creatures as it has the necessary ‘shelter and food’ for reproduction.
According to Jorge Galvan, director of the Spanish Association of Environmental Health, the conditions are ‘ideal for
Burning ban
in the Serra Ferrer between Tarbena and Parcent- burning 690 hectares of land.
A man and his son were arrested by the Guardia Civil on Monday, Fire crews battled for three days to bring the blaze under control.
By Yzabelle Bostynhatching’, meaning it will be ‘more difficult’ to control the pest. “New strategies are needed,”
SUMMER taxi shortages in the Safor region will be eased after a new deal that allows licenced cabs to pick up clients in any municipality. It’s been a long-standing demand by drivers and the concession will run between June 1 and September.
For example, there were only 34 cabs operating in Gandia last summer, gen-
Tree felling
PEOPLE in Polop are claiming the local council has got it badly wrong over felling a row of mulberry trees next to the CV70 Guadalest road..
The trees - planted over 30 years ago - were apparently chopped down because their roots were coming through the cycleway surface and could have been dangerous to twowheeled users.
Mutant cockroaches
Experts say numbers of bugs - also including ticks and mosquitos - have soared by a third while their genetics are rapidly changing
he insisted. “Cleanliness is the first step to prevent this plague. It’s not a question of getting scared but letting people know.”
As spring gets underway, he warned that warm weather en-
Next on the rank
erating numerous complaints of long waits at night and during the weekend. Some 24 additional taxis from areas like Oliva and Tavernes will now act as a single metropolitan area over the summer.
courages insect reproduction. He also confirmed that Spain was making a tick map for the first time, to avoid the spread of the bugs through pets.
Manager of pest control company Anticimex, Carlos Pradera, added Spain has developed from a ‘subtropical climate to a tropical one’ over recent years. “Warm seasons are longer and the cold ones are getting warmer and warmer.”
This means plagues of cockroaches are seen a couple of months earlier and last six weeks longer at the end of the summer.
Polop resident, Sebastien Duclert, told the Olive Press: “The track is mostly used by local walkers who enjoyed the trees’ shade in the summer for over two kilometres.”
“The root bumps were not a hazard to cyclists and in the context of climate change, many people think this decision is scandalous and makes absolutely no sense,” he added. Polop council has been approached for a comment, but have not yet responded.
Record high
BENIDORM reached a record registered population total of 74,588 residents last year, surpassing its previous best in 2013.
It is now within touching distance of reaching the 75,000 mark, which would give it ‘big city’ status and allow it to get more money from the government. An extra 2,250 people signed up on the municipal padron last year.
Feels like home
Hola Quooker!
Quooker has arrived in Spain. You can now benefit from official technical service and local warranty. Visit www.quooker.es to know more or to find a dealer near you!
With a Quooker in your kitchen you always have 100 °C boiling water alongside regular hot and cold. Add a CUBE and you will also have filtered chilled and sparkling water – all from the same tap. The tap that does it all.
info@quooker.es
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.
Justice for Bianca
WHAT happened to Bianca Pitman is nothing short of a tragedy (American mystery, p1).
Like most expats, the 43-year-old moved to Spain with hopes of embarking on a brand new life under the sun.
But just months after arriving, the American mum-of-two was found dead in a holiday apartment after, according to her husband, a sex game that ‘simulated rape’ went wrong, after she ingested a yet-unspecified drug.
It has sparked a genuine mystery and from what her close friends have told us, this kind of behaviour is totally out of character for the much-loved art teacher.
The facts are she left her partner for a new life in Spain and did not want him to know where she was. Then months later, he flew to Spain and by all appearances convinced her to meet with him, and now she is dead. There is clearly a lot to unpack in this case, and we hope the Spanish authorities leave no stone unturned in their investigation.
We want justice for Bianca and the truth to come out about what really happened on that fateful night on April 6. We send our condolences to her family and friends, most importantly her two devastated children, who now have to cope with losing their mother, while their father is locked up in jail as the prime suspect in her killing.
Truth is coming out
THE McGrail inquiry is throwing a light on one of the most opaque incidents in Gibraltar’s history.
It has taken a long four years to begin and involves some of the Rock’s most high profile figures.
It is to be welcomed that a public inquiry is being held, with the doors open to the press.
Indeed, compared with Spain - where transparency is not the first thing that comes to mind when delving into political dealings - it is a breath of fresh air.
We do not know what further evidence will be heard and what conclusions will be drawn by the inquiry. But what we have heard so far is pretty alarming.
Whether Ian McGrail deserved to lose his job due to incompetence is one thing. What he was investigating under Operation Delhi is another thing altogether.
It is perhaps understandable that the Chief Minister has announced he will not stand for a further term in office. For the whiff of corruption blowing around the Rock this month is as strong as the wind from Tarifa. We hope the truth will out.
Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es
Dilip Kuner dilip@theolivepress.es
Walter Finch walter@theolivepress.es
Yzabelle Bostyn yzabelle@theolivepress.es
Simon Hunter simon@theolivepress.es
Alex Trelinski alex@theolivepress.es
Ben Pawlowski ben@theolivepress.es
The rumbles on
WITH a population of just 32,649, Gibraltar is much smaller than near neighbours Estepona, with 77,000 people and even La Linea, with 64,000 souls. So small in fact that the usual ‘six degrees of separation’ is often reduced to just one. And if you don’t know someone, you will know their father or work with their nephew.
Yet the tiny British Overseas Territory has a thriving service economy, aided by an extraordinary complement of 32 law firms (one for every thousand Gibraltarians). The Rock, as it’s often known, has one of the highest GDP figures in the world and all the trappings of a modern liberal democracy; its own parliament, police force - and a UK-appointed Governor.
Yet, somehow, on one fateful Tuesday four years ago, these varying pillars of the Rock all managed to collide, triggering allegations of fraud, corruption, and an inquiry that began last week.
Suddenly the world is watching, with the Times, the FT and Guardian covering the case, while the celebrated podcast, The Rest is Politics, dedicated a section to the alleged corruption that revolves around the early retirement of its former police chief Ian McGrail.
It certainly makes for awkward listening (and reading) for Gibraltar’s dozen or so key power brokers as their activities come under a very public microscope. After all, this tiny little strip of land has long been accustomed to largely flying under the radar.
A very revealing public inquiry is shining a light on the shock retirement of Gibraltar’s police chief, and an alleged conspiracy involving some of the enclave’s most powerful figures
By Walter Finch at the McGrail inquiryHOW CHIEF MINISTER FABIAN PICARDO GOT INVOLVED
“‘CM, (Chief Minister) before you hear it from anyone else I want to inform you that detectives are executing a search warrant at Hassans for JL in relation to the case against [John Perez, Thomas Cornelio, and Caine Sanchez] ... Regards.” This, how ex-Commissioner of Police Ian McGrail broke the news to Chief Minister Fabian Picardo in a Whatsapp on May 12, 2020. He was referring to a search of the office of his friend, James Levy, the most senior partner at the most important law firm in Gibraltar, Hassans, with detectives seizing his mobile phone and tablet. Picardo’s ‘friend, colleague and mentor’, the pair both worked together for years at Hassans. Both senior trial lawyers, or KCs (King’s Counsels), it was never going to end well for McGrail, who less than a month later on June 9 had handed in his notice half way through his four-year term.
THE MAIN PLAYERS
IAN MCGRAIL:
A RGP policeman for 35 years, he joined as a Constable in 1984 and rose through the ranks until he was appointed Commissioner in 2018 on a four-year term. He had an unblemished record and was garlanded many times with honours and awards for his service. They include the Overseas Territories Police medal handed him during the late Queen’s 2015 Birthday Honours List. He was also awarded the Gold and Diamond Jubilee medal.
FABIAN PICARDO:
The four-time Chief Minister, who heads the Socialist Labour Party (GSLP), was first elected in 2011 and has vanquished all comers ever since. The Oxford educated barrister reached the heady heights of King’s Counsel in a 20-year legal career, mostly at Hassans, before moving into politics. During his tenure the Rock’s economy has thrived, moving away from a ‘tax haven’ model and towards becoming a hub for offshore finance and gaming. He has struck a very progressive agenda, legalising gay marriage ending legal discrimination against same-sex couples.
At the age of 54, it was a career-ending retirement and he claims Picardo
But as the inquiry heard last week, Picardo denies this insisting he had to step down due to incompetence, a claim backed up by then-interim Governor, Nick Pyle, as well as the Attorney General, Michael Llamas.
All three have accused McGrail of lying about the search, adding he had lost their confidence.
THE €840,000-A-YEAR SECURITY CONTRACT
The backstory began some 18 months earlier in 2018 when the Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) initiated Operation Delhi to investigate the alleged hacking and attempts to take control of the National Se-
Spain’s National Police awarded McGrail for his service in combating organised crime and fostering cross-border law enforcement cooperation.
He became a Queen’s Counsel (now a KC) in 2002 and was awarded a CBE for his services to the community of Gibraltar and for his work in helping to grow and develop its economy. He is credited with advising the Gibraltar government on its transformation into a finance centre and helping to set up much of the rules and legislation governing it. He is considered a first-class expert consistently ranked as a Leading Individual by the Legal 500, a publication that assesses global law firms and lawyers. it forced him. last to to
JAMES LEVY:
Nicknamed ‘the grey man’, Levy is the boss of Hassans, the largest law firm on the Rock.
P propertySpain’sbest
roperty
transformedThechickencoopthathasbeen intoanarchitect’sstudio
A MASTER EYE ON
WTaking a look at the lesser known Gaudi creations
CLUCKS TO CREATIVITY
SIESTAS, lots of holidays and long warm evenings… is it any wonder Spain offers the second-best work-life balance in the world.
According to new research, Spaniards have much more time to relax outside of work compared to most European countries.. In comparison to the UK, where most people work nine to five jobs with a short lunch
break, most Spanish workers get at least an hour to eat.
According to global HR company Remote, Spain scored a healthy 76 out of 100 for workers.
In the company’s study of the 60 countries with the highest GDP globally, only New Zealand came above with a score
HERE once chickens literally ruled the roost, a firm of architects is now drawing inspiration from the nature of the Paratges de La Moixina.
Nestled within the scenic natural park near Orlot (Girona), a remarkable transformation has taken place. What was once a dilapidated chicken coop is now a centre of creativity and innovation, thanks to the work of the Arnau Estudi d'Arquitectura studio. Led by Arnau Verges, (below) the firm decided to restore the forgotten structure to its former glory.
See page 14
With a keen eye for design Arnau and his team renovated the old coop, breathing new life into its weathered walls.
The transformation of the chicken coop into an architect’s studio has been nothing short of extraordinary. It exudes a sense of rustic charm, blending seamlessly with the natural beauty of its surroundings..
It was a labour of love for Arnau who
grew up on the farm where the coop stands. He remembers seeing roe deer and other wildlife on And now he has clear views from his comfortable studio as the wildlife timidly approach the old coop.
He said: “We watch the seasons and life go by through the window while we know that this little paradise is just a lucky fragment of the broken mirror of life.”
PERFECT BALANCE
Spainisthesecond-bestcountryintheworldforwork-lifebalance
By Yzabelle Bostynof 79.
The poll took into account public holidays, sick leave, healthcare, annual leave, maternity leave and overall happiness.
Spain did extremely well for
statutory annual leave of 36 days, while 16 weeks of paid maternity leave (at €100 a week) and getting 60% of your wage if sick were pluses.
While the minimum hourly wage is low at €7.41, it is compensated by an average happiness level of 6.48 out of 10.
An ordinary work week is 25.9
hours, including part-time work.
Despite coming first, Kiwis get less annual leave than Spaniards, with 32 days.
However, their sick leave percentage is higher at 80% as well as maternity leave allowance, at around €98 for 26 weeks.
France came third, followed by Australia, Denmark, Norway and the Netherlands. The United Kingdom was in eighth position, with an average happiness score of 6.94 out of 10.
Brits get 28 days of annual leave, £96 a week for sick leave and 39 weeks of maternity leave at £24 (€27).
In ninth and tenth place were Canada and Brazil, respectively.
Spaintoend goldenvisasthat grantresidencyto foreignerswhobuy a€500,000home
By Ben PawlowskiPreviously, the scheme allowed foreigners to obtain a three-year residence permit, extendable for another two, by buying property, or investing €1 million in deposits or shares of Spanish capital companies, or more than €2 million in government bonds. The scheme was introduced in 2013 in the wake of the housing market crash and Euro crisis as a means to re-invigorate the country’s property sector through foreign investment.
However, the policy has since come under severe scrutiny, with critics claiming it creates inflationary pressures and acts as a back door for dirty money to enter the Spanish economy. Now, Pedro Sanchez’s Socialist-led government has vowed to end the scheme.
NONSENSE!
Sanchez, 52, said that 94% of approved visas were related to property ment and located in regional
capitals such as Barcelona, Madrid, Malaga and Valencia, ‘cities where the housing market is very stressed’. “We do not want a speculative investment model with housing”, he added.
The move comes in the build-up to crucial local elections in Catalunya and the Basque Country, with Sanchez stating that his main policy aim is to ‘guarantee access to affordable housing, to respond to the public, and assure that no citizen has to spend more than 30% of their income towards having a suitable, quality home’.
In 2022, Spain granted 2,462 residency permits to investors who had bought properties with a value exceeding €500,000, a
GOLDEN VISA
60% increase from the previous year.
The Spanish government has granted a total of 11,464 individual authorisations since the golden visa was introduced, in addition to 19,805 authorisation for family reunification.
Last year, countries including Ireland, Portugal and Greece cancelled their version of the ‘golden visa’ scheme as critics highlighted a lack of affordable rental housing in major cities. However, housing experts have warned that a cancellation of the scheme could damage the Spanish economy by discouraging crucial investment from its European neighbours. Tourism councillor in Benahavis Scott Marshall branded the scrapping of the golden visa as ‘nonsense’.
Heaven can’t wait!
BARCELONA’S iconic Sagrada Familia cathedral has finally been given a completion date - 100 years since its architect died.
cision made without consultation and without any basis’.
He added: “The problem is that, whether the initiative goes ahead or not, it contributes to creating uncertainty in the foreign investor... foreigners cannot be blamed for the price of housing and rents.”
Uncertainty
In a tweet, Sanchez said: “Housing is a constitutional right and not a mere speculative market. That is why we are going to eliminate the ‘Golden Visa’, the law approved by the PP that allows you to obtain a residence visa if you invest more than €500,000 in housing in our country”.
He added: “Having decent housing cannot depend only on market rules. This will be the legislature that turns housing into the fifth pillar of the welfare state.” invest-
Marchall, who is an estate agent by trade, added that it was ‘a de-
No need to paint
Antoni Gaudi’s spectacular gothic basilica, which looms high over the city, will be completed by 2026 according to builders. He will have died exactly 100 years ago on June 10, 1926.
Work on the structure first began in 1882, with the UNESCO World Heritage Site’s construction dogged by wars, fire, a lack of funds and, most recently, the Covid-19 pandemic.
But now, Esteve Camps, the president of the company behind the works, claims to have sufficient funds and material to complete the project, including the 172.5 metre central tower.
However, work on various intricate details could continue until 2034, as well as a stairway leading up to the main entrance.
But this has sparked controversy after it emerged that over 1,000 families and businesses would need to be dislodged.
“We are trying to follow Gaudi’s plan to the letter,” insisted Camps.
“We are his heirs and the plan presented to the local authorities in 1915, signed by Gaudi, includes the stairway”.
The building is Barcelona’s most popular tourist attraction, with close to five million annual visitors cumulatively spending over €125m. Yet it has not always been popular with everyoneGeorge Orwell once described it as ‘one of the most hideous buildings in the world’.
He lamented that a fire sparked by anarchists in 1936 had failed to completely destroy the monument.
CASH BUYERS IMF wades inonprices
INTEREST rate hikes since 2022 have caused a 5% rise in people buying a home in Spain without a mortgage.
Buyers who didn't need any bank financing accounted for 32% of sales in 2023.
A Fotocasa Research study based on 8,200 interviews has predicted the figure will climb to 35% this year.
A third of mortgage-free purchasers saved up enough money followed by people who got help from their family and those who made a profit on selling their previous property.
Fotocasa's director of studies, Maria Matos, said: “The survey indicates that people are looking for other ways to buy properties without using banks and it shows their determination to acquire a home.”
Guiris welcome
Overseasbuyersboostpropertymarket as domestic sales fall
FOREIGN house buyers are continuing to target the Spanish real estate market as domestic purchases fall.
Figures from the country’s notaries for 2023 show that 14.98% of property purchasers came from international buyers - a record percentage figure.
For the second successive year, foreign home purchases grew as a percentage to beat the previous best of 13.75% in 2022.
Oscar Martinez, president of the Professional Association of Real Estate Experts, said: “More and more international tourists are coming to Spain
Expansion approved
BENIDORM council has green-lit one of its biggest-ever urban plans which will see up to 20 hotels and over 2,300 homes built along with three shopping centres.
The development will cover over 570,000 m2 in the last significant pocket of undeveloped land in the city under the Ensanche Levante urban plan.
“This is the most important urban sector in the municipality in terms of surface area that was included in the 1990 General
By Alex Trelinskiand they find areas they like with a good climate which makes them think of buying a second home or even coming out to retire.”
A total of 583,000 properties were sold in Spain last year, down 9.8% on 2022’s total, which was boosted by a postCovid pandemic rush. However, domestic purchase slowdowns are not being mirrored by a fall in international buyers who accounted for three out of every 20 homes sold in
2023.
“Foreign customers are financially astute and are very clear about what they can afford,” said Eva Lopez from the National Federation of Real Estate Associations (FAI).
According to the notaries, only
Plan,” said Benidorm mayor, Toni Perez. It is now down to developers to produce plans for the area, which has suffered years of degradation in a long wait for a plan to become reality. No time scales have been given for when construction might begin after contracts have been advertised and awarded. The area is close to the city’s Levante beach and has abandoned properties that were a frequent target for squatters and criminals.
7.5% of mortgages last year involved foreign buyers.
“If they need financing, some of them have it already ready from their own country because of different terms and conditions for a domestic buyer,” added Lopez.
The largest foreign group were the British with 8,173 purchases, followed by Germans (6,244) and the French (5,712).
The favourite areas for British buyers are the Valencian Community followed by Andalucia.
The Balearic Islands had the greatest foreign purchase totals as a percentage last year, coming in at 31.5% followed by the Valencian Community (29.2%) and the Canary Islands (28.5%). There was also a significant presence in the Murcia region(23.8%) and Catalunya(15.7%).
THE International Monetary Fund has called on Spain to build more homes in order to ease the housing crisis that is ‘affecting the vulnerable.’
Much of Spain, especially in the big cities and along the costas, has seen a demand frenzy - both from renters as well as buyers - push up prices to sky high levels.
A new report by the IMF has urged the Spanish government to tackle the crisis by increasing the housing stock.
“To improve housing affordability, authorities should prioritise increasing supply rather than distorting support for demand,” Kristalina Georgieva said in the report.
Such a measure would lead landlords to lower prices in their attempt to find tenants, the report suggests.
The recommendation came a day after the government announced its intentions to boost house building to tackle sky-high prices.
The IMF also criticised the 2023 Housing Law’s price cap measures in congested urban zones, which has so far only been implemented in parts of Catalunya.
“Past experiences suggest that such price controls can diminish the rental housing supply,” the IMF notes.
Landlords might take their homes off the market if they cannot freely set rental prices, it is argued.
the Rock
curity Centralised Intelligence System (NSCIS) and transfer it to a company called 36 North Limited.
The NSCIS was a computer platform ‘designed to monitor
and control Gibraltar’s border with Spain.’ Critical to the territory’s national security, understandably it warranted a lucrative contract to run, worth some €840,000 a year.
Police soon uncovered an alarming roll call of key figures behind the hacking, including the secretary to the Deputy Chief Minister, the CEO of Gibraltar’s Borders and Coast Guard, and, finally, Levy himself. It was on this discovery that on May 7, 2020, McGrail decided to issue a search warrant of Levy’s home as a suspect of ‘conspiracy to defraud’.
Levy - who the inquiry has discovered knew
of the ‘plan to remove the NSCIS platform’ - owned 11% of 36 North Ltd - while his pal Picardo held a 3% share.
However, with his rapid resignation it was decided Operation Delhi should be shelved and all charges were dropped in January 2022 on the grounds it would ‘not be in the public interest.’
Levy was never charged and his mobile phone and tablet were returned to him without, allegedly, being opened.
WHY DOES IT MATTER?
In Gibraltar, the same few names crop up time and again.
It may have only 32,000 or so residents, but a vastly smaller number of people actually run the jurisdiction.
McGrail’s lawyers are trying to prove that Picardo himself interfered in a live police investigation to protect his old boss and business partner.
While Picardo denies it, so far they have done a good job of showing how a tiny cabal of elites control the Rock and avoiding conflicts of interest is almost impossible, even with the best of intentions.
It has even been suggested that Inquiry chairman Sir Peter Openshaw may conclude that Gibraltar is too small to govern itself, and recommend a return to ‘Direct Rule’ from the UK.
It is a possibility that has also been floated by the leader of the opposition, Keith Azopardi, who himself is also a senior lawyer and KC.
Worse than that, it is something more than likely to prick up the ears of the Spanish, who have long-demanded sovereignty over the territory.
Spain refers to Gibraltar as a British colony; something that can be refuted so long as it governs itself.
If the position of Governor, appointed by London, is transformed from a ceremonial one to an executive one, suddenly Gibraltar becomes a British colony again. An anachronism, or relic of the past that should be decolonised and, as the Spanish will argue, returned to them.
Visit our website
Dawn of a new era
Olive Press website soars to new heights after major relaunch
THE Olive Press website has seen visitor numbers more than DOUBLE since launching a brand new look.
After months of arduous planning, www.theolivepress.es entered a new era at the weekend.
In just four days, our ambitious relaunch has had hundreds of new registrations, while subscribers are flooding in from around the world - including the US and Australia. More engaging and geared towards a younger audience, the new design was sorely needed after almost a decade without major changes.
We are sure the hundreds of thousands of new readers we are now bringing to the site each month are enjoying it.
“It was really important for us to have a website that reflects the high quality and exclusive content we produce on a daily basis - and we finally have it,” explains editor Jon Clarke. “I’m very proud of the changes and I am confident this will usher in a new era for theolivepress.es.”
As well as overhauling our paywall, we have made the pricing simpler and more compet-
By Laurence Dollimore Digital EditorAs part of the relaunch readers can subscribe for just €4.99 per month - or €1.25 a week - which is less than the price of a coffee And for a limited time only, you can get the first three months for the
Now all eyes are on Gibraltar and the inquiry, which has another three weeks to run.
www.theolivepress.es for the regular daily reports as the inquiry unravels.
only, price of one. tablet.
If you want to take advantage of the deal, scan the QR code on this page with your phone or tablet.
Our subscribers have advert-free access to all of our online articles, weekly newsletters covering travel, health and property and regular personal missives from the digital editor. In addition, you get exclusive access to all the e-editions of our six fortnightly printed newspapersnow including our new one in GERMAN. The OP was the first English-language newspaper in Spain to launch a paywall, a decision many in the industry thought unwise. But you will now notice that every other re-
is offering numerous
spectable competitor has followed suit. Unfortunately for them, they pale in comparison to the content we produce, thanks to our dozen-plus journalists and writers. Only the Olive Press exclusives every week, sending NCTJ-trained journalists out to investigate stories across the country.
This month that has included two reports on anti-tourism movements in Tenerife, the killing of an American expat in Malaga and live court coverage of the explosive McGrail inquiry in Gibraltar.
We have also been in Madrid, Benidorm, Sevilla and Murcia covering stories, as well as regular trips to Germany, covering the sensational trial of Madeleine McCann suspect Christian Brueckner, given the many links to Spain and Portugal. As well as incisive up-to-date news on health and the property market, we produce dozens of our own travel stories, features and reviews each month, taking us to the known and, more importantly, lesser-known destinations around Spain.
Is it any wonder that over the past week alone we have been followed up by almost every national newspaper in the UK, including The Times, Daily Mail, Sun, Express, Metro and Mirror
We also got an in-depth feature on ITV, as well as frequent articles on GB News.
It means the Olive Press website is, without a doubt, the number one source of news in English in Spain.
While some sites will claim to have more stories - and all of them free - the Olive Press is about curating the news and breaking the news.
So when you’re deciding which online paper to subscribe to, there really is no better option!
Nuclear graveyard
SPAIN'S government has approved a long-term project to build a €4.1 billion facility to store all of the country’s nuclear waste.
All nuclear power plants will be closed down progressively between 2027 and 2035 with each of the seven facilities having temporary dumps for radioactive waste to be kept at the sites for 50 years.
The intention is to transfer everything to a central nuclear graveyard (AGP) - in effect a large hole in the ground - where the waste will be kept permanently.
The design and location of such a site has yet to be decided but it could be ready as soon as 2073, according to the National Radioactive Waste Company (Enresa).
OP QUICK CROSSWORD
Ear-splitting row
Environmentalists blast plans to parade F1 cars through the streets of Barcelona ahead of GP
ENVIRONMENT groups have blasted plans to host a Formula One roadshow in Barcelona city centre ahead of the Spanish Grand Prix in June.
OP SUDOKU
Down
1 Past its best (8)
2 Could be G.W. or H.W. (9,4)
3 State to be true (6)
4 White wine grape variety (6)
5 Group agenda is about Hereford, today (5,2,3,3)
6 Abominable snowman (4)
12 Organ which can be bent or lent (3)
13 Avian alarm clocks (8)
15 Attraction (6)
16 North African goat (6)
18 Blue hue (4)
By Ben PawlowskiF1 cars will drive along the Passeig de Gracia boulevard after plans for the exhibition were revealed last week. The bustling thoroughfare will become home to VIP boxes, hospitality, food and drink stalls - an F1 Fan Village will also be installed in Placa Catalunya as authorities look to whip up enthusiasm for the annual Spanish Grand Prix, hosted at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on June 23.
MUCK TO FUEL
However, the plans have provoked the ire of local environmentalist groups who claim the exhibition is ‘absurd’ and will worsen air quality.
In a statement on X, Eixample Respira, which cam-
SPANISH green energy company Solarig will spend €780 million on a plant that will produce aviation fuel from agricultural waste. When complete in 2026, it will produce 60,000 tonnes a year, enough for 12,000 flights between Madrid and Mallorca. Built in an industrial park in Garray - in the Castilla y Leon region - it will be powered by a 370MW solar farm and a 50MW wind farm, supplemented by a 100MWh-capacity battery.
Solarig chief executive Miguel Angel Calleja said the plant would help Spain lead the sustainable fuels sector.
paigns for the improvement of air quality in the Eixample neighbourhood of Barcelona, said: “We are suffering from a public health crisis caused by poor air quality and noise.
“It is absurd to consider a Formula 1 exhibition in the centre where thousands of people live, many of them particularly vulnerable to the effects of pollution.”
Aviation accounts for up to 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
NO LET UP
MARCH was the 10th consecutive month for record global temperatures according to Copernicus - the EU’s Earth observation programme. It beat the previous March high recorded in 2016. The Copernicus group says temperatures in the last 12 months ‘are the highest since records began’, and are already 1.58ºC above the pre-industrial average of 1850 to 1900.
The future of Formula One racing in Catalunya was thrown into doubt after Stefano Domenicalli, the sport’s CEO, announced a new Madrid Grand Prix which will take place from 2026. The new circuit will incorporate both street and nonstreet sections around the IFEMA Exhibition Centre, just five minutes from Madrid Airport. The contract for the current Spanish Grand Prix, hosted in Catalunya, is set to expire in 2026 - the same year that the Madrid Grand Prix’s contract starts.
In Europe, March was the second warmest on record, but it was only 0.02ºC cooler than the hottest in modern times, back in 2014.
Copernicus Deputy Director Samantha Burgess said: “March 2024 continues the sequence of broken climate records in both air temperature and sea surface temperatures.”
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SPAIN is going through a ‘wine revolution’ believes leading UK wine guru Jancis Robinson.
Just as the country has seen a massive shift in its restaurant scene, the wine sector is also booming.
“There is a Spanish wine revolution and there is a revolution in vineyards all over the country,” believes Robinson.
“There are so many exciting new-wave producers…And the best thing is most of the wines are reasonably priced and so wide-ranging.”
Evidence of this, she insists, was clear from the 500 wines on offer at a recent London event for Spanish wine.
Called Vinateros, there were wines from over 80 grape varieties produced by 92 winemakers from all around the coun-
Wine revolution
Spanish wines have seen a ‘significant’ increase in quality over the last 20 years, insists UK wine expert Jancis Robinson
Passenger record smashed
By Jon ClarkeEVER fancied a journey on the Orient Express?
Well you can do just that - or rather sample its equivalent - right here in Spain.
RENFE has just launched this year's luxury Al-Andalus train service across Andalucia, taking in Jaen, Malaga, Cordoba, Granada, Cadiz and Sevilla.
The Al-Andalus is formed of 15 carriages, five of which are authentic from the 1920s.
They were built in France and were originally used by members of the British royal family to go on holiday in the French Riviera.
The carriages have common areas, restaurant cars, kitchen cars and seven bedrooms.
You can choose between the Suite Deluxe and the Gran Clase rooms.
But beware, as prices can go as high as €6,700.
difficult it is for us to map the wine regions of Spain satisfactorily now as they are scattered all over the country and as far as the Canaries,” she wrote in her column in the Financial Times.
“For a time I used to rail against Spain’s dependence on just one grape variety, Tempranillo, the dominant grape of Ribera and Rioja. But at the event this year
there were over 80!” She particularly raved about one wine, Guix Vermell, from Montsant as well as the Albarinos from Galicia. “These albarinos are far
Royal treat
ALICANTE-ELCHE airport is continuing its record breaking start to 2024 with its best-ever passenger numbers for March.
1661 try. The seasoned wine writer was particularly impressed with the ‘great whites’ and also noted that only 13 producers came from Rioja and Ribera del Duero. The rest were from a range of frequently ‘obscure’ denominations (DOs) including Cebreros, Valle de la Orotava, Arribes, Ribeira Sacra and Mentrida. “You can see how
Airport owner Aena said that 1.2 million travellers used the facility last month - 21.3% up on a year ago, and an impressive 27.2% increase on 2019, before the Covid pandemic struck.
The first quarter of 2024 has seen 3.2 million passengers, up by 22.7% on the same period last year.
It operated 20,729 flights between January and March- 18.4% more than a year earlier.
more interesting today than they were when they became fashionable 10 or 20 years ago,” she wrote. “White Rioja is also now taken seriously and there is a host of deep-flavoured whites based on grapes such as Albilllo, Verdejo and Xarel-lo.”
Location
The bulk of March passengers - over a million - were international travellers, with the United Kingdom dominating (437,414).
The vinateros (who are ‘wine growers’ as opposed to ‘winemakers’) believe that great wine is ‘made in the vineyard’ and the location is more important than the winemaking technique. The event was attended by over 20 UK importers as well as the Spanish ambassador. There will be an American version of the event in the US next year.
free
Gloomy outlook
PARKINSON’S disease is the fastest-growing neurological condition in the world with around 160,000 sufferers in Spain, according to the Spanish Society of Neurology.
Among those aged over 65 years of age, some 2% of the group have it, doubling up to people aged over 80.
The risks of contracting the disease are linked to age, but 5% of cases occur in people under the age of 50, which is named early-onset Parkinson's disease.
Dr Alvaro Sanchez Ferro from the Neurology Society says that in Spain the number of people affected will grow at a higher rate than in other countries and may triple by 2050.
Some factors that seem to predispose to developing Parkinson's are being exposed to pesticides, industrial solvents and air pollution.
STUB IT OUT
War on smoking moves forward with plain packs and vape flavours ban mooted
SPAIN has started the process to introduce its new anti-smoking plan by announcing a public consultation over instigating plain cigarette packets and banning vape flavourings.
The 2024-2027 plan was agreed by the Health Ministry and the country's 17 regions on April 5. The Ministry has now put out for consultation the
OP Puzzle solutions
Quick Crossword
Across: 7 VC R, 8 For free, 9 Pristine, 10 Edit, 11 Misdemeanours, 14 Reincarnation, 17 Scab, 19 Libretto, 20 Austria, 21 A P R.
Down: 1 Overripe, 2 President Bush, 3 Affirm, 4 Ortega, 5 Order of the day, 6 Yeti, 12 Ear, 13 Roosters, 15 Allure, 16 Nubian, 18 Cyan.
By Alex Trelinskilaunch of 'neutral' tobacco packets - already implemented in countries like the UK - and ending the sale of flavoured vapes. Flavoured vapes are viewed by health experts as being a hook for teenagers and younger people to try traditional tobacco products.
UNDER THREAT: Vape flavours in sights of Health Minister Garcia
The proposed changes are in line with the Smoking Control plan to 'prevent the initiation of consumption of tobacco and related products'. Health Minister, Monica Garcia, said that tobacco tax levels will be discussed with the Finance Ministry to 'bring us closer to countries around us'.
The plan also envisages outdoor 'smoke-free' spaces but details of that have still to be ironed out including whether or not that means a total ban for hospitality terraces. Garcia said: “The sector is in good health and the ominous forecasts that spoke of widespread ruin because people were going to stop going to bars because they could not smoke indoors never happened". “There is no economic impact because there was no impact with previous measures either," she added. "I don't think people will stop going to terraces or
beaches because there is a measure that protects against second-hand smoke but we will help the regions to implement it with all of the guarantees," said Garcia. She promised there will be a public consultation ahead of any stage of legislation, like in the case of packaging and vape flavours, where people from all sides of the argument will be able to contribute.
Though all of the regions backed the plan, it’s expected that some will take a more 'looser' view on some of the proposals - especially over terraces.
In December, Madrid's mayor, Jose Luis Martinez-Almeida branded a terrace smoking ban as 'crazy' while a Mallorca restaurant owner has said that a ban would spark 'fights' between customers and waiting staff.
A sea change for health
SWAPPING red meat for small fish such as sardines or boquerones (anchovies) could save up to 750,000 lives a year by 2050.
It would help reduce worldwide levels of diet-related diseases according to a study published last week by the journal, BMJ Global Health.
A team of Japanese researchers says forage fish like sardines are perfect in a food regime to reduce red meatscutting coronary heart disease and are also full of Omega-3.
“In Spain we have the advantage that culturally these small fish, such as anchovies and sardines, are consumed a lot,” said nutritionist Aitor Sanchez.
“The survey confirms what we know but vegetables and legumes should also be eaten more,” he added.
Eat yourself well
Taking olive oil daily could help prevent these five serious health issues - according to scientists
SCIENTISTS in Spain have revealed eating olive oil daily could help to prevent five serious health issues.
A study by the Universidad de Sevilla has revealed which illnesses and health issues this Spanish staple can help combat. It is thought olive oil has medicinal properties thanks to its 70-80% quantity of oleic acid, an omega-9 fatty acid. Commonly found in olives, canola oil and sunflower oil, oleic acid fights a variety of common illnesses.
OBESITY
Olive oil contains oleylethanolamide, a chemical which helps to regulate appetite and body weight. Studies have also found that people who consume extra virgin olive oil regularly have a lower risk of being overweight. This is probably because it is a monounsaturated fat, thought to promote weight loss.
CHOLESTEROL
According to the study: “oleic acid reduces the expression of proteins related to the movement of cholesterol, it also lowers the absorption of cholesterol and reduces oxidation of lipid proteins, preventing atherosclerosis, the buildup of plaque in the arteries.
ALZHEIMERS
The study showed olive oil could be beneficial in preventing alzheimers as oleic acid is a key component of cell membranes, including neurons.
HYPERTENSION
One of the biggest factors influencing cardiovascular risk, the antioxidant power of oleic acid can help to lower pressure on the arteries thanks to its nitrous oxide content.
CANCER
The anti-infl ammatory properties of oleic acid act as an anticarcinogen, ‘inhibiting the expression of oncogenes, genetic mutations thought to cause cancer’.
E
assist you with our Bespoke
and Mortgage Protection policies to
those that
most important to you, should the worse happen. The first question would be – have you taken out Life Insurance? You may have a Mortgage Protection policy, which means on your death the mortgage will be paid. But of course, this does not provide your family with some financial security when they really need it.
Mortgage Protection is a good policy to have as it will pay off any mortgage you have on your house, keeping your family secure in their home. This is death only cover, however there are some additional options you can add on if you require them.
For example, Mortgage Payment protection for €100,000 of cover for a 50 year old can be as little as €305 per year. On the other hand, life insurance provides a payment to your family.
You can tailor the life policy to your own requirements and create a Bespoke Life insurance – whether to cover the initial costs incurred on your death or give your family a lump sum to provide for their future. For example Life cover of €50,000 for a 50 year old, can be as little as €155 a year.
Our Bespoke Life policies can give you the cover most suited to your needs with standard death only cover and additional covers to include:-
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● Death by Traffic Accident
● Permanent Absolute Disability due to an Accident
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● Serious Illness cover/Serious Female illness cover
● You do need to be resident in Spain for these policies and there will be a simple health/medical questionnaire that you will need to complete online. These policies are available with monthly direct debit payments, and our policies will be in English.
● Alongside the Life policies, we can provide various accident policies to give your protection throughout your life and provide support should you sadly experience a life changing accident.
O P LIVE RESS The
Triple eclipse
SPAIN will see three solar eclipses in three years, 2026, 2027 and 2028. Two will be total eclipses while the other will last an astonishing seven minutes.
Bird barmy
ANDALUCIA will hold its annual Bird Festival this weekend, April 19-21.
It will be held in Montejaque, one of the top birding destinations in the region.
Fair cop
TWO women in Gandia were arrested when they tried to burgle a policeman’s home only for him to return and catch them tearing out a wall safe.
Britain is a much happier country than Spain according to new ranking
THE United Kingdom is a much happier country than Spain, according to the 2024 World Happiness Report.
Bytors.
The research, which is published annually, ranks the happiness of 143 countries based on respondent ratings and quality of life fac-
Ben Pawlowski that Spain is less happy than countries including war-threatened Taiwan, Mexico, Kuwait, Kosovo
GREAT BALL OF FIRE!
A HUGE fireball flew over Spain on Sunday.
It could be seen in Huelva, Sevilla, the Sierra Nevada and La Sagrada, Granada. The object, determined to be a rock separated from an asteroid, was spotted from the Calar Alto observatory in Almeria. It entered our atmosphere at 65,000 km/ph and lit up around the border of Malaga and Granada, some 90 km in the air.
Then it moved above Granada, before fading away at 25 km high over Jaen.
Spain has fallen in the rankings for the fourth consecutive year to 36th place, whilst the notoriously melancholic UK is 20th. The study indicates and El Salvador, the latter of which has the highest murder rate in the world.
The result was even worse for Spain’s youth, who ranked in 55th position for happiness behind countries such as Guatemala, Bosnia, Panama, Paraguay, Nicaragua and Thailand. The United States, meanwhile, have fallen out of the overall top 20 for the first time in over a decade.
In a ranking dominated by Nordic nations, Finland comes out on top for the sev-
Water
HAPPY DAYS!
VELEZ-Malaga will soon have dog lifeguards specially trained in water rescue.
enth consecutive time, followed by Denmark, Iceland and Sweden.
At the other end of the scale, war-torn Afghanistan is last with an average score of just 1.7/10.
The top 10 were: Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, Israel, Netherlands, Norway, Luxembourg, Switzerland and Australia.
The bottom 10 were: Zambia, Eswatini, Malawi, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Congo, Sierra Leone, Lesotho, Lebanon and Afghanistan.
The project is a collaboration between the local council and the Asociación de Rescate Acuático Canino (Association for Canine Water Rescue).
Dogs are trained to save swimmers in peril and transport flotation devices.
They provide vital support for human lifeguards, using their sense of smell to locate people in areas where human vision is limited or where victims have been dragged under water. The furry friends will wear special life jackets so they can be easily identified.
Bus-ted
BARCELONA city council has removed a busy bus route from Google Maps to prevent tourists dominating the service. It comes after years of complaints from locals. The 116 bus covers the Antoni Guadi designed Park Guell area, a major tourist hotspot. Once a quiet area for locals, tourists visiting the park have left the 20 seat service unusable for people going about their daily lives.