OLIVE PRESS Costa Blanca South and Murcia Issue 109

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The

A BRITISH expat has returned to feeding a feral cat colony after the local council lifted a ban following a report in the Olive Press

A sign appeared in early February at the entrance to the Salines Natural Park threatening fines of up to €600 if people fed the felines - even if they had official approval from the local council.

Derek Hepple, 81, a former police officer who has spent the last five years feeding the cats, told the Olive Press: “I passed on a very forthright letter to our CER Gatos charity leader Marga Salmeron which she delivered to Santa Pola council.

“I pulled no punches in my comments - not really caring what they thought as I'm an advanced cancer sufferer and don’t have ages to live.”

Last week Marga got back to him with the great news that Derek and oth-

“This

news but I don't know why the council introduced the ban or why they changed their mind,

The

Ose's desire to provide ‘an innovative approach to the role of the Museum international stage, while incorporating a clear desire to connect with on the role of art at the beginning of this century, without shying commitment to the social issues surrounding cultural institutions’.

The jury was made up of representatives of the institutions and members career in the international and local artistic sector: Joan

STITCH UP

Deputy Barcelona City Council; Elsa Ibar, Director General of Cultural Heritage Catalunya; Ainhoa Grandes, president of the Fundació MACBA;

Expats’ retirement dream ruined by shock €11,200 tax bill dating back three decades

A BRITISH couple’s retirement dreams have been shattered after their lawyers failed to pick up an ‘outstanding’ property tax that only emerged 26 years later.

John Stephenson, 75, and wife Kathy, 78, are stunned that the ‘unfair’ €11,200 levy was applied last year.

The ‘theft’ by the Hacienda tax authorities has nothing to do with them, they insist.

It should have actually been paid by the previous owners of the three-bedroom property in 1996 - SEVENTEEN years before they bought it.

But this didn’t stop the taxman deducting it from the €375,000 they received from the sale of the Costa del Sol home in May.

The former estate agents - who closed their Marbella firm due to Covid in 2022 - had decided to downsize

from San Pedro to Tarragona (Catalunya). They calculated the sale, plus other investments,

Carrillo de Albornoz, Director General of Fine Arts of the Ministry of president of the Association of French National Museums, Grand Palais the MACBA Advisory Committee;

DREAM TURNED TO NIGHTMARE: Massive tax paid on sale of their home has left John and Kathy Stephenson out of pocket

would take care of them through retirement. However, the outstanding IBI (rates) bill from 1996 has left them ‘financially short’.

They had bought the property in 2013 and hired a legal firm to do the conveyancing.

“Our lawyers obviously didn’t do a proper job as they assured us there was no debt on the house, we made sure of that,” John told the Olive Press

“The money was meant to pay off our car loan and other debts. Instead, we are struggling to pay them - at an age when we should be enjoying our retirement.

“When our lawyer gave us the news, I said there must be some mistake. In fact I was devastated by it.” His lawyer, Alvaro Moreno, of Armo Legal Services, admitted the case was ‘quite strange’.

“Normally these things come to light when you’re going through with the purchase, but there was no mention of the debt on the title deed,” he the Olive Press

ANGRY: John feels betrayed by his lawyers

The problem, he admitted, was that the outstanding debt

was only being posted on the official public buletin for Andalucia ‘at least once every four years’, meaning it stayed valid. It is normally the responsibility of the lawyer handling the sale - in this case Moreno’s former partner, Rafael Arevalo. But, it turns out Arevalo was not acting as John’s legal representative in the purchase. While an email chain seen by the Olive Press shows Arevalo acting as ‘Mr Stephenson’s Lawyer’, he oddly only signed the title deeds to the property as ‘a witness’.

It was something John failed to pick up on at the time due to not knowing the Spanish word for ‘witness.’

And as a witness, it means Arevalo was ‘not liable’ for failing to find the outstanding charge.

“If I’d wanted a witness, I could’ve got anyone off the street to do it,” insisted John.

speaking terms’.

“This is totally unacceptable,” insisted well known property lawyer Antonio Flores, who runs Lawbird, in Marbella.

He insisted it is completely up to Arevalo and Moreno to prove they correctly did the due diligence in 2013 - and not the other way round.

The Olive Press has been unable to get in contact with Arevalo to clarify the situation and the ex partners at Armo Legal are ‘no longer on

“The lawyers have to prove they did everything right,” he said. “They have to show that they looked in all the right places.

“They should’ve fought harder against this mystery tax bill. John and Kathy shouldn’t give up.”

FREE Vol. 5 Issue 109 www.theolivepress.es February 22nd - March 6th 2024 O P LIVE RESS The COSTA BLANCA SUR / MURCIA TM 147 834 Tel: 952 147 834 See page 15 TRAILBLAZERS TO TRENDSETTERS
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Olive Press celebrates International Women’s Day by highlighting some of the most influential characters, both past and present, and
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Opinion Page 6
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colony of around 30
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pleased to be resuming his daily 6 am feeding sessions. Mew-turn NEWS www.theolivepress.es February 8th - February 21st 2024 5 Supersized mobile plans! Was 80GB Now 150GB €24.99 28 €10 39 Was 25GB Now 50GB 28 days €12.99 Was 50GB Now 100GB days €18.99 All with unlimited calls & texts in Spain, to the UK and other countries With everything in English and now even more data for the same low price, it’s a great move! Visit lobster.es or call free on 1661 For visit lobster.es Even more data! BRITISH animal lover facing fines of up to €600 if he carries on feeding stray near his home Costa Blanca. Retired police officer Derek Hepple, 81, enjoys early morning walks with his rescue dog Markie on a route taking in the Salinas Salt Flats that has a colony of around cats. It comes despite the big-hearted expat joining the volunteer feeding team and getting an official permit from the Local. It also means digging into his own pocket the tune of €128 month. Cat-astrophe Big-hearted expat’s frustration at cat colony feeding ban “Most of were abandoned by people who just packed up and left,” Derek told the Olive But now, the colony come under from Santa council with workers removing a number of small trees the in and small bowls containers for them. “They have cleared out and destroyed the whole feeding area where put the food in,” continued Hepple. “They then put up huge sign stating anybody feeding them could be ned €600,” he added. “Why didn’t the council let us know first? Or try and solution. It is disgusting that people in charge can do this and let 30 cats purposely starve to “It appears there is nothing can do about this.” Derek first headlines when featured on the front the Olive Press two years ago, when the generous pensioner found home for homeless 71-year-old man living him. Czech expat George and his dog Boba were living an abandoned War bunker. By Trelinski FINE: and the front about Derek and George accidentally. went missing after sailing Menor in stowith friends. recovered days later with his suggesting his death have been an ache was scared of would not have voluntarily. occupants were the water surviving off the Alcazares coast, Ivo’s not found until foul TORREVIEJA council approved the biggest annual budget in its history namely €157.8 million. Opposition groups, with the exception of the far-right Vox party, voted against the Partido Popular authority's package. The leader Suena Torrevieja party, Pablo Samper, said that even though it was the ‘highest’ budget ever, it was least ‘supportive’. Samper said that total of €3 million been slashed from 10 socialincludedprogrammes. in funds to help vulnerable people pay rents and school transport subsidies.councillor Paredes refuted ELCHE is embarking on big programme of tree planting which will see 1,000 trees appear around the city this year. A wide variety of deciduous and perennial trees will be planted including Japanese acacias and fi trees. Some 860 tree ‘pits’ be created on pavements and paved areas improve shading and reduce pollution. The council has pledged plant at least 4,000 trees each year through to 2027. BRITISH expat is earning than Spain’s Vice Presi‘managing’ urbanijust 109 properties. Hills has come unfor paying himself €86,700-a-year despite being ‘voluntary’ ‘salary-free’.war’ with the outraged residents of Torre Bermeja, in Estepona (Malaafter his inflated pay packnown if this includes Taking root Spending more Quids in! By Laurence Dollimore ex-football managers Harry Redknapp and George Graham, the Irish mafi clan,theKinahans,whoarealso said to But it means he earning more than Spain’s deputy leader Yolanda Diaz, who pockets €79,415. Hills allegedly exempted himself from paying community fees which currently cost residents around €6,000 per year. Now ‘large group’ residents, many of them Brits and have to court to prove his actions are ‘illegal’. “People are outraged, actions are totally illegal and against the rules,” explained lawyer David Valadez, who representing the residents. Olive Press has Hills for comment. CHRISTMAS CHEER O PRESS---------------–
cats ap-
with Derek

Tough stance

VALENCIAN tourist minister Nuria Montes has welcomed revised EU legislation which allows regional governments to fine online websites advertising unlicensed holiday lets.

Basket stars

THE world-famous Harlem Globetrotters basketball team will be showing off their skills at Murcia’s Palacio de los Deportes on May 17 as part of their international tour.

Body mystery

A MALE body was found floating off Cartagena’s Faro de Navidad lighthouse on Saturday with authorities trying to identify it.

Hair trigger

AN Elche man, 46, grabbed his wife’s hair and tried to strangle her while she was preparing dinner, but was stopped by a passing police patrol who heard screaming outside their home.

A VICTIM of Spanish-based serial fraudster Mark Acklom won’t get any compensation from her bank after being conned out of £750,000.

Barclays Bank says that a six-month internal investigation has shown that they are not liable to make Carolyn Woods any payment.

Woods argued that since a Barclays worker and a former employee were arrested during the police investigation on suspi-

EXPENSIVE ROMANCE

cion of conspiracy, the bank had failed in its duty of care to her as its customer. Neither of those probed were subsequently arrested. Mark Acklom, 50, moved to Spain with his Spanish wife Yolanda Ros in 2013 after a romance scam involving Woods. He duped her out of her life savings by

using the alias of Mark Conway who claimed to be a Swiss banker and MI6 agent. He persuaded Woods to move her money into a Barclays account and then got her, to transfer it all in a series of ‘loans’ into the account of an associate who was a former Barclays employee.

Brits in the dock

THREE Brits and three Spaniards have gone on trial for a €19.4 million real estate scam involving UK citizens buying property in La Manga de Mar Menor. The case is being heard at the Murcia Provincial Court in Cartagena. The Prosecutor's Office wants each defendant jailed for five years and to pay a daily fine of €12 for 10 months, as well as repaying all of the illegally-obtained money plus covering full legal costs.

Multi-million real estate con comes to court 20 YEARS after bank was scammed

The illegal transactions were carried between September 2005 and November 2006.

According to prosecutors, the manager and deputy manager of a La Manga bank branch granted - without guarantees - 327 mortgages totalling €67.7 million even though the

AN Elche bar owner has been arrested for hiding a spy camera in the toilets.

Three people reported the device, which they spotted inside the extractor fan.

The owner initially denied knowing anything about the unit, which he said was not hooked up to his security system.

The man, 43, behaved nervously and

homes bought only cost €46.2 million, with another €2.1 million going on personal loans to help with purchase costs. The rest was allegedly syphoned off into bank accounts of the six accused. Prosecutors stated that no background checks were carried out and none of those given the loans ended up living in Spain.

Letchy Landlord

an Elche Policia Local officer saw him using his mobile phone which had an app featuring a surveillance camera logo. He then admitted installing the camera, which he claimed was meant to record people taking drugs.

One of the defendants, the owner of a commercial company, provided the homes for sale - most of them direct from real estate developers - and two others supplied the buyers, all from the Plymouth area of England.

Another of the defendants, a company administrator and lawyer, acted as agent for the buyers in getting the loans and as a representative for the borrowers to open bank accounts specially for them.

The unnamed bank has taken over the homes in an attempt to recover its money and is claiming compensation from the six accused. It has waived all repayments and interest charges from the UK victims.

Ham burglers

TWO Torrevieja men have been arrested for being part of a gang that stole three vans crammed with food worth €230,000 from Santomera in Murcia.

Some 650 pieces of Iberian ham, cheese and oil were set to be transported from the vehicles parked outside a food wholesaler.

The Guardia Civil located the stolen vans in Crevillente but they had been emptied, with the items taken to a Benejuzar warehouse.

Virtually all of the stolen food has been returned, along with the three vans, as the Guardia continue their search for more gang members.

Pilfering priest

A CLERGYMAN is being investigated for stealing a wheelchair in El Campello. The 64-year-old man took it when it was parked outside a charity headquarters being visited by its owner. The wheelchair - worth €1,950 - was apparently going to be sold at a bargain price via a second-hand goods website.

The Guardia Civil returned the chair to its grateful owner as it continues inquiries into the priest who has no previous criminal record.

CRIME www.theolivepress.es February 22nd - March 6th 2024 2 NEWS IN
BRIEF

Zorra in the dog house

A FEMINIST association has collected more than 1,500 signatures in a bid to cancel Spain’s controversial Eurovision entry, Zorra The song from Alicante duo Nebulossa was chosen as the winning entry at this year’s Benidorm Fest. Zorra, however, has caused controversy due to its lyrics and its title, which means ‘vixen’ in Spanish but can also be used as an insult similar to ‘bitch’.

In response, the MFM Madrid feminist movement has launched a petition about a song that it claims ‘represents a sexist insult and is a trivialisation of violence against women’. For its part, the band Nebulossa (pictured) has defended its song.

“The word zorra is going to start to be seen in a different way,” said singer Mery Bas.

“People say it freely, we have totally redefined it,” she added.

DOUBLE FAULT

Rafa Nadal in hot water after criticising equal pay for men and women in the world of sports

RAFAEL Nadal has sparked a backlash after doubling down on his belief that women in sports should not automatically be paid the same as men.

The Grand Slam champion, 37, was talking to La Sexta presenter Ana Pastor to discuss the opening of his new tennis academy in Malaga. However questions soon turned to recent controversial topics, including his collaboration with Saudi Arabia and his thoughts on the gender pay gap in sports. Pastor told Nadal that he seemed ‘uncomfortable’ at

the mention of feminism. The Mallorca native - who has won €125.2 million in his career - has previously said he is against women and men being paid the same in tennis. Nadal told Pastor: “Not at all, what I am not is a hypocrite to say that these things are easy, and I don't think they are.

“Investment? The same for men and women. Opportunities? The same. The same salaries? No, for what? “What is unfair is that there are not equal oppor-

tunities. If you're saying that being a feminist is believing that a man and a

TREND SE TTER

HE is more used to wearing Armani, but now famously elegant actor Luke Evans (far left) will be able to show off his own line of clothes.

The Welsh star and his Spanish boyfriend Fran Tomas (left) have teamed up with stylist Christopher Brown to launch a menswear brand called BDXY.

It will feature outfits inspired by the screen legends of Old Hollywood, concentrating on basics and everyday essentials.

Evans, who is the star of major movies such as The Hobbit , Beauty and the Beast and Fast & Furious 6 confirmed his relationship with Tomas back in December 2020.

Tomas, who is originally from Alicante, works as a project manager in the construction sector.

woman deserve exactly the same opportunities, then I can say that I am a fem-

inist.

“But equality for me is not based on awarding for awarding’s sake, equality resides in if Serena Williams generates more than me, I want Serena to earn more than me.”

Williams is the leading woman having won €88.2 million in her career.

Some users of X blasted Nadal’s comments as machismo, or sexism, while others backed him, with one writing: “It’s not fair that someone who generates more sales from tickets and t-shirts earns the same as someone who generates much less.”

FANS of legendary Australian rock band AC/DC are in for a treat later this year, when the group pays a visit to Spain.

As part of their Power Up European Tour 2024, the authors of Thunderstruck and Highway to Hell have chosen Sevilla for their only Spanish date on May 29 at the Estadio de la Cartuja Vocalist Brian Johnson will be on the mic, with guitarists Angus Young, Stevie Young and drummer Matt Laug. New bassist Chris Chaney will be taking over from original band member Cliff Williams.

The tour will kick off on May 17 with gigs in Germany and Italy, before the Spain concert on May 29.

The band will then travel to the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, England, Slovakia, Belgium, France and Ireland.

On the prowl

Numbers have fallen due to poaching and the destruction of their natural habitat, namely rainforests.

NEWS www.theolivepress.es February 22nd - March 6th 2024 3 CONTACT US FOR INFORMATION ON OUR TARGETED ADVERTISING ON 951 27 35 75 OR SALES@THEOLIVEPRESS.ES YOUR BUSINESS COULD BE AS VISUAL AS THIS FROM AS LITTLE AS €75 AN ISSUE CAN YOU SEE ME? THEN SO CAN ALL OUR READERS +34 619 111 998 wellis-spain.com
IN
POWERING
A PAIR of Sri Lankan leopards called Uda and Okanda have a new home at Bioparc Fuengirola after transferring there from French zoos. The Sri Lankan leopard is in danger of becoming extinct, with less than 800 left in the jungle.

Putin’s terror

A RUSSIAN pilot who was assassinated in a car park was killed with bullets made in Russia, it has emerged.

Maksim Kuzminov, 28, was shot at least five times underneath an apartment complex in Villajoyosa on February 13.

Sources close to the investigation said that the bullets were Russian-made, adding weight to the theory that he was killed for his defection to Ukraine.

The sources believe it was no accident that the bullets could be traced back to Russia, as they now served as a warning for others planning to desert Vladimir Putin’s forces.

According to the Kyiv Post, Kuzminov seized control of a Russian Mi-8 helicopter last August and brought it safely to an airbase in the Kharkiv region.

It was all part of a Ukrainian intelligence operation named ‘Titmouse’, which saw him defect with the military chopper to awaiting Ukrainian officials - along with valuable documents and secret technical equip-

Kuzminov said his motive for helping Ukraine was his opposition to the Russian invasion, saying he didn’t want to be a part of it.

Too sexy by half

No one expects the Spanish inquisition at carnival - except in Torrevieja

A GROUP of Christians wants legal action taken against a Torrevieja Carnival troupe that featured young women dressed in ‘erotic lingerie’. Torrevieja mayor, Eduardo Dolon, has rejected censoring participants suggesting it would be 'like going back to the days of the Spanish Inquisition'. Comparsa Osadia took part in the Carnival night parade and won a €650 fourth prize in the best costume section for adult troupes.

Weevil worries

PALM tree pruning has started on the Orihuela Costa after residents moaned that a lack of maintenance for two years has allowed the deadly Red Palm Weevil to spread.

Just one tree infected by the weevil can cause a swathe of palm tree losses in the surrounding area with one describing the area's palm groves as being in a ‘calamitous state’.

Adults - along with some children - were part of the Osadia group that joined 3,000 people in the well attended parade.

The Osadia females wore stockings, garter belts, high heels, and other lingerie items, with a video of their offering subsequently posted on social media with critical references to the ‘sexualisation’ of children.

The Christian Lawyers group claims a criminal offence took place and has threatened to denounce carnival organisers and the people who run Osadia.

OBJECTIONS: to the scantily clad troop

It also wants their €650 prize withdrawn.

Christian Lawyers president, Poland Castellanos, said: “The fact that this deserved an award seems to us to be something reprehensible and that it also falls within the

RIP ANNE

THE much-loved founder of the Brexpats in Spain support group Anne Hernandez has died.

Tributes have poured in for the ‘tireless’ campaigner following her death from a short illness.

Anne worked tirelessly to help the hundreds of thousands of Brits whose lives were upended by the Brexit vote, for which she was awarded an MBE in 2021.

She worked closely with the Olive Press in recent years, and even wrote a column for us for a time.

Publisher Jon Clarke said: “Anne was tireless in her work and a true inspiration to the expat community.”

category of criminal corruption of minors.

“Therefore, we hope that justice will act and that the innocence of children will not be allowed to be destroyed and used in this way," added Castellanos.

Torrevieja mayor, Eduardo Dolon, fired back by stating: “We are not going to bring in censorship and everybody can express themselves freely.”

“Carnival is a party where everybody can be themselves and everything that is being interpreted over this is being taken out of context,” he added.

The Torrevieja Carnival Association issued a statement saying that it ‘supports all troupes and participants and that it will always defend freedom’.

There have also been reports of some child members of Comparsa Osadia and their parents receiving threats via social media.

CRUISE BOOST

OVER 359,000 passengers used the port of Alicante last year - up 47% on 2022 figures.

The rise was well above the national average increase of 18.9%.

Some 85 cruise ships docked in 2023 compared to 62 the previous year, with more liners expected during 2024. Cruise passengers accounted for 54% of the Alicante total with the remainder coming via the ferry link with Oran (Algeria) which runs four sailings per week.

Turning the tide

WORK to stop regular flooding caused by storms in part of Torrevieja will be finished in March.

The Doña Ines urbanisation, the Casa Grande industrial estate and Avenida de las Cortes Valencianas have long suffered during bad weather - causing problems for residents and road users.

The project, which started in July, has involved the building of a 14,000 m3 capacity pond which will take the excess stormwater.

The €570,000 budget has also been used on planting trees and installing benches to improve the area’s appearance.

NEWS www.theolivepress.es February 22nd - March 6th 2024 4

DEFEATED

Fight against massive development plan is called to a halt

of Transport decided not to take the matter further.

Cambiemos argued that the development was illegal because there wasn't a favourable report from the General Directorate of

LONG CAMPAIGN: ends in failure

Roads and that drinking water supplies were inadequate for the area.

The State Attorney's Office acting for the ministry said that the new development's traffic study showed there would be heavier volumes of traffic and increased

Station opening

GRAN Alacant finally has its own police station with a special opening ceremony last Saturday. The station cost €118,000 to build and is situated in a prime location on Avenida de Finlandia between the N-332 and the turn off for Gran Alacant.

Last weekend’s opening was the end of a long campaign to have Santa Pola Policia Local officers based in an area that is home to 10,000 people.

noise - especially on the N-332. Their arguments were rejected by the TSJCV which ordered both parties to pay a total of €3,000 in costs, but were given leave to appeal to the National Supreme Court in Madrid, which they have decided not to act on.

The developer Gomendio says that it is now in a position to apply for the first building licences before the summer.

The highlight of the campaign to stop the new houses came in 2010 when the European Union paused the plans after receiving a seven-thousand signature petition which argued that flora and fauna would be damaged.

Arguments continued over the years but things went Gomendio’s way in 2021 when they got a positive environmental impact study from the Valencian government.

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In the dock

YOU trust them to look after your best interests - especially when large amounts of money are involved.

Lawyers are the first port of call when buying a property - especially if you do not speak the language or know the system.

As our front page story (Stitch up) shows, retired estate agent John Stephenson, 75, and wife Kathy, 78, did everything right when they bought their property - at least they thought they did.

They put their faith in lawyer Rafael Arevalo to navigate them through the sometimes choppy waters of buying a house.

They thought all the proper searches were completed - the most important of which was to ensure there was no outstanding debt on their dream home when they bought it.

All seemed well until 10 years later when they sold up to help finance their retirement.

It was only then they were stung with an €11,200 bill for past IBI taxes that really should have nothing to do with them.

They have had no option but to pay up. But what of their lawyer at the time of the sale? Arevalo should be held responsible for the mess they are in and his insurance should pay up for his oversight.

After all it was literally his job to make sure they would not have any nasty surprises.

Or - and here comes that phrase again - so they thought. It turns out that in all the documents, he signed as a ‘witness’ not as a legal representative.

So, they hired a lawyer, he did the paperwork, but it is now claimed he was never actually representing them legally.

And - as is so often the case with incompetent lawyershe is now nowhere to be found.

And then there’s the lawyer today. As other lawyers consulted by this newspaper have suggested, Alvaro Moreno should have done more to contest the clearly unfair IBI payment.

It is a story we at the Olive Press have heard time after time. ‘Professionals’ who expats trust are too often incompetent at best, corrupt at worst and never seem to face the music.

Well they should be made to, in the dock if necessary.

PUBLISHER / EDITOR

Dilip Kuner dilip@theolivepress.es

Walter Finch walter@theolivepress.es

Yzabelle Bostyn yzabelle@theolivepress.es

Ben Pawlowski ben@theolivepress.es

Simon Hunter simon@theolivepress.es

Alex Trelinski alex@theolivepress.es

John Culatto

CRACKDOWN ON NOLOTIL

THE British family of the first suspected Nolotil victim in Spain have recalled their heartbreaking experience amid a growing campaign to crackdown on the ‘lethal’ painkiller.

When James Hanley, 72, decided to move to Spain in 2016, he was dreaming of retirement in the sun.

THE DRUG

But within a year he would be dead, after taking Nolotil to numb his pain following successful cancer treatment. His story would go on to serve as a leading case study for a campaign to ban the drug, launched by medical legal expert Cristina del Campo.

James, a former ferry steward, ‘had very good friends in Spain’ and went to visit them often before deciding to leave Ipswich in search of the expat dream.

His nephew, Daniel Preston, told the Olive Press: “He embraced it and threw himself into the local community.”

‘If he hadn’t gone to Spain he could still be alive’: British family of ‘first known Nolotil victim’ speaks out

James was ‘living his best life’ in Javea, Alicante, getting a ‘nice’ apartment, adopting a stray cat and enjoying local restaurants.

Just months into his retirement dream, the ‘bubbly’ expat, received the shocking news he was suffering from rectal cancer. After removing the tumour, James was given

Readers respond

Our postbag has been full since we revealed the Nolotil scandal

Great campaign!

I AM really pleased you are campaigning for the banning of Nolotil. When I had a hip replacement operation at IMED in Benidorm in 2019, this was put in my drip bag until I noticed, then told them to replace it. I then contracted an infection in the hip, which took about two years to be eradicated but, obviously, I have no specific knowledge that it was because of the Nolotil.

Since then every time I go into a hospital or health centre, I tell them that I am allergic to Nolotil but very few note it on my records, so I have to be very aware in situations where it might be used. Similarly, for Ibuprofen, as I am on Lixiana, a blood thinner. That has to be closely monitored too!

Editor’s note: Keep taking care! As a clarification, we are not calling for Nolotil to be banned, but rather that the official guidance be followed and Nolotil not be prescribed to Northern Europeans.

Dr’s advice

I WAS prescribed Nolotil 575mg capsules in June this year. But when I spoke to my husband’s doctor in the hospital she told me not to take them. She explained they are not for British or Scandinavians, they are for Spanish people. So I never took them, in fact I still have them untouched.

No effect

I SUFFERED extreme pain from a rib fracture and was prescribed painkillers that had no effect. The doctor at the Ciudad Patricia care home then prescribed Nolotil. I took seven and still had pain. However I am still alive, having not suffered any apparent side effects.

I wonder if the fact that I am half Italian has made me immune to the severe side effects suffered by many expats.

Nolotil, also known as Metamizol, to combat the pain of his cancer treatment.

All seemed well, until just days later ‘he couldn’t breathe’.

Back in the UK, concerned family members urged James to see a doctor and he was immediately hospitalised.

Daniel flew to Alicante ‘not really sure’ what was wrong with his uncle.

iel.

But at the service, he reunited with Cristina del Campo, a medical translator who was ‘adamant’ that something wasn’t right with James’s case.

She said: “After James died they told me he also had sepsis amongst other things, I had heard that word recently, in relation to the death of an Irish woman.

“I started looking into it and I began to see a pattern, everyone who died had taken Nolotil. Many had sepsis and Fournier Gangrene.”

After James’s funeral the family began to question his untimely death

The rapidly progressing illness was soon revealed to be a form of sepsis known as Fournier Gangrene, an aggressive, flesh-eating disease.

“I remember at one point the bedsheets fell away and exposed his body. It was horrific, this flesh eating bug had ripped through his body and was eating away at him,” Daniel said.

“It was clear to me that there was no stopping it, it was too aggressive. And sure enough, we went home due to work commitments and a few days later he was gone,” said Daniel.

For James’s sister, Bridget, the news came as a terrible shock.

The care worker, who stayed in Essex due to a fear of flying, said it was ‘absolutely awful’ to not be able to be there for her ‘beloved’ brother.

It wasn’t until James’s funeral that the family began to question his untimely death.

“We just thought it was a really unfortunate case at first and we didn’t think too much about it,” said Dan-

It is thought the drug reduces patients’ white blood cell count, leaving them vulnerable to infection.

The condition, known as agranulocytosis, is believed to be a result of genetic differences in Northern European populations.

Cristina has now been fighting against Nolotil for the past seven years with her campaign group the Association for Drug Affected People (ADAF).

It aims to compel health workers to stick to a 2018 directive which restricted the prescription of Nolotil for ‘short term use’, with ‘significant consideration’ of patients’ backgrounds, including genetic vulnerability to dangerous side effects.

When asked for comment, one company that supplies metamizole in Spain, Boehringer Ingelheim, said: “Agranulocystosis is a very rare, adverse reaction that has been known for decades and is well-de

YOU CAN TAKE ACTION

Sign our petition to urge healthcare providers to stop giving the ‘lethal’ painkiller to northern Europeans

THE Olive Press has launched a petition to urge Spanish healthcare providers to stop giving Nolotil to northern eu- ropean patients.

Also known as metamizole, Nolotil is a popular painkiller in Spain.

However, it is known to cause agranulocytosis, or se- verely low white blood cell count, in northern European patients, leading to organ failure, sepsis and gangrene. The drug has been linked to at least 40 deaths of British and Irish people in Spain.

Despite a 2018 informative note issued by the Spanish Medicine Agency advising medical professionals to not administer the drug to northern europeans, people keep dying.

Yet still, readers contact us everyday saying they have been offered the drug.

That’s why we’ve launched a campaign urging medical professionals to comply with the 2018 advice.

If you agree that it should be followed, please sign our pe- tition, go to Change.org and search Stop Nolotil Deaths.

NEWS FEATURE www.theolivepress.es 6 NEWSDESK: 0034 951 154 841 For all sales and advertising enquiries please contact 951 15 48 41 Voted top expat paper in Spain OPINION 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. AWARDS Best expat paper in Spain
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2016
LIVING THE DREAM: but sadly James’s (left) time was cruelly cut short KILL

PROGRESS: Spain’s gender equality ranking has improved since 2020

WHAT’S THE SCORE?

Spain ranks fourth in the EU Gender Equality Index and Yzabelle Bostyn explains why…

FEMALE equality in Spain had a big year in 2023.

In December, Spanish politicians approved an ‘Equal Representation’ Law designed to encourage gender parity in politics and business.

It followed a landmark victory for the country’s menstrual leave law, which was the first in Europe to grant leave for women with painful periods.

Despite all these laws, controversy surrounding women’s rights continues to sweep the country. While some 67% of women believe discrimination remains ‘quite large’ in the country, over 44% of Spanish men say equality has ‘gone too far’.

activities, the gender imbalance flips.

Some 39% of Spanish men say they frequently take part in such activities, compared to just 33% of women.

So, how does Spain really perform when compared to other EU countries? The Olive Press investigates.

With 76.4 points out of 100, Spain ranks fourth in the EU’s Gender Equality Index. 6.2 points above the EU average, the country has moved up two places in the ranking since 2020.

The index is calculated based on a number of different indicators including time, knowledge, work, money, power and health.

Each of these is given a score worked out using a variety of data, for instance, power takes into account the amount of female board members in high ranking companies.

Although overall the country performs well in the GEI, it is still underperforming in various areas and is important to be aware of these, so where are Spanish women thriving and where are they struggling?

The improvement of the country’s time score ( +6.4 ) has been one of the main drivers of Spain’s climb to fourth place. This category considers the amount of time women spend doing care, domestic work and social activities compared to men. Although Spain has improved in this area, women still carry the burden of care activities and domestic labour.

Some 41% of women care for family members, elderly people or those with disabilities, compared to 33% of men.

Meanwhile, 64% of women do cooking or household cleaning everyday, some 20% more than their male counterparts. When it comes to social, leisure and cultural

This category has also contributed to Spain’s fourth place position, increasing by 1.7 points since the 2020 index.

The knowledge category surveys not only educational achievement but the segregation of men and women by subject studied.

In Spain, women outnumber men in educational attainment, with 34% having degrees or their equivalent and 23% currently in vocational training. The figures for men are 32% and 21% respectively.

Women also outnumber men in the fields of education, health and welfare, humanities and arts, representing almost half of university students.

Although men represent just 25% of students in this area, other studies indicate they greatly outnumber women in STEM subjects, accounting for 65% of university students.

Meanwhile, 70% of Spain’s childcare work absences were granted to women, showing that they often sacrifice time at work to care for their families.

One of the areas where Spain performs the best, this category looks at women’s health, life expectancy, habits and access to services. While some 74% of Spanish men perceive their health to be ‘good’ or ‘very good’, compared to 69% of women, male life expectancy is some eight years lower than women’s, at 80 years. Despite this, both genders’ ‘healthy life’ years are equal, with men and women enjoying 63 years of good health.

Perhaps this balance is due to the fact that although women stick to healthier habits, they have less time to spend exercising compared to men.

Some 79% avoid tobacco and alcohol consumption compared to 69% of men.

Not far enough

A STUDY released by the Spanish Sociological Research Institute hit the headlines after stating 44% of Spanish men believe ‘women’s equality has gone so far that it is now discriminating against men’.

While 32% of women agreed, the majority, 67%, believe inequality remains ‘very’ or ‘quite’ large.

In comparison, just 48% of men agreed with this statement.

But why do Spanish men feel disenfranchised?

Digging deeper into the data, we can see that they think women have better, or at least, equal opportunities in almost every aspect of life; from promotions at work to educational access.

However, when the survey asked women, they reported that they felt their opportunities were ‘worse’.

For instance, just 27% of men said women’s access to positions of political responsibility were ‘worse’ than men’s, compared to 47% of women.

Responses like this follow recent advances in women’s rights in the country. In 2005, then prime minister Jose Zapatero, introduced some of the world’s most advanced gender equality laws. The move came after an Andalucian woman, Ana Orates was burnt alive in her own home by an abusive ex partner who she had spoken out against on television.

Advances

Since then, subsequent governments have also made strides towards equality. Most recently, Pedro Sanchez’s left wing coalition introduced a new ‘Equality Law’ designed to create equal access to positions of economic and political power.

This, alongside other laws promoting equality for LGBTQ+ people, have sparked controversy across the country and ruffled feathers amongst the right wing.

Many men are - wrongly - seeing these laws as advantages not offered to them. In fact, the so-called ‘discrimination’ many Spanish men claim to be facing is better described as the feeling of being threatened by the slow eradication of their privilege as men.

Although Spain’s score may seem high, the country has actually dropped five places in the EU work ranking, now standing in 17th position. This category looks at equal access to employment and good working conditions as well as the quantity of women in full-time work and the length of their careers.

Some 14% fewer women are employed in full time work compared to men, standing at 41% and 55% respectively.

On the career prospects index, an EU wide indicator of job quality, prosperity and security, Spanish women score 56 compared to men’s 57.

All of these statistics, though improved, indicate that women’s careers are affected by expectations to care for children.

A recent study by Spain’s National Statistics Institute (INE) showed some 24% of women aged 24-49 with children resort to part-time work in order to care for their children in comparison to 4.7% of men.

But only 38% of women take part in daily physical activity and eat sufficient fruits and vegetables, 11% fewer than their male counterparts.

This domain looks at women’s decision making power in political, social and economic spheres.

Spain’s political equality has greatly advanced in recent years - women account for 48% of ministers, 42% members of parliament and 46% of regional assemblies.

In the economic sphere, 37% of directors in Spain’s largest companies are women. Meanwhile, board members of Spain’s central bank are split 50/50.

However, in the world of sports and TV, the story couldn’t be more different.

Men represent 73% of decision makers in the country’s Olympic sports organisations and 60% in publicly owned broadcasters.

In the domestic realm, women are still suffering the effects of gender stereotypes, which oblige them to sacrifice their free time and careers for their families.

Women are not getting ‘more rights’ but solutions for the sexism that persists in modern society.

This becomes evident when we consider that almost 20% fewer men than women think inequality still exists in the country. It seems that while laws and legislation are making it seem women have more rights than men, the lived experience for women is very different.

It is clear that Spanish women still experience high levels of sexism in their daily lives.

In my personal experience, I am still warned not to walk home alone at night, have been verbally abused on dating apps and been catcalled while on my own balcony.

Until women can live without fear, there is no doubt that inequality still exists. Unfortunately, it is unlikely the sexism that remains in Spanish society will be eradicated by laws.

A much deeper social intervention is required to make meaningful change, which will not create the backlash this survey has uncovered.

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WHAT’S THE HISTORY OF IWD? 8

nternational Women’s Day (IWD) has been observed since the early 1900’s - a time of great expansion and turbulence in the industrialized world that saw booming population growth and the rise of radical ideologies.

PIONEERING: New York suffragettes

LEADER: Clara Zetkin

CUFFED: Pankhurst

POWER: UN backs

IWD

WEBSITE: For IWD

MARCHING: Annie Lennox in London

HELP: From Hillary

1908

Great unrest and critical debate was occurring among women. Oppression and inequality was spurring women to become more vocal and active in campaigning for change. 15,000 women marched through New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay and voting rights.

1910

A second International Conference of Working Women was held in Copenhagen. A woman named Clara Zetkin (Leader of the ‘Women’s Office’ for the Social Democratic Party in Germany) tabled the idea of an International Women’s Day every year on the same day in every country.

1911

International Women’s Day was honoured for the first time in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland on March 19. More than one million women and men attended IWD rallies campaigning for women’s rights to work, vote, be trained, hold public office and end discrimination.

1913 1914

International Women’s Day was transferred to March 8 and this day has remained the global date ever since. In 1914 women across Europe held rallies to campaign against war and to express women’s solidarity. In London there was a march in support of women’s suffrage on March 8. Sylvia Pankhurst was arrested in front of Charing Cross station on her way to speak in Trafalgar Square.

1975

International Women’s Day was celebrated for the first time by the United Nations. Then in December 1977, the General Assembly adopted a resolution proclaiming a United Nations Day for Women’s Rights and International Peace to be observed on any day of the year by Member States, in accordance with their historical and national traditions.

1996

The UN adopted an annual theme in 1996 - ‘Celebrating the past, Planning for the Future’. This theme was followed in 1997 with ‘Women at the Peace table’, and in 1999 with ‘World Free of Violence Against Women.’

2000

By the new millennium, International Women’s Day activity around the world had stalled in many countries. The world had moved on and feminism wasn’t a popular topic. International Women’s Day needed re-ignition. There was urgent work to do - battles had not been won and gender parity had still not been achieved.

2001

The global internationalwomensday.com digital hub was launched to re-energise the day as an important platform to celebrate the successful achievements of women and to continue calls for accelerating gender parity.

2011

Saw the 100 year centenary of International Women’s Day. Barack Obama proclaimed March 2011 to be ‘Women’s History Month’, calling Americans to mark IWD by reflecting on ‘the extraordinary accomplishments of women’. Hillary Clinton launched the ‘100 Women Initiative: Empowering Women and Girls through International Exchanges’. In the UK celebrity activist Annie Lennox led a march across one of London’s iconic bridges raising awareness in support for global charity Women for Women International.

The world has witnessed a significant change in both women’s and society’s thoughts about women’s equality. Many from a younger generation may feel all the battles have been won, while many feminists from the 1970’s know only too well the ingrained complexity of patriarchy. With more women in the boardroom, greater equality in legislative rights, and an increased critical mass of women’s visibility as impressive role models in every aspect of life, one could think that women have gained true equality. The unfortunate fact is that women are still not paid equally to their male counterparts, women still are not present in equal numbers in business or politics, and globally women’s education, health and the violence against them is worse than that of men. We do have female astronauts and prime ministers, women can work and have a family, women have real choices.

February 2024

A WOMAN’S INFLUENCE

Queen Letizia is among the most influential women in Spain - but how many of the others do you know?

WHEN Forbes released its second list detailing Spain’s most influential women it highlighted Queen Letizia, Spain’s Women’s Football team and singer Rosalia. But the magazine’s list, designed to ‘celebrate women’s success and educate future generations’ is full of inspirational Spanish women most people don’t know about. Here we reveal some of the lesser known people honoured, as well as their more famous sisters…

PIONEERING VOICES

Spain’s early feminists and suffragettes

SPAIN at the end of the 19th century was undergoing a massive economic and social upheaval - and women wanted a piece of the action too. The country saw the emergence of a band of courageous feminists and suffragettes who fought for social, political, and economic justice.

But it would be a long road before they were to get the vote - and in many ways they had to wait until the death of Franco in 1975 before the deep-set conservatism that kept women ‘in their place’ began to give way. This is a process that is still continuing with modern day women fighting their own battles.

A wave of feminist thought had begun to take root in the late 19th century, with works like Emilia Pardo Bazan’s The Feminist Question (La Cuestion Feminista) published in 1892, serving as a catalyst for discussions on women’s rights, education, and equality.

Another pioneering figure was Concepcion Arenal, whose writings and activism challenged traditional gender roles and advocated for women’s education and legal reforms. Her work was in many ways key to the growth of subsequent feminist movements in Spain.

In 1918 - the same year as Germany agreed to extend the vote to women in time for the 1919 elections and women over 30 in the UK got the vote - the Asociacion Nacional de Mujeres Españolas (National Association of Spanish Women) was founded by Consuelo Gonzalez Ramos.

It attracted leading figures including Clara Campoamor and Victoria Kent.

Born in Madrid, Campoamor was one of the first women to enter Parliament in Spain and had a long history of feminism and campaigning for universal suffrage. During the 1931 elections women could not vote but

QUEEN LETIZIA OF SPAIN

A journalist and divorcee, Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano has broken royal taboos as Queen of Spain.

Before her coronation she was awarded the Madrid Press Association’s Larra Prize as the year’s most outstanding journalist under 30. As Queen she advocates for youth education, scientific research and greater awareness of rare diseases.

GROUNDBREAKERS:

Emilia Pardo Bazan (above) and Concepcion Arenal (right)

they could stand to be MPs. Campoamor and fellow lawyer Victoria Kent were the only two women elected.

Their work on the Constitutional Committee helped to enshrine the principle that women had the same rights as men in the Spanish Constitution of 1931 - with one glaring disagreement. Malaga-born Kent, as a member of the Radical Socialist Republican Party, felt that it was too soon to allow women the vote.

Far left thought at the time was that women tended to be too conservative and in thrall to the Catholic Church and so would most likely vote right wing. Campoamor, a member of the Radical Party, saw it as a human rights issue and was instrumental in achieving universal suffrage for women in time for the 1933 elections after ‘winning’ a debate with Kent. During the Franco era women nominally retained the right to vote - although voter lists became restricted to ‘heads of households’, usually men.

Campoamor and Kent had already shown herself to be an inspiration to women. They were the first two female members of the Madrid Law Association having both broken through a glass ceiling by entering university to study law.

Campoamor went into exile during the Civil War and died in Lausanne (Switzerland) in 1972 at the age of 82. Kent too was exiled and died in New York aged 96 in 1987.

I
2024 CAMPAIGNERS: Clara Campoamor (above) and Victoria Kent fought for women’s rights

(Córdoba, 1974) will be the first woman to hold the position of D Contemporani de Barcelona. She is currently Director and Chief Curator of as well as Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University the Thought Council, Fondazione Prada. She has previously International Biennial of Contemporary Art; Curator of International London; Artistic Director of Rencontres Picha Congo; Curator of Contemporary Art at the Centro Andaluz de Ar Seville; Senior Curator at Creative Time in New York Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno (CAAM) in Las Palmas, Gran

PRINCESS LEONOR OF ASTURIAS

Heir to the Spanish throne (right), the 18-year-old has been making headlines recently whilst completing the military training. Described as ‘loyal’ by Forbes, the princess was praised for her support of the Spanish women’s side at the recent World Cup final. Leonor has studied in the UK, attending prestigious private school UWC Atlantic College in Wales.

THE SPANISH WOMEN’S FOOTBALL TEAM

Although celebrating the whole team, Forbes highlighted the Balon d’Or winner Ataina Bonmati (far right) and teammate Salma Parallelo, who was crowned the best player of the tournament. The team, who beat the English side 1-0 in the World Cup final last year also received the Spanish Royal Award for Sporting Merit.

ROSALÍA

Infusing flamenco and pop, Rosalia (left) has conquered the charts at home and abroad, becoming the first Spanish woman to appear on the cover of Rolling Stone USA

Consortium of the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona the committee of experts, which innovative approach to the role of the Museum on the local and incorporating a clear desire to connect with contemporary debates beginning of this century, without shying away from a firm issues surrounding cultural institutions’.

Her Motomami tour broke records, covering 21 countries and 2 million attendees. The Barcelona native’s logo has also appeared on her home team’s kit during the hotly contested El Clasico football match between Madrid and Barcelona.

WELENA ARZAK

In 2012, Basque chef Elena Arzak was crowned ‘World’s Best Female Chef’ in the World’s 50 Best Restaurants Awards Now, more than a decade later, she is as influential as ever. Her three-Michelin-starred restaurants are known for their relaxed vibe where local families have dined for generations. She comes from a Spanish culinary dynasty, following in the footsteps of three generations of chefs. Her dishes are known for preserving Basque traditions whilst adding flavours inspired by cultures worldwide.

ELVIRA DYANGANI OSE

Director of Barcelona modern art mu seum (left), the MACBA, the art histo rian proudly oversees a 90% female workforce. In 2022, the Turner Prize judge was included in ArtReview’s Power 100 list for her influence in the art world.

FRANCINA ARMENGOL

The President of the Spanish Congress, Francina Armengol is known for her tact in

reaching agreements and her support for using regional languages in government. In 2015, she became the first female leader of the Balearic Islands whilst raising two children as a single mother.

SARA GARCÍA ALONSO

The molecular biologist (below left) became the first Spanish woman to be selected for the European Space Agency reserve. Not only the first Spanish female astronaut, the scientist is also part of the National Cancer Research Centre and leads projects to find new drugs to fight lung and pancreatic cancer.

GLORIA LOMANA

The Executive President of 50&50 Gender Leadership, journalist Gloria Lomana (below right) is a pioneer in female leadership and communications. In 2019, she founded a communications consultancy focussed on equality and female leadership. She also pioneers leadership programmes for young women aged 15-18 and shares her insights in the national media.

IRENE CANO

Head of Meta for Spain and Portugal, Irene Cano is at the forefront of world changing technology. Under her leadership, Spain will become Europe’s first ‘metacountry’, a multinational centre for innovation and planning of the metaverse.

ANA OBREGON

In March this year, actress Ana Obregon (left middle) became the centre of a national controversy when she decided to become a mother using her dead son’s sperm at almost 70-years-old. The story shocked Spaniards. Following the controversy, Ana published a book her son had started writing before his death in 2020.

The Boy with the Shrews went on to become a best seller and Ana a successful influencer.

KNOW WHERE YOU STAND

representatives of the institutions and members with a recognized and local artistic sector: Joan Subirats, Deputy Mayor for Culture of Ibar, Director General of Cultural Heritage of the Generalitat de president of the Fundació MACBA; María Dolores Jiménez-Blanco Director General of Fine Arts of the Ministry of Culture; Chris Dercon, of French National Museums, Grand Palais, Paris, and member of Committee; João Fernandes, artistic director of the Instituto Moreira

HEN setting up a business in Spain Jennifer Cunningham realised that the qualities she learnt during her time in the Royal Air Force would stand her in good stead.

There she learnt not to accept excuses or lies, as well as gaining an iron discipline, fearlessness, determination - and the overwhelming importance of honesty and integrity.

“Being in the RAF was one of the happiest times in my life and where I had discipline instilled in me,” she tells the Olive Press.

“As a result I don’t stand for any nonsense, but that also means people know where they stand with me, which is very important in business.”

It was still anything but easy for her to set up her insurance business on the costas three decades ago, when women were not taken seriously in business.

“I was a widow, surviving on a meagre widow’s pension and so the only way I could start up was to re-mortgage my home, borrow money and make it work,” she recalls, from her home in Javea, on the Costa Blanca.

“I had problems finding a bank who would support me and I remember the first time I presented my business plan to get a loan, the bank manager wouldn’t address me directly but kept looking towards the male friend I had brought with me.

Honesty and integrity are key to setting up a business - lessons learnt in the RAF by expat business leader Jennifer Cunningham

She then began working with a giant American company, Liberty Insurance, designing special packages for the expat market and has built up a reputation as a hugely successful expat businesswoman.

They didn’t take me seriously, I walked out and went somewhere else

“I had to point out that it was me who was borrowing the money, that I was the business owner and when they didn’t take me seriously, I walked out and went somewhere else.”

She eventually found a sympathetic bank manager, a man who has supported her ever since her first venture, and who she has stayed with as he moved across different banks.

“At the beginning they didn’t want to take me on and they felt sure that I would fail,” she reveals. “My style of selling was completely new to them, the culture here in Spain was so different.”

“As an entrepreneur I had to take risks and convince those who had the financial backing of huge institutions behind them to take a risk on me, but I proved myself and in the end, those very same people looked to me to lead strategy and even asked me to teach them how to do it.”

Today Jennifer Cunningham Insurance has seven offices in Spain (including one in the Canaries) and thousands of expat customers.

While an incredible success story - not just for a woman, but also as an expat - she however, is most proud of the fact that she leads a team of 23 staff, predominately women.

“It isn’t a policy to only employ women, it just turns out that

IRON DISCIPLINE: The RAF taught Jennifer well

they are the ones that have thrived,” she explains.

“Applications are open to everyone and we do employ men and I try to keep a balance in the teams, but it’s the women that seem to be most successful in this business and the ones that stay on for years and years, while the men just don’t seem to keep up.”

Photo by Maureen Evans
Visit www.jennifercunningham.net for more info

Life SAVERS

FOR Eva Perez, receiving the all-important phone call kickstarted a complicated mix of emotions.

“You’re happy because your loved ones are celebrating that it’s your chance to continue to live and to follow your dreams, but at the same time you know there’s another family, somewhere else, who are crying,” she explains from her home in Madrid.

It’s a confusing mish-mash of feelings - fear, hope, happiness, grief, responsibility - that Eva, now 55, knows all too well.

She was aged just 11 when doctors discovered she was suffering from hepatitis, inflammation of the liver, which required extensive treatment and medication.

But then liver transplants didn’t exist in Spain and, even when they did get introduced in 1984, they were highly experimental and dangerous.

Indeed, it wasn’t until 11 years later in 1995 when Eva was finally offered the life-saving surgery.

It went well and two years on, she was pregnant with her son, Fernando.

But she had to stop taking the medication which would have had damaging effects on the foetus and, as a result her new liver was rejected and she needed to go under the knife once more in December 1997.

Lucky

She was incredibly lucky, with a donor available within two months of giving birth: “I felt incredibly fortunate, because getting a transplant is not like buying something from El Corte Ingles.

“You can have all the technology in the world but the entire process is dependent on a family experiencing the worst moment of their lives, but agreeing to give life to someone else”.

However, for this she is eternally grateful. “The first family gave me life, the second gave me life with my son”, she explained.

Eva is one of tens of thousands of Spaniards who have benefited from the selflessness of grieving families.

She is also one of many to have benefited from Spain’s famous organ donation and transplant model, widely regarded as the best in the world.

An incredible 5,861 or gan transplants took place in Spain last year, meaning the coun try topped the global list for a record 32nd consecutive year. One in four donors within Europe and 5%

Ben Pawlowski discovers why Spain has been the world leader for life-saving organ transplants for 32-years

of ALL donors worldwide are Spanish, with over 140,000 transplants successfully completed since records began.

But why has the Spanish model had such success and longevity?

According to Gonzalo Diaz, a researcher at the University of Granada several factors come into play.

“The opt-out system is one of the fundamental pillars of the Spanish system - unlike other countries, in Spain you are an organ donor automatically, unless you opt-out of the system”, he explained.

The opt-out system is the antithesis of the opt-in system, whereby potential donors have to explicitly state their desire to have their organs used after death.

REACHING

CLIMBING THE MOUNTAIN

Ystudy from Diaz and his colleagues found over 90% of Andalucians were supportive of the system, whilst almost three-quarters want their organs to be donated after death.

In 1989, the Spanish Health Ministry created the National Transplant Organisation (ONT), an agency in charge of the coordination and oversight of donation, procurement, and transplantation activities.

Diaz believes that the organisation’s ‘magnificent’ work has been integral to Spain’s success.

The opt-out system is a fundamental pillar of the Spanish system

The success of the system has seen other counas the UK, adapt the policy in hope of replicating Spain’s model, which has a world-leading donation rate of 48.9 donors per million people. However, for Diaz, there are other vital cogs to the successful policy: “It really helps having the high levels of support and confidence the population has for the national transplant and medical system.”

A recent

“Their capacity to explain the importance of donation is incredibly effective”, he said.

A 2017 study published in the American Journal of Transplantation likewise highlighted the importance of the ONT, claiming Spain benefits from ‘a specific organisational approach to ensure the systematic identification of donation opportunities’, whilst simultaneously ‘promoting public support’ for donating organs after death.

And the model continues to flourish, with 2023 seeing a 9% rise in the number of organ transplants conducted in the country.

Beatriz Dominguez-Gil, head of the ONT, explained to the Olive Press that the increase could only have been possible ‘thanks to the constant search for new ways to increase donation and transplant activity’.

“It ensures that one day in the future, this incredibly complex medical procedure will be available for every single patient that needs it,” she added.

Despite the success of the Spanish model, 4,790 patients remain on the waiting list, a number of whom will either die while waiting, or be removed from the list as they become too ill.

Discussing how Spain can continue to improve its model, Diaz continued: “I believe that addressing new technological challenges within the sector, maintaining high levels of training for medical professionals, and continuing to be transparent and honest towards the general public will be key”.

Nevertheless, Spain’s carefully nurtured model continues to be the best in the world.

For Eva, who today works as the President of the National Federation of Liver Transplants, her opinion is definite. “It is clear in my mind that if I had not been born in Spain, I would not be here today”.

MEET THE OP TEAM

zabelle Bostyn’s career in journalism began during the Coronavirus pandemic, when trapped in a cramped flat with a Peruvian family she had just met, she turned to a local journalist for help.

She felt first hand how journalism can help people when just a few weeks later, she found herself on a chartered flight home courtesy of the UK government.

Arriving back at the University of Sheffield, she began writing for student newspapers such as The Tab and UniFresher, where she worked her way up to Sheffield Editor.

After finishing her degree in English Literature and Hispanic Studies, she enrolled in the university’s prestigious journalism MA.

While studying for her masters she developed a love for journalism, frequently being published in local papers.

Once she finished her degree, she worked in marketing before setting off an epic trip around Latin America.

From Mexico to Colombia, she chronicled her travels on her blog, cementing her love for travel writing.

Perfect fit

She loved scaling volcanoes in Guatemala, finding the best vegan ceviche in Mexico and swimming with sharks in Belize.

Tragically, her trip was cut short by news that her Nana had terminal throat cancer, so she left the backpacker life to care for her.

Her grandma’s death brought life into sharp focus for Yzabelle’s family and she made the decision to pursue her longtime goal of returning to Spain. She had firm links with the country, having lived in Barcelona as part of her year abroad and visited her family’s Alpujarran holiday home every summer for 16 years.

DISCWORLD: Yzabelle playing in the Spanish championships with Volaores

When she found the Olive Press, it seemed like a perfect fit, a place where she could perfect her Spanish and work as a journalist. She has now settled in Estepona, where she is a proud member of the local Ultimate Frisbee team.

The top five most read stories on www.theolivepress.es in the past two weeks are:

1- ‘Blood rain’ is coming to Spain: New DANA will bring the weather phenomenon to Andalucia and beyond this week

2- PICTURED: British expat and urbanisation president who ‘paid himself more than the deputy PM of SPAIN’

3- What will happen to Spain’s property market in 2024? Expert Mark Stucklin gives his verdict

4- Why Brits staying with friends or family in Spain should consider carrying THIS document

5- Farmer strikes in Spain: Chaos to continue today with tractors blocking roads and ports from Malaga to Barcelona and Valencia

11 Get in touch today at sales@theolivepress.es or call us at 00 34 951273575 for more info
BLESSED: Eva has had two liver transplants BOSS: Beatriz is the head of Spain’s transplant body
FOR THE SKY: Scaling Acatenago in Guatemala

FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

CONSTRUCTION could start as soon as next year on a cable car or escalator link to Alicante's Santa Barbara castle.

Aiming high

AN artificial beach resort conceived by US company Crystal Lagoons is coming to Sevilla. The firm has created a process that allows crystalline lagoons of ‘unlimited size’ to be built and maintained at a low cost anywhere in the world.

The company has already launched in Prague, Warsaw, Bucharest and Budapest, and its expansion will include Rome, Milan, Toulouse plus two more Romanian cities.

No details have yet been revealed about the Sevilla site.

The firm says setting up a large crystal clear lagoon suitable for bathing and water sports, surrounded by white sand beaches, transforms areas into all-year ‘dynamic entertainment hubs’.

The 775-year-old structure is one of the city's biggest tourist attractions, with over 800,000 people visiting it last year. It also has the annual honour of being the 'most-visited' monument in Alicante province.

Alicante City Council is awaiting the re-

sult of an environmental impact study before deciding on how to proceed on developing the 600 metre link. Options include installing a series of escalators to cover part of the route or a cable car powered by solar energy between

Santa Barbara and Las Cigarreras. Alicante's Innovation councillor, Antonio Peral, said ideas had been worked on 'for years' and once the environmental report is received, plans could be developed 'this year or next year'.

Against the grain

AN iconic Spanish dish could be under threat as farmers warn paella rice could ‘disappear’ due to EU regulations.

Bomba, the rice variety used to make the meal, could be at peril after the European Union banned a pesticide farmers claim they rely upon to cultivate the grain.

The chemical is said to stop rice plants growing a fungus which causes rice blast disease, which can lead to ‘total crop failure’.

Three rice growers in the Valencia region have claimed

A LARGE number of UK travellers have helped take Alicante-Elche airport to a record January high with 958,088 passengers.

That’s the best-ever start to a year and 20.5% more than 12 months earlier when there were 795,148 travellers.

The comparison is even starker when looking at January 2019 - over a year before the Covid pandemic struck - with the total up by 22.1%.

Last year saw the highest-ever passenger

Farmers in Spain warn rice used to make paella could 'disappear' due to EU rules

their harvest in 2023 was half the 10 year average as a result of the Pyricularia fungus.

Miguel Minguet said the variety, which is almost exclusively found in Spain, is ‘very likely to disappear’.

“Our crop is going to be lost

Amazing Alicante

numbers for the airport at El Altet and the very early signs suggest that the 2023 figure will be smashed by the end of this year. The United Kingdom contributed the largest number of passengers last month with 287,555 travellers out of 805,602 international travellers.

to regulations,” he claimed.

Major exporters still use the pesticide in Brazil, India and Cambodia.

It came after farmers staged protests across Europe over claims they let outside competitors have an advantage over EU farmers by letting them use the chemical.

The clashes have exposed Brussels’ struggles to balance sustainability policies with providing self-sufficient food production.

Known as tricyclazole, the EU stopped authorising the chemical because it could be harmful to human health.

It has been used for 40 years to combat the fungus in Valencia’s wetlands. Angry farmers claim the EU has one set of rules for local producers and another for imported goods, allowing them to carry traces of the potentially harmful pesticide.

A SPANISH airport has taken the unfortunate prize of losing the most luggage across Europe.

New research by Reclamio, a company specialising in the management of air passenger complaints, ranks Adolfo Suarez Madrid-Barajas airport as the worst culprit.

Some 26.5% of complaints for lost luggage received by the company in 2023 were about the capital’s airport, used by over 60 million passengers last year.

Spain’s second busiest airport, and Europe’s seventh, Barcelona-El Prat, was culpable for 13.2% of all claims handled by Reclamio.

Whilst the data is skewed by Reclamio’s monopoly over passenger complaints on the Iberian peninsula, other studies support the idea that Spanish airports and airlines are particularly bad offenders.

A 2019 study by price comparison site MoneySuperMarket also ranked Madrid-Bajaras airport as the worst offender in all of Europe for flights from the UK.

February 22nd - March 6th 2024 12
SERIAL LOSERS
BYE-ELLA: EU regulations ban a crucial pesticide for rice production All solutions are on page 14 Across 7 Metrically, about 1,340 horsepower (8) 8 Comply (4) 9 Stretch (3) 10 Having considerable worth (8) 11 Car stores (7) 14 Wash (5) 15 Courageous (5) 17 Official sitting (7) 21 He’s off, or out at sea (8) 22 Nickname for Margaret (3) 23 The Great ---, constellation (4) 24 Man-to-man, in basketball (3-2-3) Down 1 “Conventional” city? (6) 2 Venture (4) 3 Immature insects (6) 4 Motionless (5) 5 Currently (8) 6 Investment goal broke the law (6) 12 Gurus (8) 13 MI6 (1,1,1) 16 Fill the tank again (6) 18 Cricket team (6) 19 Keyboard instruments (6) 20 Boarded (3,2) 22 Window division (4) OP SUDOKU OP QUICK CROSSWORD
LAGOON SOON

Feels like home

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THIS is a good question and I can offer you a number of answers.

I started my company nearly 30 years ago, working from home and developing the business slowly over a number of years.

Once established, I employed staff and rented a large office in Javea port, where I am still to this day. How life has changed for me, and for the better.

I realised when I moved to Spain, that there was very little help available and what was available was normally in Spanish. There was no private health insurance, no funeral plans and no insurance dedicated to the Expat, and little customer service.

I started the business selling health insurance for a British company, along with funeral plans. Having lost my husband in Spain, I realised how difficult it was to arrange a funeral and the costs were enormous.

Being very disciplined myself (probably due to my time in the Air Force), I have a strong work ethic. I used to work from home during the day, and I would go out early evenings making home visits until I was busy enough to take someone on to help me.

From those early days when I worked tirelessly, I built my company and now have seven offices. I demand from my excellent and loyal staff that they treat all my clients with respect, courtesy and honesty and offer them the best service that is possible.

I pride myself that the after sales service is the best, a service very rare in Spain. I have two Claims Administrators and a dedicated Renewal department, who will make sure that as your circumstances change, your policies can change with you and you are fully aware of your coverage.

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Viagra link

MEN who take Viagra to treat erectile dysfunction could have a lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study.

The study saw nearly 270,000 men take part, with an average age of 59the participants were newly-diagnosed with erectile dysfunction and did not have dementia symptoms at the start of the research.

The men were then followed by researchers for an average of five years.

Some 55% took drugs including Viagra, Cialis, vardenafil and avanafil, whereas the rest did not.

Men who had been prescribed the drugs were 18% less likely to develop dementia, although more research is needed to prove the link.

THE average wait to see a family doctor or primary care health staff is 9.12 days in Spain, according to figures compiled by the Defence of Public Health group (FADSP). The study says that 25.9% of patients wait 11 days or more, while 38.2% of people suffer delays of three months or more for appointments with a hospital specialist. There are many regional variations with the

WAITING TIMES

average primary care delay standing at 12.4 days in Catalunya, followed by 10.4 days in Andalucia and the Valencian Community with 9.8 days.

In contrast, Asturias comes in with the best figure of the 17 regions with a 4.8 day wait.

Vaccine study

Covid jab health probe ordered by Spanish court

A COURT has ordered an investigation over whether Covid-19 vaccines that allegedly contained graphene oxide posed any health risk. Complaints were submitted in 2022 and Almeria Provincial Court now wants to see whether there is ‘any indication of a crime against public health’. The court overturned a decision made by a judge last May to dismiss the case as unjustified, without clarify-

OP Puzzle solutions

Quick Crossword

Across: 7 Megawatt, 8 Obey, 9 Eke, 10 Valuable, 11 Garages, 14 Bathe, 15 Brave, 17 Session, 21 Offshore, 22 Peg, 23 Bear, 24 One-on-one.

Down: 1 Geneva, 2 Dare, 3 Larvae, 4 Still, 5 Nowadays, 6 Wealth, 12 Advisers, 13 S I S, 16 Refuel, 18 Eleven, 19 Organs, 20 Got on, 22 Pane.

ing the facts.

The ruling upholds an appeal by the complainants and concludes that the police need to carry out investigations, especially since probes had been started in other parts of Spain.

The case was initially brought after the opinions of a University of Almeria (UAL) chemistry professor were published

on social media over an alleged contamination of the vaccine following the study of a sample. His findings suggested that analysis provides ‘solid evidence of the probable presence of graphene derivatives, although it does not provide conclusive proof’. The university dissociated itself from his conclusions and said that the analysed sample was ‘of unknown origin with a total absence of traceability’. The UAL clarified that it was not an official report or a scientific study, while stressing its total support for vaccines in fighting diseases.

In response to complaints acted on by the Court of Instruction 2 - and now revoked by Almeria Provincial Court - the judge last May said that there were no indications of any crime ‘given that it is not proven that the Covid-19 vaccine had a toxic component that generates danger to people’s health’.

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Mon-key to freedom

A MONKEY which was held in brutal captivity in a flat in Barcelona for 35 years has finally been freed after an an animal rights organisation filed a complaint with local authorities

Ton-up

THE first woman to receive the Covid-19 vaccine in Spain, Araceli Hidalgo, received birthday wishes from Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Tuesday after turning 100 years old.

Tight fix

POLICE freed a thief who got stuck in the window of an Elche bar when he was trying to escape arrest along with a colleague who ran offbut was also caught.

WITH their traditional pastry business scuppered by the cost of living crisis, a community of cloistered nuns in Sevilla has had to take drastic measures to survive.

Described as the ‘perfect location to relax in the heart of the city’, the nuns are offering stays within their convent through Airbnb.

The secluded nuns, from the Order of Saint Clare, have opened four flats which can each be rented for between €90

How nuns are turning their convent into a holiday rental

and €180.

Only one member of the Convent of Saint Mary of Jesus, Sister Ines, maintains contact with the outside world, using a revolving hatch through which their famous pastries are sold. But with a falling number of vocations and climbing inflation, the nuns have turned to the rental market to top up the

Picky prioress

The flats, located within the 16th-century walls of the convent, are managed by Javier Bernal and Luis Bidon, who successfully negotiated a oneyear agreement with the nuns after passing them a message through an intermediary pastry-buyer.

A COMMUNITY of cloistered nuns in Ronda is in desperate need of new members, with the Vatican threatening to close the convent.

The group needs two new sisters ‘as soon as possible’ to persuade the Vatican to keep the convent open.

Several young women have enquired about the ‘position’, but the prioress of the convent has stated that prospective nuns must have a CV including ‘substantial previous experience’.

Two years ago the congregation was home to nine nuns, but a succession of deaths has left just four sisters.

The Vatican states that cloistered congregations must have a minimum of six nuns.

NUN OF YOUR BUSINESS: Convents must diversify income streams

The bells of the convent ring to announce when a paying guest arrives, more often than not a foreign tourist, according to Bernal.

Nowadays, the community consists of 18 nuns, with the Bishop of Sevilla recently advising the city’s 34 convents to diversify their income streams.

The convent was founded in 1502, the height of Sevilla’s thriving Golden Age, by Alvaro de Portugal, a cousin of Isabella the Catholic, the Queen of Castilla y Leon.

One of the flats currently has a rating of 4.86/5, with past guests complimentary of the location, cleanliness and architecture.

Grapes of wrath

AN intruder literally poured €2 million worth of wine down the drain at a renowned bodega. He entered the Valladolid winery on Sunday and emptied three tanks containing 60,000 litres of maturing premium wine.

Expert

The Guardia Civil is searching for the hooded person that appeared to have expert knowledge of how to turn on the taps at the Cepa 21 winery in Castillo de Duero - a complicated procedure meant to safeguard against accidents.

And he also knew which tanks contained the premium Horcajo and Malabrigo brands, which are sold at over €90 a bottle. He accessed two other tanks but, fortunately for Cepa 21, they were already empty.

FINAL WORDS We use recycled paper REuse REduce
FREE Vol. 5 Issue 109 www.theolivepress.es February 22nd - March 6th 2024 O P LIVE RESS The
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PIC CREDIT: Matthew Murphy and Oliver Rosser

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