Councillors accuse developer of ‘spying’ and ‘lies’ as protesters vow to continue battle to prevent ‘urban atrocity’ at threatened Costa Blanca beach
See full story, page 5
See full story, page 5
A GIANT two thirds of British voters have been eliminated from the electoral roll for the forthcoming May elections.
A staggering 61,500 expats have lost the right to vote in the May 28 council elections.
The 63% drop comes with a large percentage of British residents failing to re-register their right to vote by the January deadline.
Figures from the National Statistics Institute (INE) show the giant fall in non-Spanish participation with councils putting it down to lower British registrations.
The number of British expats registered to vote in the last local elections in 2019 (97,585) has now dropped to just 36,543 residents, the official stats reveal.
The alarming drop of 61,042 people has come about as a consequence of Brexit with British residents now having to separately register to vote every four years, as well as joining the padron
They are no longer automatically included on the roll.
Data shows that Brits represent just 8.8% of the foreigners registered to vote in Spain this year, a considerable decrease from 21% in 2019.
Just 11,340 British expats are registered to vote in Alicante and 2,116 in Murcia.
This is a ‘system failure’, according to expat councillor Scott Marshall, in Benahavis.
The Councillor of Tourism blamed it on unnecessary paperwork and a failure to better explain the new rules.
“Because of bureaucracy, British residents have had to re-register again and many of them did not remember or realise on time,” he told the Olive Press
By Alex Trelinski & Alberto Lejarragathe Olive Press
“We were not notified until the last minute and there was a lot of confusion,” he added.
However, the Scottish expat does not believe it’s the only reason for the low participation. “There is always a degree of apathy in the international community with regards to participating in local elections,” he continued.
“For example, only 8% of the foreigners registered to vote in the 2019 elections actually did so,” he explained. Meanwhile on the Costa Blanca it is a similar story.
Taking the town of San Fulgencio, as an example, in the 2019 municipal elections, 57% of the elector
ate was foreign, while this time the percentage has fallen to 38%, accounting for 1,728 non-Spaniards. San Fulgencio councillor, Darren Parmenter, said: “Many people didn't know what to do and this is despite us publicising registration information.”
The mayor of San Miguel de Salinas, Juan de Dios meanwhile, has predicted problems on polling day with registered foreign voters now down to 11% in his municipality. “We will see people turning out to polling stations that have voted for years who will discover for the first time they are not on the register,” he warned the Olive Press.
Despite most media groups publicising on how to register to vote, most British expats have missed out on a fundamental right to express their views on who should be running their local services.
Opinion Page 6
EXCLUSIVE: Our man at the Coronation, See page 6
SUMMER forest fire plans for the Murcia region were enacted earlier than normal on Monday due to a rise in rural blazes.
A BATHER drowned at Playa Flamenca on the Orihuela Costa last Thursday with a 70-year-old man unable to be revived by paramedics.
THE arrivals terminal of the former San Javier airport is being transformed into a Mar Menor endangered maritime species habitat with aquariums filled with rescued species from the near-by lagoon.
Tourist boost
SAN PEDRO del Pinatar has received over €3 million of EU money to boost sustainable tourism including revamping the Lo Pagan esplanade and increasing cycle lanes.
CHARGES against a former porn star have been shelved in a bizarre case in which he was accused of manslaughter after a man died at his house during a ‘toad venom ritual’. The incident took place in July 2019, at a house in Enguera when a photographer named Jose Luis Abad passed away after inhaling the venom of the reptile to create a hallucinogenic effect.
One year later, Nacho Vidal, 49, was arrested for his alleged involvement in the death. In her ruling, a Xativa judge overseeing the case said that Abad had ‘voluntarily taken part in the ceremony’, and did so ‘having previously consumed cocaine’.
A forensic report concluded that the mix of the venom and the cocaine had a deadly effect on the victim. The judge concluded that there was not enough evidence of the involvement of Vidal, real name Ignacio Jordá, in the death of Abad for the case to go forward.
SPAIN'S Supreme Court has upheld a 135-year prison sentence for a British teacher who created and distributed pornography of children in his care.
Ben David Rose was exposed by the Olive Press for changing his name by deed poll to become a nanny in Spain following convictions in the UK. His devious behaviour led to the stiff jail term last year after being found guilty of molesting up to 36 children aged between four and eight years old. It came after he was able to deceptively land a job at one of Madrid’s most prestigious private schools.
The case raised serious safeguarding concerns after it emerged he had been convicted for similar crimes in the UK and placed on the sex offenders register before moving to Spain. Incredibly, his move was not properly monitored and he landed a job as an au pair in Zaragoza and then as an English teacher in several schools in the capital.
The 33-year-old had been con-
STAFFORDSHIRE police have got a tip-off that an ‘on the run’ convicted murderer could be hiding out in Alicante province.
Glenn Wathall, 65, from Burton upon Trent was convicted in 1999 after beating his partner to death on Christmas Day. He was sentenced to life behind bars but released on licence in 2015, but
victed of sex crimes against children while running a summer camp near London under his previous name Ben David Lewis in 2016.
In an Olive Press probe, it emerged that within days of being handed a suspended sentence and placed on the UK sex offenders register he changed his name to Ben David Rose. He applied for a new passport and fled to Spain where he quickly found work as a nanny looking after three children. Rose then moved to Madrid
quickly breached his bail conditions which meant he could be recalled. New information has now come to light after a British expat saw a Crimestoppers photo of Wathall which matched somebody he had seen in an unnamed coastal town in the Alicante area.
NEWS: We exposed Rose last year
and cared for two young children before taking a job as an English teacher at a private school. Police were tipped off to the presence of a ‘dangerous sexual predator’ working in Madrid after an investigation by police in Australia. They established that someone in the capital was making and distributing obscene images. When police later searched his phone, they found dozens of obscene photos and videos of him with girls as young as six years inside a classroom.
The Supreme Court upheld Rose’s sentence in a lower court last year.
A FAR-RIGHT fitness guru who was extradited from Spain to face terror charges in the UK told a court he is ‘horrified’ that he might have encouraged violence.
Liverpool native Kristofer Kearney, 39, has pleaded guilty to two counts of disseminating terrorist publications but denied that he shared the videos with that intention. The court case hinges on whether the Telegram posts calling for violence were ‘reckless’, as Kearney claims, or deliberate. The court previously heard that Kearney claimed that Adolf Hitler ‘showed people the way’ and encouraged violence against black people, Jews and Muslims. Kearney was known online among far-right activists as ‘Charlie Big Potatoes’ and created a channel for exercise tips called Fascist Fitness
The offences relate to two Telegram posts on January 23 and March 8 2021, which included the manifestos of Christchurch mosque killer Brenton Tarrant and Norwegian mass-murder Anders Breivik.
Kearney is expected to return to Spain to serve his sentence once the judge hands it out on June 23.
Kearney has close links to Marbella and the Costa Blanca.
THE ‘Gypsy King’ Tyson Fury is set to go another round in Mallorca after tearing up the island last summer.
The heavyweight’s declaration to return comes on the back of his jaw-dropping talk about his life at an event last August.
“He’s coming back to the same villa in Son Vida,” explains celebrity agent Gaston Montauban.
“He’s planning to come every year now, having fallen in love with the island last year,” continued the realtor, from Mallorca Deal.
Tyson, a frequent visitor to Spain, was introduced to the island by his commercial manager Spencer Brown, who regularly spends time in Mallorca. While he has frequently trained or taken holidays in Marbella, last summer he was persuaded to spend a week at
this stunning six-bed villa, with stunning grounds and pool.
It came after his popular ‘After Party’ bash at Son Amar, when he enthralled the 500-strong audience, holding court and even singing. His manager, Brown, has become a close friend and confidant of Fury’s over the last few years.
The 734-msq villa, which sits next to Son Vida golf course and hotel, is for sale at €4.9m via www.themallorcadeal.com
ACTRESS Amber Heard has moved from Mallorca (pictured) to Madrid, it has been claimed.
Ex-girlfriend of Hollywood star, Johnny Depp, has relocated to the capital with her two-year-old daughter Oonagh Paige.
She appears to have ‘quit Hollywood’ for good for a new life in Spain in the wake of losing an infamous defamation trial to Depp last year.
Heard, 37, was seen looking relaxed and happy with her child in Retiro park, while sources claim she has rented a modern house on the outskirts of the city.
The identity of Oonagh’s father has never been revealed, while she has allegedly split up from her lesbian lover Eve Barlow, a Scottish journalist, who worked for music magazine NME.
FRESH life has been breathed into a cold case involving some of the most iconic photos in rock and roll history. The remarkable set of pictures of John Lennon and Yoko Ono - including their iconic Gibraltar wedding snaps - have been missing for decades.
HeardWhile the Olive Press launched a special investigation in 2016 to help recover them for photographer David Nutter, the trail has since gone cold.
Cold case reopened: Fresh lead in missing John Yoko wedding photos
EXCLUSIVE
By Walter FinchOver the course of a year we managed to establish that the stolen negatives were being offered by a shady Far Eastern cartel that claimed to own them. However, despite receiving a copy of a contact sheet we were unable to finally secure the negatives or pin down the seller.
Now, out of the blue, we have received a mystery letter from an apparent Good Samaritan in the USA who claims she had the missing negatives in her hands in 2011.
Offered to her company by a third party, they were digitally scanned but not purchased over concerns of copyright. Having recently read our reports from 2016 she has decided she wants to return to the photographer himself and has reached out to the Olive Press to help.
“I feel real sympathy for Mr
CAN YOU SEE ME? THEN SO CAN ALL OUR READERS
Nutter’s plight and I want to get the scans to him,” she wrote, adding she would actually like to deliver them herself.
Taken in Gibraltar in 1969 by Nutter, the incredible photos captured the infamous, whistlestop wedding of Lennon and Yoko.
The valuable negatives – estimated to be worth at least €150,000 – vanished in the 1970s after Nutter, now 84, lent them to a friend Anthony Fawcett to use in his book, John Lennon: One Day At A Time.
They were allegedly stolen during the repossession of Fawcett’s apartment ‘he claimed’. Despite two separate investigations by British police and the FBI they have never been recovered.
If you can help (or are the anonymous letter writer) pls contact jon@ theolivepress.es in strict confidence.
FORMER
UK glamour model Katie Price has been pictured in Spain in a patriotic Union Jack bikini to celebrate the Coronation. The controversial star, formerly known as Jordan, has been eschewing the usual celebrity hotspots for a week’s holiday in Murcia.
Price, 44, posted photos on social media posing by her pool in Roldan in the depths of inland Murcia.
Her distinctive figure - she aims to have ‘Britain’s biggest boobs’ - was also spotted around Altea and Albir, on the Costa Blanca this month.
It is her fourth vacation of the year despite facing bankruptcy proceedings. She was taking a break with her boyfriend Carl Woods and kids at a villa surrounded by olive groves. The Olive Press tracked down the home to Roldan, some 20km from Murcia capital and 35 km from Torrevieja - a long way from glamour hotspots of Marbella and Ibiza.
Notorious for her love of cosmetic surgery, Price underwent her 16th boob job procedure in December, transforming her breasts to an astounding double H cup. She was pictured posing with Benidorm legend Crissy Rock.
HEADS had to be turned and craned upwards as the passing Basketball legend Michael Jordan visited Marbella.
Ironically, a lookylooky man selling fake Nike Air Jordans was the first to notice the real NBA star, 60, was walking around after lunch at La Milla restaurant.
Jordan was on holiday with his wife, the Cuban model Yvette Prieto.
ALICANTE has lost six of its Blue Flag beaches, after Benidorm withdrew from the scheme and others got ruled out for building works.
Two prominent Marina Alta beaches - El Arenal in Javea and Denia’s Les Deveses - have pipe works and regeneration projects in progress, which ruled them out.
Meanwhile, La Ermita beach at Santa Pola, which got a flag for the first time two years ago, loses it along with its nearby Tamarit beach.
Benidorm insisted its withdrawal from the scheme had nothing to do with losing a flag at Poniente beach last year.
The town hall decided that it would not be able to get any flags due to detailed, ongoing work at all three of its beaches.
Despite the cut, Alicante is still Spain’s top province for Blue Flags beaches, with 85 able to fly the flag this year.
Alicante has 27 more than second-placed Pontevedra, with Malaga third with 39.
By regions, the Valencian Community just pips Andalucia to top spot with 153 flags to 148.
AIR Nostrum, Iberia’s franchise airline for regional flights, is set to link Nice with five Spanish airports including Valencia. The connection runs from June 10 until September 3.
A MURCIA expat had a May weekend to remember, barely a year after enlisting in the British Royal Navy. Marina Garcia, from Mazarron, was chosen to be a guard of honour in the Coronation procession, accompanying King Charles III to and from
CRITICS have slammed a central government plan to give €2.2 billion in drought aid to farmers, insisting it is down to ‘poor planning’.
PP leader Alberto Feijoo insisted the giant emergency drought measures come after five years of ‘apathy’ and without proper planning of the country’s water resources.
Buckingham Palace. While 20-year-old Marina was born in the UK, whe was brought up in Spain. “Although I was born in England, like my father, I came to live very soon in Mazarron and so I consider myself from here,” she told the Olive Press
See The King and I, page 6
“The countryside doesn’t want to be showered with aid but rather water,” he said at a rally in Valencia.
“The country needs its land to be productive and to sell its products,” he added.
Rainfall in Spain has been
SPAIN’S alarming year of weather has continued with snow falling in parts of Spain and hailstones in the Mediterranean.
Snowfall landed in Asturias, while hail came down in Catalunya and Valencia.
Many of the areas affected had not seen a single drop of rain in months.
According to state meteorological agency, Aemet, the year has been the driest since records began, with less than half the average rain registered up to May 1.
Showers and storms are forecast around the country this week while temperatures will rise from Monday in the south.
27.5% lower than average for the last eight months and forecasts suggest the country will not see significant rainfalls until September.
So far, 2023 is the fifth-worst year on record in terms of the amount of water stored in the country’s reservoirs.
In Murcia, reservoir levels are down 12% on last year
ALICANTE has become one of the top 10 most populated cities in Spain. It has replaced Bilbao with 348,901 official inhabitants, compared to the Basque city’s 340,455. The most populated cities are Madrid, Barcelona, and Valencia.
at 28.3%, while in Valencia they are healthier at 54%, albeit a big drop from 68% last year.
In Andalucia, reservoir levels are critical, standing at just 27.9%, some 10% down on last year and 35% down on the same month in 2013. The Cabinet approved decree includes urgent measures to support the agriculture sector, with the drought already having caused losses to over five million hectares of cereal crops.
The assistance includes direct aid of more than €636 million, plus subsidies of up to 70% on insurance policies for drought.
“Our immediate action will guarantee the supply of water for this summer,” insisted Teresa Ribera, minister for environmental transition.
GIANT strides have been taken towards declaring a new natural park in Valencia.
The regional authorities have signed an order confirming the Sierra Escalona as 'one of the most important areas in terms of ecology, environment and landscape'.
The decree bans any development that ‘degrades’ the Sierra Escalona and nearby Dehesa de Campoamor during the creation process.
The new Natural park will straddle 9,003 hectares in the Orihuela, San Miguel de Salinas, and Pilar de la Horadada municipalities. It also includes the El Cristo and Pujalvarez mountains and the Pedrera reservoir. The forested area hosts a rich biodiversity including eagle owls and golden eagles, as well as endangered mammal species such as the wildcat.
The Valencian government declared the Sierra Escalona and its surroundings a 'Protected Landscape' back in 2018.
The Valencian Superior Court had already rejected several challenges from agriculture and real estate businesses appealing the plans.
Councillors accuse developer of ‘spying’ and ‘lies’ as protesters vow to continue battle to prevent ‘urban atrocity’ at threatened Cala Mosca beach
A GIANT developer behind the controversial plan to build thousands of houses on one of the last virgin stretches of Costa Blanca coastline has been accused of intimidation and lies.
Opposition councillors in Orihuela told the Olive Press the group used ‘fake information’ and even ‘commissioned’ spies to probe any officials opposing the plans for Cala Mosca.
EXCLUSIVE
By Alberto Lejarragaveloper ‘in every way they could’.
“This is a speculative scheme for very rich foreigners that will destroy Cala Mosca’s unique biodiversity,” said Cerdan.
NOVICE drivers will face zero tolerance for drink-driving under proposed new EU-wide driving licences. The European Commission aims to reduce the 20,000 lives lost on roads last year.
The changes focus on young drivers, reducing the driving age to 17 and easing the route for them to get their C licence to drive lorries.
Other important changes include making the licence digital to allow authorities to punish infractions committed across borders and making it easier for UK drivers to exchange their licence for an EU one.
“They kept bombarding Orihuela rep-
The town hall failed to be drawn into commenting to the Olive Press before we went to press. resentatives with letters containing fake information,” councillor Carlos Bernabe told the Olive Press this week.
“Claims like the town hall would need to pay them €200 million compensation if the development did not go ahead, which is a made up number,” added the leader of the local Cambiemos party.
“It is an urban atrocity and the saddest part is the mayor and her team have bought into that speech.”
His claims were backed by Antonio Cerdan, member of the local CLARO group that achieved the temporary suspension of the huge macro-project, granted by the European Parliament in 2007.
“Gomendio kept threatening all of us with the compensation claim and I’ve been told they even asked for reports on officials who were not in favour,” he added.
It comes as protesters threatened to pull down a fence that the council has approved to go up around the coastal zone where Gomendio plans to build 2,200 luxury homes.
Campaigners for Salvemos Cala Mosca protested against the project near the newly raised fence this Monday.
Their protest came as it emerged a strong national body has now stepped in to oppose the scheme.
Spain’s General Directorate for Roads has taken the development to court.
Legal proceedings have been launched which could lead to the project being declared void.
“It would mean Gomendio would need to immediately stop any works,” insisted Bernabe
Both Bernabe and Cerdan insist PSOE leader Carolina Gracia and Ciudadanos Urban Planning Councillor Jose Aix have helped the de-
CULTURE vultures can get the chance to visit some of the country’s best museums for free today (Thursday).
All state museums will open their doors at no charge to coincide with International Museum Day.
A HIGH-speed railway from Cartagena could be open by 2026. Transport Minister, Raquel Sanchez said the plan was to start electrification of the line between Cartagena and Chinchilla 'as soon as possible'.
On an electioneering visit for the PSOE in advance of elections, she insisted it was part of future planning but she could not provide any time frame for work to begin.
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.
VOTING is a key right that people have died for down the years. The fundamental democratic function to keep our politicians and mayors in check comes just once every four years in Spain. So it is a tragedy that so many expats - including tens of thousands of British nationals - have lost the opportunity to cast their vote on May 28.
And this, despite a last minute agreement between the UK and Spain during the shambles of Brexit that enshrined the right. However, little known to almost everyone, Brits now would need to register to vote every four years before a mid-January cut-off date.
Sounds simple enough, but despite some small, sporadic information campaigns to remind people last year, the majority of British nationals didn’t get the message.
Registration has understandably bombed and alarmingly in some regions, such as Murcia, only 5% of foreign residents will be able to vote.
Take the resort of Manilva, where as many as 4,000 (25%) of the town hall register (padron) is made up of British expats, yet less than 800 can apparently vote.
This is a total joke given most British expats pay taxes in this country and have often struggled to get properly registered, not to mention get TIEs and driving licences.
They have a right to vote.
So to give them just a six week window to register, stretching across Christmas, New Year and the Three Kings, was a total joke.
An extension of just one day was even more laughable!
“There were so many ridiculous hoops,” explained one longterm expat, on the Costa del Sol.
“You could register online but most people don’t have the digital certificate… and you still needed a clave (password). And then you needed a video conference.
“For someone in their 60s or older without decent Spanish and not digitally savvy it was a major uphill struggle.”
This is simply not acceptable and the Olive Press is now calling on the British government and embassy to step in and get this sorted out for 2027.
We need a proper post mortem and pressure from the embassy. The ambassador and his team need to get their act together and quicker than they did with driving licences. This is as easy as ABC. There’s been a failure in democracy. Sort it out and sort it out fast!
PUBLISHER / EDITOR
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HUNDREDS of people go missing in Spain every year. Mysteriously, when it involves a tourist or someone from the expat community, it is not uncommon for the case to go unsolved for ages – or never be solved at all.
A search for missing English rugby player and X-Factor star Levi Davis, who had been living in the Balearics, has yielded no results after six months. The high profile investigation has attracted a lot of media coverage, but it is by no means an isolated incident. Meanwhile, the mystery of Baltic expat Agnese Klavina may be closer to being solved with her body very likely to have turned up a fortnight ago in Marbella.
But the strange cases of teenager Amy Fitzpatrick and mum Lisa Brown (both of which the Olive Press investigated at length) are no nearer being cracked.
Last seen leaving celebrity hangout Aqwa Mist nightclub in Puerto Banus with British millionaire Westley Capper, Latvian expat Agnese has not been seen since September 2014.
Privately educated ‘Wes’, who died from Covid in 2021, partly grew up in Essex and partly at posh private schools in Marbella. He and his Scouse accomplice Craig Porter (whereabouts unknown) were filmed forcing Agnese into a car on the club’s CCTV. A body language psychologist concluded that Agnese looked ‘visibly distressed’.
The following day CCTV footage showed four masked men loading a large black holdall onto a yacht belonging to Wes’s dad – John ‘Freddie’ Capper, a self-made millionaire who owns various homes in the Benahavis hills, including Madronal and Zagaleta, where he mostly lives.
Capper and Porter had claimed that they were driving Agnese to another party but she changed her mind and asked them to drop her off near her house in Monte Halcones, close to the villa of ex-England manager Flavio Capello.
Since a body was never found, the pair were ultimately convicted in 2019 of the lesser crime of ‘coercion’ after a judge ruled that they had not unlawfully detained her.
Instead, Capper was sentenced to two years in prison and Porter got six months.
But in a sensational twist, police are now investigating the discovery of skeletal remains in a suitcase in Benahavis, just yards from Monte Halcones and within 400m of at least two Capper homes. Police have yet to rule out it is that of Agnese, but are awaiting DNA tests to confirm or refute the theory.
Lisa Brown
Nearly eight years ago, Brown, 32, an expat from Scotland, failed to collect her son (who was eight at the time) from school in Guadi-
LIFELONG memories, a sense of pride and a stiff right arm are the legacy of King Charles III’s Coronation for one Olive Press staffer, who took part in the historic event.
Never without a huge smile on his face - even after a 5am dress rehearsal finish in cold, rainy three-degree London - Matt Jones made Spanish expats proud.
The 48-year-old Olive Press sales representative, who lives in the humble, sleepy, down-to-earth Andalucian village of Alozaina, was whisked into a world of royalty, pomp and pageantry on the golden streets of Westminster.
In incredible access to the May 6 procession, he ended up lining up alongside 99 other Royal British Legion (RBL) standard bearers in Parliament Square.
Acting as a ‘guard of honour’ he needed to be carefully vetted and was flown over to the UK from Malaga ‘in secret’ a week before and put up in a five star hotel at Marble Arch.
“It was an absolutely amazing experience. It was such an honour and privilege for the RBL to be asked to be part of it,” recalls Matt, who joined the media group last year.
“We were the only non-military organisation to be asked to be part and the reaction from the crowds was brilliant. They were even clapping and cheering us throughout .
“In fact, I am still buzzing from the Matt was not the only expat involved from Spain. Mary Kemp, 57, who lives in Alicante, carried the standard for District Spain North
The Sussex lass joined Matt, who represented the south of Spain, to bear their branches’ flags up the Strand, past the Cenotaph and then take up station by Westminster Abbey.
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“We stood within five feet of the parades as royalty proceeded past - we could not have been closer,” continues Matt.
“No one had a better view! Except of course we had to
aro, near Sotogrande, on the Costa del Sol. The mother-of-one, who moved to Spain at the age of 18, had just begun a new job in Gibraltar and was said to be ‘happy’. Her partner, Dean Woods - a drug dealer, who had changed his name by deed poll to ‘Simon Corner’ - oddly vanished from the Costa del Sol just after Lisa was reported missing in November 2015.
He was arrested at Heathrow in 2018 and brought to Spain for questioning, but the case was controversially dropped. Although it was later reopened and he was extradited to the UK six months later, that inquiry also came to nothing.
Woods was sentenced soon afterwards for a completely different crime – his involvement in a €10 million cocaine ring.
The Olive Press revealed that police believe she inadvertently became involved in drug runs on yachts across the Med, but when she found out and argued with her partner he or fellow gang members killed and dumped her at sea.
Somehow Woods escaped prison while on day release in November 2022 and has been on the run since.
keep eyes front the whole time! But we could still take in what was happening!
“The only problem was it was raining so much. Those standards weigh around 12 kilos dry. Once wet they felt like they weighed a ton. You can imagine how sore my right arm was after hours of holding the standard.
“But of course it was all worthwhile. It is such a small price to pay for being part of such an incredible moment of history; to honour your King and represent your colleagues in the RBL.”
It was certainly a long day for the 100 standard bearers. They were bussed to Whitehall at 7am where they mustered for a 100 yard procession to Horse Guards Parade.
“This was an honour in itself - a civilian organisation being permitted to be on the ground,” insists Matt, who was up at 5am finishing preparations on his uniform and boots.
From there they marched to Westminster Abbey to proudly stand with their standards, before a short rest during the Coronation service itself.
They were directed to Dunbar Court for a cup of tea and a sandwich, before returning to their posts.
Following the King’s departure, the RBL members broke ranks to head back to their hotel where they were presented with certificates
More questions than answers remain in missing person cases involving foreigners in Spain. As the body of tragic Agnese may have finally turned up, we look at five others
Lisa’s family believe Woods may have returned to Spain, where he has many friends and connections on the Costa del Sol.
On leaving court in 2020, Lisa’s brother Craig said: “We are still hoping for information, but at this moment, the judge is not bringing any charges.
“But it’s an ongoing case and if anybody knows anything, they should act on it.
“It’s still very difficult for the family, everybody feels it.”
A £100,000 reward is still being offered by Lisa’s family for information on her whereabouts.
Amy, who would have celebrated her 31st birthday last month, vanished from Mijas Costa on New Year’s Day, 2008. She had been babysitting. Her aunt received a phone call in 2014 from an anonymous source who said Amy was buried at the former Hippodrome racecourse in Mijas. However, as the Olive Press recently reported, Spanish police have yet to investigate or excavate the site. She was just 15 when she disappeared on the short walk home to Riviera del Sol. The Dublin teen was
living in Spain at the time with her mum Audrey Fitzpatrick, her stepfather Dave Mahon and her brother Dean. No trace of Amy has ever been found. The family faced further tragedy when Dean was stabbed to death by his stepfather Mahon in 2013. Mahon was later convicted of manslaughter and jailed. He and Audrey remain together despite the tragedy.
The case of Levi Davis has dominated headlines since he first went missing on October 29, 2022. However, a new development has sparked fresh hopes the 24-year-old could be found alive.
A close friend of Levi’s told a private investigator
hired by the family that a text sent to Levi on December 15 had been opened and read recently. The friend had written to say, ’Please come home. I love you. And miss you xx’. And beneath the message an acknowledgement had appeared to show the text had been read.
Levi had been staying in Ibiza but travelled to Barcelona with just €40 and no change of clothes. He was picked up on CCTV leaving the Old Irish Pub near Barcelona’s La Rambla about 10pm on October 29, a few hours after arriving on the boat.
Levi’s mother, Julie, received information from an alleged eyewitness that her son had ‘been sighted’ at Placa de Sant Agusti looking ‘lost and confused’ on November 14.
So far, only his passport has been found, which Mossos D’Esquadra agents discovered near the city’s port.
John Leach, who was 65 at the time and appeared in 1990s BBC TV series Eldorado, has not been seen since leaving his home in La Cala de Mijas in 2012.
He was last seen walking alongside the A-7 next to El Sheriff bar sometime between 12.30pm and 1pm on August 21.
It is believed he may have decided to go to a wake being held in El Chaparral golf at a bar called The Hut at 4pm as he had called a few friends the day before to see if they were going.
He was carrying €10 in cash and his mobile phone but failed to answer calls made by his daughter Jessica, who was visiting Spain when he disappeared. Jessica said at the time.: “He likes his daily routine and always sticks to it so this is not normal behaviour for him.
of appreciation before sitting down to a gala dinner.
“I am so happy it went so well. It was nerve wracking leading up to it. We didn’t have long to prepare for the event, just a few days of practice. I had to learn how to march in step as I have never been in the military. In the end the adrenaline saw us through,” he explains.
“But we all helped each other and worked as a unit. Everyone looked after their colleagues’ backs. If you had a shirt not tucked in, or a tie askew, a friendly tap on the shoulder
would be given, and everything would be sorted out.”
And to cap off the longest - and possibly best - day of his life, Matt, who has lived for 13 years in Spain, previously working for the Costa del Sol News and Spectrum Radio, managed to reacquaint himself with some decent English beer.
“We were not allowed a drink in the days leading up to the coronation, but after the gala dinner it was straight down the pub.
“It was a great day to be British, and a great day to drink British beer!”
“Me and my mum are sick with worry and just hope he is found safe and returned home soon,” added Jessica. But 11 years on, nothing more has been heard about John, who was a well known and popular figure around La Cala..
He was wearing a grey polo shirt with beige or white three-quarter-length trousers and brown shoes. If you have information on any of these cases the Olive Press on 951 273 575 or email newsdesk@ theolivepress.es
CRIME SCENE: A body and skull, which could be Agnese’s, turned up at The Crest development in Benahavis this month OFF TO THE PUB: Straight after the gala dinner with Matt, ringed at work (above) in the morning outside Big BenTHE Canary Islands want to fully decarbonise their economy by 2040 - 10 years before the rest of the European Union.
A big step towards that is the Salto de Chira ‘pumped hydro’ project on Gran Canaria utilising the existing Chira and Soria dams and which should come on line in four years time.
A giant water battery will be created with the help of €400 million invested by the government in the first energy storage scheme which will serve all of the Canary Islands. Water will be pumped from the Soria dam up to the Chira dam during periods when demand for energy is low.
When demand rises, water will be sent down from Chira to Soria via a tunnel over a set of turbines, thus creating energy. The concept of ‘pumped hy-
ALICANTE University marine scientists have catalogued the first local sightings of an invasive type of sea algae. Known as ‘Rugulopteryx okamurae’ it has been dubbed ‘Asian algae’ because it is prominent in the Asia-Pacific area.
In Spain, it first appeared on the beaches of Ceuta at the end of 2015 and has spread throughout the Alboran Sea, where experts say it has had a bad impact on native marine species, as well as on fishing and tourism.
It was detected in Alicante waters in March and in great abundance in the centre of the bay of Alicante as it grows mainly on the dead forest of ‘Posidonia oceanica’ that abounds in the area.
By Alex Trelinskidro’ works as a battery as it can store and release power virtually on demand.
Over 75% of electricity on the Canaries is generated by burning oil, and the Salto de Chira project should eliminate a large part of that, as well as improving the environment and saving a lot of money.
Canary Islands president, Angel Victor Torres, said: “Energy storage is going to be one of the key elements in the energy transition, both for its contribution to electrification and for its capacity to enable enhanced management of renewable energy, which is es-
pecially important in non-interconnected systems such as the islands.”
Salto de Chira is expected to start generating in 2027, with up to 200MW of power at times of high demand - accounting for a third of what
IREAD with great interest the plans of a Californian-based company named Colossal to bring back animals long extinct. So it looks like the Dodo, the Woolly Mammoth and the Tasmanian Tiger could well be recreated with new technologies.
ALL WITHIN FIVE YEARS
The company, founded by entrepreneur Ben Lamm, has already raised more than $75 million to make this happen.
FACT OR PURE SCIENCE FICTION?
When you listen to him present his ideas you believe him.
New synthetic biology and genetic engineering
INVESTOR: Paris Hilton
the islands need. It will create over 4,000 direct and indirect jobs and save €122 million each year on fossil fuels. At a stroke, Salto de Chira will increase renewable energy in the Canaries from 24% to 51%
ONE of Spain’s main breeding grounds for Flamingos has dried up.
Normally thousands of the birds flock to the Fuente de Piedra lagoon near Malaga every year to breed.
Unfortunately, the unprecedented drought has led to them staying away, with only a small group of a few dozen flamingos holding out at a small end of the wetland, with the rest of the lake dry.
According to the Junta, the lake has received half the rainfall it normally does in the past six months.
could indeed offer far-reaching op portunities way beyond recreating the set for another Jurassic Park film.
De-extinction technologies could be used to recreate damaged ecosystems. Conservation takes on a whole new meaning when you allow your mind to run away with these end less possibilities. Many big names have invested in this new venture. Paris Hilton, Thomas Tull (the original creator of the Jurassic Park franchise) and the Winklevoss twins (Facebook’s original investors). Many people are putting their money where his mouth is.
I can’t pretend to be clever enough to understand the science behind all this….analysing genomes, editing genes, synthesising genes, building assisted reproduction technologies, etc.
MAYBE, JUST MAYBE IT IS POSSIBLE. After all, it wasn’t that long ago we thought it impossible to put a man on the moon. For sure biodiversity can have a huge impact in the fight against climate change. One far-fetched thought crossed my mind as I reflected on all of this.
If science and technology can indeed achieve this, maybe we can breed politicians and government leaders with a moral conscience capable of enacting change!
may be hard to imagine, but it’s seemingly true…
have unearthed five 5th-century stone reliefs of human faces belonging to the ancient Tartessian culture of the 8th–4th centuries B.C.
The two most complete depict women wearing jewellery and researchers believe they could have been major figures in society, with one of the figures possibly representing a warrior.
The Tartessos civilization inhabited the southern Iberian Peninsula and is only known from archaeological discoveries.
The discovery was made at the Iron Age site of Casas del Turuñuelo in Badajoz province in western Spain which comprises of a large, twofloor building made of adobe walls on stone foundations.
SLAVES, prisoners of war, condemned criminals or even free men who voluntarily chose the job… there was no one route to becoming a gladiator in Roman times. But one thing was common - death was never far away.
THE annual Benicassim Blues Festival, taking place from June 2-4, will animate the streets of the coastal retreat for a weekend of live music, workshops, masterclasses, and children’s activities. Head off to the vermouth and blues masterclass, or combine the soulful sounds of the Spanish and international blues scene with an al fresco paella. Music will play in open-air venues across the town and the whole festival is free to attend. Artists will include soul, hip-hop and funk band The Main Squeeze, jump-blues and rockabilly band Micky & The Buzz and blues artist Alice Armstro.
By Simon HunterNow a new exhibition in Burgos is telling the stories of some of these warriors through artefacts used to commemorate them.
The Museum of Human Evolution in the northern Castilla y Leon region has borrowed six funerary ‘steles’ from Cordoba’s Archeology Museum for the show, which is called ‘Death in the arena. Gladiators of Cordoba’.
The steles – made from slabs of limestone or marble – are inscribed with the life stories of the dead gladiators, and were once located in a necropolis in Cordoba.
The site was discovered in
EPITAPHS: On a Gladiator life and (top) a helmet
the 1930s when the local council in Cordoba decided to build a new neighbourhood.
It was then that workers found a spectacular underground tomb, and some years later proper excavation work located 15 burial sites (five of them with two occupants) for a total of 20 gladiators. The exhibition also features reproductions of the equipment that these gladiators used, including shields, helmets, daggers and armour.
ELCHE area singer Blanca
Paloma could only finish in 17th place in last Saturday’s Eurovision Song Contest in Liverpool with her flamenco-based song Eaea. The low-standing was something of a surprise with bookmakers expecting a top-10 finish. Paloma, 33, said after the competition that she was ‘very proud’ of what she
The items on display date from the first and second centuries A.D. but the exhibition explains the birth of the profession of gladiator from as far back as the fourth century B.C., when combat would honour someone’s memory.
had done but that there was ‘work still to do’.
“Flamenco still needs to be exported,” she told Spain’s broadcaster TVE. “It’s a seed that we have planted.” She added that she was ‘happy with the execution’ of the song on the night’. “It was risky” she added. “I want to encourage people to continue to take risks with different proposals.”
The display would later become the preferred public spectacle in the times of the Roman empire, according to the museum. The exhibition will run until autumn and is free to enter. Guided tours are also available at no charge.
etc. may also be subject to the obligation to declare even if no other income is received.
This tax is proportional and is levied according to the principle of economic tax capacity, which is constitutionally recognised in article 31 of the Spanish constitution. It basically means that those who earn more pay more.
income from interest, dividends or rental income,
For income obtained from salaries and pensions the general tax scale must be applied and the tax rate varies from a minimum of 19% for the lowest incomes to 47% for incomes exceeding €300,000. Other income such as dividends, interest, real estate income or capital gains must be declared in the
savings section and these rates tend to be significantly lower than the general scale.
It should also be noted that all taxpayers, depending on age and family circumstances, are entitled to family and personal allowances to reduce the amount payable.
If you have any queries regarding the filing of your income tax return, we recommend that you contact Pedro from My Lawyer in Spain who will be happy to advise and assist you.
From slave to grand master: Jack Gaoini recalls a remarkable, little known chapter in Spanish art history involving Velázquez & Pareja
DIEGO Velázquez (1599-1660) needs no introduction. Perhaps the best-known painter in Spain’s Golden Age, Velázquez’s paintings became the paragon of excellence for the great Spanish realist and impressionist painters that followed.(think: Pablo
Picasso, Joan Miró, Salvador Dali, etc.). Recently, Velázquez has been on the minds of art historians and museum curators for reasons you might not expect.
Of late, on-going discussions by those in the art community argue that Velázquez’s legacy has brought a new dimension to the world of art. Allow me to explain…
Early in his career, Velázquez had a mod-
est, somewhat regional, reputation as a painter. That changed when the Flemish great Peter Paul Rubens, who while visiting Madrid, recognised the young man’s potential. He encouraged Diego to travel to Italy to paint, study and learn from the great masters. In 1629 he left Malaga for Genoa, entrusted by King Philip to continue to paint but also to procure paintings and sculptures for the royal palaces. Traveling with him was a personal entourage of other artists, assistants, and - wat for it - a Morisco slave named Juan de Pareja. Even after the expulsion of Moors (1492), Spain remained a muti-racial and highly stratified society but artists were known to have slaves in their workshops.
To some extent, Velázquez’s subject matter while in Rome reflected this diversity. With his brilliant use of a loose (almost impressionistic) style of brushwork, vivid colors, shading, and light, Velazquez brought to life a certain ‘vitality’ to darker-skinned subjects.
During his stay in Rome, Velázquez’s painting of his slave, The Portrait of Juan de Pareja was exhibited at the Pantheon (1650) where it not only was popularly received, it ‘electrified the city of Rome’.
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As one biographer noted: “The Portrait of Juan de Pare ja was widely applauded by all the painters from different countries who said the other pictures were ‘art’ but Velázquez’s portrait was ‘truth’. Very little is known of Juan de Pareja’s background. He was born around 1609 in Antequera and came to Velazquez either by purchase, gift, or inheritance. Pareja was believed to be born of an African slave and white Spaniard. Early on, as a member of Velazquez’s household and workshop, he demonstrated knowledge that went beyond merely mixing paints, cleaning brushes and setting up easels.
Rather, he evolved into not only a dedicated apprentice but as an emulator of the masters around him - especially in his time in Rome. There he developed stylistically into an artist in his own right and was prolific in his painting. One critic described his bold brushwork as ‘more of a sign of courage rather than confidence’. Diego Velazquez would ultimately free him by ‘manumission’ or formal emancipation from slavery. Juan de Pareja had entered Rome an enslaved Morisco but left a free man with an accomplished reputation. Flash forward nearly 300 years to the world of art in New York City. In 1926, The
●
Carnegie Corporation purchased a private art collection from a Puerto Rican man of mixedrace named Arturo Schomburg.
Schomburg, a historian, writer, and activist, often collected ‘slave narratives’ - evidence of what he called ‘hidden black achievement’.
Known as part of an intellectual revival of African arts called the Harlem Renaissance Movement, the Schomburg/Carnegie collection is housed today in the New York Public Library. Schomburg however was not finished with his efforts. Using the proceeds from his sale to the Carnegie Corporation, he traveled to Spain to retrieve many of the works of Juan de Pareja.
At the time of this writing, much of Schomburg’s collection pertaining to the works of Pareja is on display at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The exhibition offers an unprecedented look at the life and times and artistic achievements of Juan de Pareja. The Met hopes to better position the voices of enslaved people through art.
The presentation examines ways in which ‘enslaved art’ and a multiracial society are linked to Spain’s Golden Age.
The infamous Portrait of Juan de Pareja is contextualized by the presence of much of Pareja’s works. Even the original historical document which ‘freed’ Velasquez’s dedicated assistant is on display.
These works, combined with Velazquez’s portrait of Juan de Pareja serve as a thread connecting 17th Century Art with 20th Century Art.
● I, Juan de Pareja is an award -winning novel by Amer- ican writer Elizabeth Borton de Treviño.
of art”-- the process of freeing insti- tutions (e.g., museums, exhibitions, etc.) from the cultural and social effects of Euro-colonial art, is re- ceiving increased attention. Many museums are is- suing statements of solidarity hoping to offer greater access to the art of colonized people. For a fasci- nating video on this subject matter with associate curator at The Met , Maia Jessup Nuku, go to: https// YouTube/SBfGRVFFczk.
● Not all Pareja’s work is presently in New York. His classic The Calling of Saint Matthew can be viewed at the Museo del Prado in Madrid. At the Museu de Belles Arts in Valencia, the Portrait of the Architect José Ratés Dalmau can be viewed.
● The Met’s Exhibit in New York City runs until July 16, 2023.
ALICANTE-ELCHE airport welcomed 1.43 million passengers in April - up by nearly 20% on a year earlier, and beating the previous April record set in 2019 by 7%. The same picture was mirrored at Valencia airport last month with 863,541 passengers - an annual rise of 19.5%, and 7% higher than April
SPAIN was visited by 13.7 million foreign tourists in the first three months of the year - 41.2% more than in the same period in 2022.
Between January and March, the total spend by international tourists was €17.2 billion, an increase of 44.7% compared to the same quarter last year, according to the National Statistics Institute.
In March, 5.3 million visitors arrived in Spain (an increase of 30% compared to March 2022), who spent a total of €6.6 billion, 31.1% more than a year ago.
Minister for Industry, Trade and Tourism, Hector Gomez, claimed the figures were proof that ‘2023 is becoming an extraordinary year for tourism in all measures with higher spending and longer stays’.
“We are witnessing the consolidation of tourism as one of the main drivers of the Spanish economy, which is also reflected in the quality of employment in the sector and in an increasingly varied and innovative range of destinations," Gomez added.
By country, the United Kingdom, dominates the foreign arrivals with 1.1 million vis-
THE SPANISH Government will fund 50% of the cost of Interrail passes for people aged between 18 and 30 to travel across Europe this summer.
President Pedro Sanchez has also announced that discounts of up to 90% and 50% on regional and high-speed trains respectively will be offered to this age group.
These promotions will be made available from June 15 to September 15.
“We are going to have an European Interrail and a Spanish one so young people can get to know all the municipalities and regions of their country,” Sanchez said.
2019. Both airports have recorded record passenger numbers for the first four months of the year with the problems caused by the Covid-19 pandemic seemingly far in the distant past.
Passenger traffic cumulatively at Alicante-Elche is over 4% higher between January and April compared to 2019, with a 9% increase at Valencia.
That means 4.06 million people have used Alicante-Elche airport this year up to the end of April, and 2.7 million at Valencia.
HOW wonderful that people are travelling again with ease, confidence and enjoyment.
We have the pleasure of working with a very successful travel insurance provider that is Covid-19 and Brexit friendly.
We at Jennifer Cunningham Insurance can give you a no obligation quotation if you are a resident in Spain, with single trip and annual cover to meet your needs.
Single Trip Travel Insurance is for up to 180 Days, (31 days maximum for over 65’s), available up to age 79 and there are discounts for Couples & Families.
Annual Multi-Trip Travel Insurance allows individual trips of up to 17 days, however, you can choose 32, 45, 90 Days, (subject to age restrictions).
Cover up to age 79, and discounts for Couples & Families. With three levels of cover to choose from – Silver, Gold and Platinum, with varying levels of sums insured depending upon your travel needs, you have the choice to adapt the insurance to your travel requirements.
Our standard travel insurance also includes cancellation, medical and repatriation, personal accident, baggage and personal effects, money, cards and documents.
itors, experienced strong growth in March (up 29.4%) compared to the same month in 2022. France and Germany are the
countries that come next on the visitor numbers tally.
The Canary Islands were the top tourist destination in March, accounting for 24.7% of all foreign tourists (1.3 million people) - up 15.5% more than a year ago.
FAMILIES in need face a three-month wait before being granted access to a food bank in Alicante.
Local NGO Colonia Requena has sent a letter to the Ombudsman exposing the situation, for which it holds Alicante City Council
responsible. Deprived families have to get a certificate of vulnerability to be given resources from local food banks.
But the evaluation and processing of this crucial document by the municipal authorities is taking longer than it should.
A WEBSITE extolling the virtues of traditional Valencian paella has celebrated its 10th anniversary by publishing details of 20 'hidden' paellas - special recipes 'not known even to Valencians'.
Wikipaella acknowledges 364 restaurants that make authentic paellas to Valencian standards.
Unsurprisingly 320 of those are in the Valencian Community, but outsiders are found in Madrid and Murcia, as well as further afield in the United Kingdom and the United States. “A proper paella is down to unique ingredients,” said Wikipaella co-founder Guillermo Navarro.
The 20 'hidden' paellas have been compiled by Josep Piera who states that paella is 'not a recipe' but a technique of cooking rice which is considered by experts to be one of the hardest rice dishes to produce.
Colonia Requena has said that this issue is affecting around 200 families in the north of the city alone.
Around 80,000 people in Alicante province are said to be in need of access to food banks.
There are additional cover options, the most popular of which are:
● Covid-19 – this optional extension is useful if you wish to be covered for Covid-19 before and whilst on a trip.
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PRE-EXISTING MEDICAL CONDITIONS:
Europesure do not cover all pre-existing medical conditions, however, there are many conditions that are covered. It is not necessary to complete a medical questionnaire. Contact us and we can provide more information.
My advice to you is to go nowhere without insurance and to find out more, and have everything explained to you fully, contact one of the offices.
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR A QUOTATION, PLEASE CALL ONE OF MY OFFICES, EMAIL INFO@ JENNIFERCUNNINGHAM.NET OR VISIT THE WEBSITE WWW.JENNIFERCUNNINGHAM.NET
In this article we examine the financial consequences of not addressing your exposure to UK inheritance tax.
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) collected an extra £729M in inheritance tax receipts for the financial year 2021/22 an increase of 14% from the previous year raising £6.1 billion in revenue.
The UK Office for Budget Responsibility has forecast that for the financial year 2022/23 inheritance tax receipts will raise £6.7 billion in tax revenues.
The OFBR has also predicted inheritance tax receipts will increase by a further 24% to £8.3 billion by 2026.
The average UK inheritance tax liability per estate continues to rise sharply from £209,000 in 2019/20 to an estimated £266,000 by 2022/23.
A strong rise in asset values (including UK house prices) alongside the UK Government’s decision to freeze the level at which estates are exempt from IHT has dragged more people into the UK IHT tax net.
As a result of recent changes to UK ‘deemed domicile’ provisions in April 2017 the conditions for those claiming non-domicile status have been tightened. Once you have passed away, the burden of proof for any non-domiciled claims falls on your heirs.
You may have lived abroad for many years but your circumstances can change. It’s not uncommon for British nationals to return home if the spouse passes away or if they require medical treatment. If you return to the UK for more than a year your domicile of origin is reinstated and you become liable to UK IHT.
Whilst HMRC is always looking at ways of increasing tax revenues; inheritance tax is a ‘voluntary tax.’ The earlier that you plan the more options you will have available to protect your estate from UK IHT; procrastinating will only tighten the taxman’s grip on your hard-earned money.
Many tax payers choose to do nothing –whether it is inertia or not feeling enough pain – is anyone’s guess. However, ignoring the problem doesn’t make the pain go away.
Doing nothing about UK Inheritance Tax deprives your loved ones from enjoying the fruits of your hard labour. You are basically gifting money to the UK Government rather than to your beneficiaries – why would a rational person not take steps to reduce their tax exposure?
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If you feel you would benefit from a second opinion please email enquiries@fwm.gi or call us
DESIGNED to offer a new standard of luxury in the capital, the JW Marriott chain opened its first hotel in Spain this Spring. Installed in the central Canalejas zone, between the Puerta del Sol and the Castellana, you are a hop, skip and jump from just about every Madrid site.
It’s a striking entrance in Spain for the global US giant, which has gone for a very contemporary feel in its 139-room hotel.
The reception and dining area is dramatically lit with original iron columns
The amazing views from the guestroom terraces are particularly worthy of note, for their graphic black and white tile floors.
The El Patio garden is a charming oasis on the roof and the signing of leading Madrid chef Mario Sandoval bodes well.
www.marriott.com
WHEN it comes to the world’s best luxury hotels, Spain ticks many boxes. And the accommodation on offer just keeps getting better, particularly when it comes to architecture, with a host of hip new
hotels opening over the last year. Whether you are seeking rural tranquillity, a lively city break, a taste of history or a beach holiday, there is something for everyone. Here we take a look at 6 of the best new hotels in 2023…
Opened February 2023. From €159 a night
EXPERIENCE First Class accommodation at this former railway station.
Sitting in the heart of the Pynenees, just seven kilometres to the French border, this stunning hotel is an architectural gem, both in its original design and recent reform. Opened in 1928 with a cere-
mony attended by King Alfonso XIII and president Gaston Doumergue, at the time it was a modernist masterstroke made of steel and concrete. Promising a route from Paris to Madrid and Lisbon, via Zaragoza, it was suitably grand (and long, at 241m in length).
But the Spanish Civil War ended any hopes of romanticism as the border shut and during World War II, Canfranc witnessed a wagon-load of arrests, espionage and gold trafficking across the border into Spain. It became known as ‘the Titanic of the mountains’ particular after the station (and route) closed in 1970. Thankfully after much tooing and froing it was acquired by the regional Aragon government and in 2017 work began on bringing it back to its former glory.
In February its doors finally reopened with 103 rooms, care of the Spanish Barcelo group. You enter the hotel via the grand, imposing central booking hall (right), with giant windows and views onto the Pyrenees. It sets the scene developed by Barcelona interior firm, ilmio, who have renovated the rooms to a high standard maximising the views.
www.barcelo.com
Open June 16, From approx €600 a night in September
WE first wrote about the incredible UNESCO heritage estate British tycoon Richard Branson owns in the north-west of Mallorca a few years back… and when he opened a couple of villas last year we expected the hotel to follow soon afterwards.
Now, finally, after plenty of chopping and changing, the Son Bunyola Hotel will open with 26 rooms and suites next month.
The hotel is expected to be a new definition of luxury for the island, sitting in its incredible 1,300 acres of private land.
On a rocky headland, enveloped by a pine forest, the privileged guests can be guaranteed peace and silence.
It will count on two restaurants, an outdoor swimming pool and hot tub, as well as a spa.
www.virginlimitededition.com
Opened May 2023, from €278 a night in low season
THIS sleepy part of central Portugal was mostly overlooked for decades, until the nearby coastal strip of Comporta got globally fashionable a decade ago. While a little way south and inland, the Alentejo boutique hotel of shoe legend, Christian Louboutin (above), is by far THE style hotel of 2023 so far.
Opening this month, it is inspired by Louboutin’s ‘eclectic, maximalist and daring’ tastes. And that is all too clear, looking at the photos on the website, which champions, as much, its artisan designers and artists as its actual location or rooms.
The Parisian fashion legend fell in love with the region decades ago and has carefully gathered together the best of its authentic style.
This is the listed historic home he frequently locked himself away to work on his winter collection and, who knows, maybe inspired his famous red soles (top left). It is very much a reflection of the region’s laid-back vibe and wonderful light and its 13 bedrooms are a riot of colourful details, including frescoes and unusual tiles. The Matinha suite, in particular, is out of the grand dreamy playbook of the kings of Sintra. While carefully preserving the building’s detailed architecture, the gardens are a step on, being designed by landscape specialist Louis Benech, who has even worked at the Gardens of Versailles. There is a natural heated swimming pool. Need we say more. www.vermelhohotel.com
Opened March 2023 From €1,139 a night
LIVE like a conquistador. The price for a junior suite may seem a touch high, but then you are staying in a five-star Renaissance palace with parts dating back to the 14th century. Caceres is one of the most charming towns in Extremadura, with the ancient streets reminders of the wealth that poured in from South America.
Its opening was a dream come true for Jose Polo and Tono Perez, famous for their three Michelin stars at the nearby Atrio Restaurant (also a hotel), in Caceres.
A further step into luxury, this architectural jewel is artfully placed in a key historic barrio of this wonderful city. The reception areas of the hotel follow ‘a simple, unified architectural canon in harmony with its surroundings’, and there is a distinct sense of tranquillity.
The beautiful courtyard has maintained its original columns and flagstone floors, while its suites are surprisingly modern, yet work with a range of original features from vaulted ceilings to Juliet windows.
At least the price includes breakfast and you can normally (one expects) get a booking in the nearby Atrio restaurant. www.restauranteatrio.com
IF grand, country estates are your thing, then Son Net takes some beating. Like an Italianate villa its grand proportions shelter some of the best appointed suites - and communal rooms - in all Europe. And this is no fusty, sit-on-their-laurels grand family sitting back and collecting tithes from the fortunate few. Son Net was taken over by Andalucia’s leading five-star delight, Finca Cortesin, last year. They know how to do luxury… and discreetly to boot. Far from worried about occupancy, they concentrate on amazing service (the sort where Santander bank’s Bo-
tin family can feel comfortable, dining next to the likes of Slash, from Guns & Roses or Peter Andre).
After a year of expensive renovation which carefully conserved its palatial design (stone floors, beams and arches, etc) it has recently emerged as a sophisticated retreat with classically elegant bedrooms and suites.
Nudging into the foothills of the Sierra Tramuntana mountains, the grounds are to lay back and be pampered beside the 30-metre pool flanked by private shaded cabanas, a phalanx of flower-beds and a vineyard and ecological vegetable garden.
www.sonnet.es
ANDALUCIA’S white villages, the pueblos blancos, cling to mountainsides throughout the region and rank among the most beautiful in Spain.
But there’s one that deserves to be singled out: Setenil de las Bodegas, in the northeast corner of Cadiz, is unique for its cave houses and cave restaurants and shops.
The village has grown up in and around cliffs in a river valley, located less than 20 kilometres north of Ronda. Many of the homes and businesses are set into caves, with just the whitewashed façades visible under the overhanging rock face. Several of the streets are also dug into the cliff and sheltered by massive jutting boulders, some of which are draped in ivy. On the outskirts some terraces of houses jut straight into the cliff face, some with curtailed rooflines, others, somehow,
By Anthony Piovesanwith chimneys (above right). Walking through the town feels almost surreal: you just can’t imagine that a place like this exists – or that people actually live here.
But Setenil has a population of nearly 3000, and records show there has been a village here since the 12th century - and it was certainly a settlement in Roman times.
Long before that, it was home to cave dwellers: Excavated objects show the town inhabited by troglodytes 25,000 years ago.
As the modern village grew, people dug into the cliff face and enlarged the caves, and built houses in the spaces between the rocky cliffs. This prevented them from getting too hot in the summer, and too cold in winter.
The chisel marks where caves have been excavated are still visible inside bars and restaurants. If you stay overnight in a cave house, you’ll be able to admire the handiwork while lying in bed or taking a shower.
Modern Setenil was founded in 1484, when Christian armies came from the north and expelled the Moorish rulers. It took the Christians 15 days
to rid the village of the Moors who defended themselves from the castle at the top of the mountain.
The name ‘Setenil’ is believed to derive from ‘septem nihil’, a Latin phrase meaning ‘seven times no’ – in reference to the number of invasions successfully repelled. The other part of its name –‘Bodegas’ – is the Spanish for ‘store’, and refers to the caves which were once ideal for storing wine, grown in the nearby Ronda hills and popular back in ancient Rome.
Commercial wine production died out in the 19th century when phylloxera marched through, but today there are over 30 nearby vineyards (or bodegas) in the area again.
Setenil is a popular day trip, and on weekends you’ll see many tour buses and cars circling in search of a space. But here’s a hot tip: If you’re planning to drive to Setenil, leave your car in Alcala del Valle and take in the beautiful scenery and work up an appetite by walking the remaining three kilometres along the picturesque Arroyo de los Molinos.
On the weekends the cave restaurant terraces under the dramatic overhang on Calle Cue -
vas del Sol are very busy, but in the week it’s usually quiet. They specialise in Cadiz mountain food: tasty stews, pork and chorizo; revueltos (scrambled egg mixed with black pudding or asparagus); Conejo a la serranía (rabbit) and sopa cortijera (soup made with bread, poached eggs, and asparagus). They do good desserts too: puff pastry with quince, cider dumplings, and torta de aceite – cake made with olive oil and almonds.
If booking ahead, try to get a table at La Frasquita, Bar la Escueva or La Tasca (all on Calle Cuevas del Sol) for top atmosphere and shade.
After lunch, explore the backstreets, some of which wind up between the huge boulders to the top of the town and the ruined Moorish castle. The tourist office in a medieval building has a beautiful patterned Moorish wooden ceiling, while there is an attractive 16th century church (Our Lady of Encarnacion) built on the site of a mosque.
A steep winding staircase right by the river on Calle Cuevas del Sol leads to a lookout, the Mirador del Carmen. From here, you can see the town complete in all its beauty, its rows of whitewashed houses snaking up the mountain, the jagged cliff faces, as well as the surrounding olive and almond fields.
It’s no surprise Setenil consistently makes it onto the ‘top places to visit’ lists, and particularly after the New York Times singled it out among its Top Ten for 2019.
For more information, visit www.turismodesetenil.com
Quick Crossword
Across: 7 Zoom, 8 Graduate, 9 Sparkler, 10 Nods, 11 Alive, 12 Reduced, 14 Telstar, 16 Egypt, 19 Tact, 20 Songster, 21 Aerobics, 22 Mats.
Down: 1 Compel, 2 Improvisation, 3 Agile, 4 Barrier, 5 Quinquagesima, 6 Stodge, 13 Warship, 15 Enamel, 17 Pretty, 18 Gnash.
A SPANISH hospital has successfully implanted a miniature pacemaker into a prematurely-born baby for the first time in Europe.
The youngster, weighing barely one-and-a-half kilos, had suffered a congenital atrioventricular blockage (CCAVB) meaning the heart could not pump enough blood to meet the body's needs.
Around one in 22,000 babies are born with CCAVB with a high incidence of prolonged illness or even death.
Head of Valencia’s La Fe Hospital’s Arrhythmia Unit, Joaquin Osca, said: “The normal-sized pacemaker could not be implanted inside the baby's chest due to its size so we used a miniaturised version instead.”
AN outbreak of Trichinososis has affected at least 16 people in the Castilla y Leon after they caught a form of roundworm from wild boar meat. It is a notifiable disease in Spain and the main source of infection among humans is via consuming raw or undercooked meat products from wild boar or pigs. Initial symptoms of infection are nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting, fatigue, fever, and abdominal discomfort.
THE Covid-19 pandemic is officially finally over, according to the World Health Organisation.
The director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, made the announcement after the 15th meeting of the Emergency Committee, which recommended ending the Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC).
During the meeting, the committee highlighted the
By Walter Finchdecreasing trend in deaths and hospitalisations from Covid.
They also pointed out the high levels of population immunity against SARSCoV-2 as reasons for ending the PHEIC. The previous meeting of the committee in January had concluded that it was still not the moment to of -
ALICANTE doctors and scientists believe they have found a pigment in the Santa Pola salt mines that could help fight breast cancer.
The pigment is produced by certain microorganismsthe ‘halophilic archaea’ - in order to protect themselves from the sun with its anti-tumour capacity having been successfully tested in breast cancer situations.
Alicante University Biology head, Rosa Maria Martinez, called it an ‘important discovery’.
“We’ve reached a conclusion that with certain doses, the pigment causes no harmful effects on health cells, but limits the growth capacity of cancerous cells,” she said. The discovery opens the way to fighting cancer using natural compounds that cause no problems to the human body.
ficially end the pandemic. However, Tedros (above) said he would not hesitate to declare another emergency if the situation changed. Vaccines and other treatments have eliminated the risk the virus posed a few years ago, he added. Tedros also warned that despite the declaration of the end of the health emergency this year, the virus would remain a threat to global health.
Despite the WHO’s pronouncement, there are still around 500 fatalities per day from Covid worldwide. This adds up to more than 200,000 deaths per year, according to reported cases, while the actual number may be higher.
A PUBLIC health campaign group has claimed Torrevieja Hospital is woefully short of beds.
‘Platforma por la Sanidad Publica y de Calidad’ says the average bed allocation in the Valencian Community is 2.1 beds per 1,000 residents, but Torrevieja Hospital falls short of that.
It currently has 274 beds with the campaigners claiming it needs an additional 166 beds to reach the regional average. Some 29 beds have been added since the hospital returned to public management in October 2021.
The Valencian Health Ministry says there are a total of 204,000 card holders in the department.
Platforma spokesperson, Eva de la Fuente, said at a protest at the hospital that it had not kept pace with the rising population in Torrevieja .
“The population has more than doubled over the last 20 years and rises dramatically during the summer season,” she said. “The bed shortage puts extra strain across the whole hospital and is especially noticeable in the emergency department,” de La Fuente added.
SPANISH actor Javier Bardem has told chat show host Conan O’Brien that listening to AC/DC songs helped him learn English, including ‘All the curses, all the bad words’.
THE Spanish state received €300 million over 10 years from ‘forgotten’ bank accounts under a rule where any cash or shares in dormant accounts must be handed over after 20 years.
A FAMILY of ducks led to a hold-up at Madrid’s Barajas airport when they decided to go for a waddle along the runway. They eventually strolled away unharmed.
LIKE a scene from a horror movie, the crew of a sailboat had to be rescued half a mile off the Cadiz coast after a pod of aggressive killer whales tried to sink it.
Four sailors aboard the Alboran Champagne yacht made the distress call just after midnight.
The pack of enormous marine
By Walter Finchpredators had disabled the rudder and smashed a hole in the hull.
Upon realising that they were taking in water, they donned their lifejackets and prayed that the coast guard would arrive in time.
A YOUNGSTER got himself into a tight spot after getting wedged between two fences in Benidorm.
A fire crew was dispatched to the resort’s ‘English Zone’ where it used its hydraulic separator, normally used in traffic accidents, to free him.
Salvamar Enif arrived to rescue the crew just as the sailboat was starting to go under. The Alboran Champagne was so flooded that it was unable to be towed back to port, and so the boat was left adrift with a special light activated to warn
A BALD-faced attempt to cheat in a driving theory exam by hiding a camera under a comedy toupe did not pay off for one desperate learner driver.
The 24-year-old, of Chinese origin, attended his exam in Guadalajara with ill-fitting hair that immediately raised suspicion. Police swooped and discovered the wig hid a mini spy camera and a small earpiece, which the man had used to communicate with a friend who was reading the questions through the camera.
The man was given an automatic failure and a disqualification from taking the exam again for a further six months.
other vessels in the area. Several hours later it was almost entirely submerged under the Atlantic when a Guardia Civil auxiliary patrol boat arrived to salvage what was left of the wreckage. Orcas are apex predators, meaning they are at the top of the food chain, and they have been known to hunt a wide range of prey including fish, squid, seals, and even whales.
Despite their name, orcaswhich are a type of dolphinhave very rarely been known to attack humans in the wild. There have been reported cases of a specific pod of orcas harassing or bumping into boats in Northern Spain, west of Portugal and around Gibraltar.
YOUNG Brits fled the UK in their droves ‘to escape the King’s coronation’ - and Spain was one of their top getaways.
Short-haul jaunts to a host of Spanish hotspots were up fourfold over the coronation weekend.
Demand for trips to Benidorm and Ibiza rocketed – with travel firm Last Night of Freedom revealing clients were specifically saying they wanted to ‘escape the coronation’.
Marbella and Madrid also saw a bump in bookings from Brits, while trips to Barcelona rocketed by a staggering 400% over the long weekend.