Olive Press Costa Blanca South and Murcia Issue 94

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TOP OF THE WORLD

Spain´s best restaurants

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TIME TO CHILL

Dive in and keep cool as the heatwave arrives

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Line in the sand

A PERUVIAN expat has called in lawyers over claims he was beaten up by police and left in hospital with a ruptured bladder.

In the alarming alleged attack, Diego Armando Torres, insists he was punched and kicked by six Guardia Civil agents on a Friday night.

Even more shocking, he claims he was tied up and a plastic bag was put over his head nearly suffocating him.

“I actually feared for my life, particularly when one officer told me ‘you’re going to die’,” he told the Olive Press this week.

The incident happened when he and a friend were heading home to Sabinillas at 9:15pm, on June 16. Diego, 37, who arrived in Spain to work as a builder two months ago, had been out for some drinks in nearby Estepona.

“We were pulled over at a motorway police check just before arriving in Sabinillas,” he explained.

“They stopped us and asked my mate to step out of the car. I initially stayed in the passenger’s seat, but then got out to ask what was going on.

“The agents told me to be quiet and

Expat resident says he was brutally beaten up by Guardia Civil officers

EXCLUSIVE

not to speak, but I asked again if everything was okay.

“The police are now saying that I used force and kicked one of them, but this is not true.

“Suddenly they snapped and forced me to the ground and I was handcuffed and taken to a police car.”

His mate, from Bolivia, who wants to remain anonymous, confirmed the heavy-handed arrest.

“But when I dared ask a policeman why they were doing it, he replied; ‘do you also want to get hit?’

“Diego was put in a car and that was the last time I saw him that day,” explained his friend, who is also a builder.

The victim claims he was then taken to the Guardia Civil barracks in Manilva where he was grilled on what he was doing in Spain.

“I was very scared and just wanted to call someone,” he said. “Eventually they agreed but as I left my phone in the car I couldn’t remember any numbers apart from my brother’s, who lives in Norway, and they refused to call a foreign number.”

It was then that a couple of the officers started slapping him in the face telling him to ‘shut up’.

“I remember there were up to six of them taking turns to slap me,” he

insisted.

“After a while they took me back to the car. I was terrified and I started screaming for help.

Then, one of the officers punched me in the face through the open window, cutting open my left eyebrow.”

At this point the attack got far more sinister, he claims, after the police took him back to a different smaller and darker room at the station.

“They tied my ankles and wrists together, covered my head with a plastic bag and started punching and kicking me in the stomach,” he claims.

BEATEN: Diego with ruptured bladder and (far left) face with cuts and bruises

“When I was about to asphyxiate, they would remove the bag then put it back on. They did this many times.

“An officer also stepped on my head, causing me injuries and bruises. They kicked and punched me in the stomach until I passed out from the pain.

After the brutal assault, he was taken to the Policia Local Station in Estepona, where he was put in a cell and fell asleep, but woke up around 3am with agonising stomach pain. Despite begging to go to hospital it wasn’t until 9.20am that three Guardia agents returned and took him to a GP in Estepona, where the doctor told the officers he had to be taken to hospital urgently.

He was taken to Marbella’s Costa del Sol Hospital, where he underwent emergency surgery on a ‘ruptured bladder’.

He also ‘presented bruises on the head and face’ according to the official medical report seen by the Olive Press.

Diego has since taken legal advice and is currently waiting to hear back from a public defender to file an official complaint.

A Guardia Civil official report claims Diego was arrested for kicking one of the agents, which he completely denies.

Leading Marbella lawyer Antonio Flores, described the case as ‘an

BEACH hoggers reserving breakfast slots on Calpe's beaches will be fined for hindering daily cleaning work. Calpe council has reminded beach users of local laws prohibiting planting deck chairs, hammocks, and umbrellas before 9.30am.

Any belongings found before then will be removed and owners fined.

Calpe's beaches councillor, Pere Moll, said: “We appeal to the civility of beach users to ensure beaches are not occupied before that time.”

Police powers also mean that any beach equipment unattended for more than three hours will be taken away. For many years, Calpe council has received numerous complaints during the summer about people 'reserving' space on the beach with mid-morning arrivals finding large stretches occupied by sun beds and umbrellas with no owners in sight.

PARTY TIME!

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“The worst ones were, I estimate, in their 30s and 40s, while two younger agents, probably in their 20s, did not do anything and actually tried to comfort me.”
Fermin is here
San
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Ukraine help

THE outgoing Valencian government has allocated €12.7 million in relief to nearly 13,000 struggling Ukraine refugees who will get €400 each for three months, with €100 per child.

En route

THE night bus C6 line service suspended due to the pandemic has resumed between Alicante-Elche airport and Alicante city.

Cop boost

SUMMER security coverage has been boosted with nearly 1,900 extra Guardia Civil and Policia Nacional officers in Alicante province and just under 4,000 in Valencia province.

More jobs

JUNE’S unemployment total of 325,577 in the Valencian Community was the lowest since October 2009 with a 6.65% fall over 12 months.

TRAVEL AGENT BROTHEL

COPS have dismantled an Alicante gang who sexually exploited women after bringing them over from Colombia via a travel agency with false promises of jobs.

Nine people have been arrested with two ringleaders jailed and 21 victims freed from flats in Valencia, Murcia and Alicante.

Investigations started when one of the victims escaped and contacted the Policia Nacional at Alicante Airport. She told officers she was recruited in Colombia with the promise she would work in Spain as a kitchen assistanta better paid job than back at home.

However, she was forced to work as a prostitute and pay for the cost of the trip funded by the criminals.

They charged extortionate interest on the sum plus expenses that had nothing to do with the journey.

The victim described the 'deplorable' conditions where she worked which was akin to slavery, having to work at all hours and not allowed outside.

The enterprise was conducted under the guises of a travel agency which allowed the gang to bring in the women from Colombia as tourists. The criminal enterprise netted around €21,000 per month.

TWO men are being investigated for illegally advertising stuffed Eagle Owls on animal sales forums in Valencia.

Two birds were offered for sale by the Spaniards, who face charges of breaking Flora and Fauna laws over the sale of protected species.

The Guardia Civil monitored specialist animal sales websites and social media pages when they came across the adverts.

Neither of the sellers could produce any documents that allowed them to keep the stuffed birds, let alone permission to sell this kind of wild animal. The owls were seized by Guardia officers and handed over to judicial authorities.

NO HOOT!

No get away!

A LUXURY yacht called 'Getaway of London' has been intercepted with €32 million of hashish on board.

The UK-registered boat was pulled over by the Guardia Civil in Santa Pola while five tons of hashish was being unloaded. Three men were arrested at the marina while a fourth was detained at La Vall d'Uixo in Castellon province.

Several people are said to

Crew of British yacht Getaway of London heading to prison after €32 million drugs found

have jumped into the water to avoid being caught, with two men still believed to be at large.

The interception happened after the Guardia received

Hugger mugger grabbed

A HUGGER mugger robber wanted by over 20 courts across Spain has been arrested in Alicante.

The 25-year-old Romanian woman was part of a travelling robbery gang specialised in love-hug assaults. Her gang mainly targeted elderly people or tourists and then put them in a bear hug while ripping off watches and jewellery or pinching a wallet and purses.

The Romanian had 29 arrest warrants out against her which locally included Cartagena, Benidorm, and Orihuela.

intelligence that a 'fast boat' with four engines and a top speed of 52 knots would be landing with ‘a big stash of drugs’.

Alongside the Policia Nacional, officers launched a surveillance operation, which bore fruit when a van was spotted approaching the yacht club. The vehicle parked up next to the 18-metre long luxury yacht and several people unloaded bales of hashish into the van.

The nationalities of those detained has not been revealed, although the van was stopped with 74 bales of hashish, weighing 38 kilos each.

A further 52 bales were found on the boat.

From front

Brutality

atrocity’.

“If proved, this would be an atrocity. First, these officers should be given a precautionary suspension and then tried for assault and abuse of authority,” he insisted.

A spokesman for Spain’s Ombudsman added: “If he has been beaten up, he needs to file a report and the justice system will do its job.”

A Guardia Civil press officer said: “I don’t know if this is true or not, but it sounds strange to me. I have been a Guardia Civil for 30 years and I have never seen anything like this. It sounds like a science fiction movie. Once he files a complaint, this will go to court and a judge will decide.”

Drug club shut

A BENIDORM cannabis club has been closed down for selling drugs - mainly to foreign tourists.

Licensed cannabis associations are permitted under Spanish law so long as they are members clubs with people smoking their own marijuana.

Five people aged between 20 and 28 have been arrested including club officials and various amounts of narcotics and cash seized.

CRIME www.theolivepress.es July 13th - July 26th 2023 2 NEWS IN BRIEF

OUR AUNT ANITA

HE had been walking down a Barcelona street in the early days of the Spanish Civil War when a striking figure captured his eye. It was July 25, 1936, and the woman standing on a barricade really stood out.

Antoni Campañà jumped into action training his camera on the attractive Spaniard wearing militia fatigues.

Smiling broadly with all the early optimism of the Republican cause, she held up the classic black flag of Spain’s CNT anarchist trade union. The picture - like Robert Capa’s legendary Falling Soldier photo taken in Cordoba - would go on to become one of the most emblematic symbols of the war.

Richie’s return

THE seemingly ageless Lionel Richie returned to play Marbella last week after an eightyear hiatus.

Just 72 years young, the crooner, who rose to fame as part of the Commodores in the seventies, performed some of his greatest hits at the auditorium of the Starlite festival. “It's been an amazing night and I hope to see you again soon," Richie said on stage at the end of the concert.

But the famous photo would also spark a decades-long mystery – just who was this iconic woman?

Her identity remained unknown for an incredible 87 years, until a breakthrough five years ago, when the identity of the photographer was first discovered.

A Barcelona local, Toni Monne, was rummaging around in his old family house in Sant Cugat when he discovered a box containing thousands of wartime photographs belonging to his grandfather, Antoni. And among them was the iconic image.

Step forward a few years and Monne began working with the National Art Museum of Catalunya (MNAC) to prepare an exhibition of Campaña's work. Then, as if by fate, when the exhibition finally opened a family member of the unknown woman attended while visiting Barcelona from France.

“We got goosebumps,” François Gomez Garbin revealed, on seeing his aunt Anita in the photo. And by chance Monne, who happened to be there at

THAT’S THE PITS!

Formula One hotshot Lando Norris’s Spanish rental villa burgled while out for dinner

HE may be blessed with wealth, good looks and a career as F1 driver, but Englishman Lando Norris’s good fortune seems to have deserted him in recent times.

Not only is the 23-year-old hotshot enduring a less-thanstellar racing season, but he recently became the victim of a very expensive robbery – the second in two years.

The McLaren driver revealed he had been burgled while he had gone out in Marbella with a group of friends to eat. The group, that included the

popular influencer Jennie Dimova, found their luxury villa in the nearby hills ransacked and most of their possessions gone.

"We were out for dinner, and our place got robbed," Norris, who is currently ninth in the standings, revealed.

"A mixture of many things were stolen. Some were expensive and some were not so expensive,” he continued.

“It is still an ongoing investigation so I cannot say too much."

HEDGEHOG RESCUE

A TEAM of unique 'hedgehog-saving' dogs have been trained to rush into action after the first summer wildfires razed parts of the Doñana national park.

The canines have been specially trained by an environmental group to sniff out injured hedgehogs.

Once located, the hedgehogs are treated and cared for and then returned to their natural habitat.

CAN YOU SEE ME? THEN SO CAN ALL OUR READERS

The shocking turn of events left Dimova shaken up, as she shared her anguish on TikTok.

"If you're wondering why I look like this, it's because our villa got robbed," she said.

"Everything I owned - my clothes, my shoes, my bags, my jewellery - everything has been taken.

“I'm left with literally nothing. I cried for two hours, but what can I do?"

The blow didn’t stop Norris from coming second in the British grand prix at the weekend. It is a big improvement having only managed to secure points in four of the other nine races this season.

that moment, was told that the woman’s name was Ana Garbín Alonso.

And finally her story was known.

Born in Almería in 1915, Alonso was 21 years old when Campaña took her photograph, which was then distributed throughout Europe on the postcard album, The Fight in Barcelona.

When the war ended with a win by Franco's fascist army, Alonso was forced to cross the Spanish border and settle in Beziers, France.

She became a dressmaker and had a son, Pepito, yet incredibly never once returned to Spain.

Despite this, Spanish culture pervaded the walls of her home, its music, food and humour.

And now, this month, her story is being told in an extraordinary exhibition in Montpellier entitled; Hidden icons. The Unknown Images of the Spanish War. Alonso died in 1977, but the exhibition remembers her fighting spirit and includes a selection of many other of Campaña's works.

Choli-days

DIEGO Simeone has been spotted enjoying a break from the daily pressures of the Atletico Madrid hotseat with the missus. The 53-year old waded into the shallows with his bikini-clad paramour Carla Pereyra, nearly 20 years his junior, during their getaway in Ibiza.

The Argentine, often known as ‘Cholo’, needed to let his hair down after a so-so season with Atletico. His side notched their customary third place finish and crashed out of the Champions League in the group stages.

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S OFF OUR COSTAS

See you in court!

A CAMPAIGN group is launching legal proceedings against a housing development that will desecrate ‘the last virgin kilometre of Orihuela Costa’.

The ‘abhorrent’ Cala Mosca development of 2,200 homes has long been on the drawing board of developer Gomendio.

The controversial plan was previously halted in 2008 because of its environmental impact, but in an unpopular turn it was finally approved by the town’s council last April.

A final green light for the project was confirmed by the new PP-VOX government in June.

But Salvemos Cala Mosca has refused to give up its defence of the pristine coastland, including more protests and legal proceedings. “We have submitted an official document confirming we are taking the case to court very soon,” spokesman Angel Barcelo told the Olive Press.

He insisted: “We will ask for an injunc-

Eyes peeled

ABDUCTED: Jayden’s dad Andrew has ‘brought him to Spain’

A CHILD who was abducted by his biological father while on holiday in Portugal a year ago is thought to have crossed into Spain.

Jayden Pearson, 14, is believed to have been moved into Andalucia, having lived further north.

The Doncaster-native is slim, 5ft tall, with blue-green eyes

JUDICIAL SHOCKER

THE Supreme Court has quashed a rape conviction of a Moroccan bricklayer for a sexual assault that took place more than 30 years ago.

Ahmed Tommouhi, 72, was incorrectly convicted of a series of sexual assaults in 1991, and spent 15 years in jail.

However the assaults had in fact been carried out by another man who had a very similar physical appearance.

The key to the ruling was semen gathered at the scene had no genetic match to Tommouhi.

The only evidence was his identification in a police lineup.

Furthermore, one of the rape victims, identified only as Nuria, has since admitted she mistakenly identifyied Tommouhi, due to his similarity to the true rapist.

Tommouhi was 40 years old when he arrived in Spain, but was arrested just six months later for these crimes that he did not commit.

He revealed this week that he refused to return to his home country until his name was cleared in Spain.

PROTEST: Locals up in arms

tion and if this is granted, the works will be stopped until the judicial proceedings finish.” This newspaper has previously exposed Gomendio for using ‘intimidation’ and ‘lies’ to put pressure on local authorities.

He was last seen by his mother, who has legal custody, when she waved him off on a 10-day trip to the Algarve with his father Andrew Pearson, 33, in August last year. However, when the airport

Free pass extension

REGIONAL transport around the Valencian Community will continue to be free for anyone 30 or under this year.

The extension also maintains a 50% discount for Metrovalencia, the Alicante Tram, the Castello Tram, and intercity buses. Free transport for young people was introduced in October 2022 as a way of promoting sustainable travel and fighting inflation. Around 240,000 passes have been issued and used in four million journeys, resulting in passenger savings of €2 million.

MELTDOWN ON THE WAY

SPAIN'S second major heatwave of the summer arrived this week and could serve up highs of 48 degrees in some inland areas, threatening the alltime record in the Western Mediterranean.

The highest temperature ever was observed just two years ago in Sicily, Italy on August 11, 2021 when the mercury hit 48.8 degrees.

The country's state weather service, Aemet, suggests that the hot weather could be around for some time -

The Mediterranean is facing prospect of highest temperatures

ever recorded as much as two weeks. There is nevertheless some respite this weekend predicted for coastal areas, with 31 degrees for Malaga, 30 degrees in Benidorm, and 32 degrees in Valencia.

Higher temperatures of 35 degrees for Torrevieja and 33 for Palma are forecast. The high temperatures are being caused by a mass of very warm and dry air

known as ‘Cerberus’ travelling from the Sahara desert that has been expanding into Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia towards south Europe.

Heat warnings have been issued both to residents and tourists across Spain. The Cruz Roja has urged people to check on the most vulnerable during the

CHILD DIES IN HOT CAR

A THREE-YEAR-OLD child died on Thursday after his mother accidently left him in a locked car. The youngster passed away after spending several hours in temperatures of around 25ºC in the Pontevedra province in the northeastern Galicia region.

The mother reportedly forgot to leave the child at the daycare centre where he was due to be looked after, and travelled instead directly to her place of work.

The authorities were alerted to the child’s plight by a passer-by, who called the emer-

gency services at around 5pm.

An ambulance crew could do nothing for the child however, apart from to certify his death.

The alarm was also raised when the boy’s father went to pick the boy up from the daycare centre, and found that he was missing. The local council of O Porriño, where the family lives, has declared three days of mourning.

See letters on p9

high temperatures, such as children and older people, while also calling on people to stay hydrated and to watch for signs of heatstroke, which can include vomiting and fainting.

The new heatwave comes after the World Meteorological Organization said the beginning of this month was the hottest week on record for the planet.

'The world just had the hottest week on record, according to preliminary data,' the WMO said in a statement, after climate change and the early stages of the El Niño weather pattern drove the warmest June on record.

El Niño is a naturally occurring pattern that drives increased heat worldwide, as well as drought in some parts of the world and heavy rains elsewhere.

taxi did not pick Jayden up on his return flight and Andrew blocked her number, mother Rebecca Jones, 35, began to fear the worst. Police investigations in both Portugal and the UK initially pinpointed the pair in Alcobaca, between Lisbon and Porto, and later in Castelo Branco. But it is now feared his father could have brought him into Andalucia in efforts to evade capture. Rebecca gained custody of Jayden and his brother, Mathew, 11, in 2019 after her relationship broke down with Andrew.

But she agreed to let him go on the holiday with his father, unaware of what he was planning. If you spot either Jayden or Andrew, you are advised not to approach but contact South Yorkshire Police on +44 114 2196905. Alternatively email newsdesk@theolivepress.es

Heat stroke deaths soar

AN alarming nine people died of heatstroke in Alicante last month.

The numbers are expected to increase with the current heatwave pushing temperatures to record numbers. Over the summer period, hospital casualties increase by at least 10% due to extreme temperatures. There have been health alerts issued in over 50 towns in Alicante due to the increase of humidity going up to 70%

A RENFE ban to take bicycles onto the Los Nietos rail service has angered Cartagena cycling groups.

Members from various clubs protested over the ban, insisting it is hypocritical given RENFE claims its trains are the most sustainable transport.

Train fury Firework

TWO firework factory workers sustained serious injuries after an explosion in Vilamarxant. The blast happened at a self-contained work hut at Pirotecnia del Mediterraneo.

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A campaigning, community newspaper, the Olive Press represents the huge expatriate community in Spain with an estimated readership, including the websites, of more than two million people a month.

Voted top expat paper in Spain OPINION

OUR DUTY

IT is the moral duty of any public-serving media outlet in a healthy democracy to expose abuses of power.

At the Olive Press, we stand together with anyone, particularly foreigners, who have been bullied by the authorities.

So when we heard about the alleged police assault on Peruvian Diego Torres, we had an obligation to investigate it fairly and without prejudice.

It is true that when we first spoke to him, his story came as a shock.

But after meeting him and having gathered evidence, while naturally sceptical we could not find evidence that he was dishonest.

The Guardia Civil listened carefully when we explained to them the charges and promised us they will investigate when a complaint is formally filed.

The Olive Press maintains an excellent relationship with the law and order body, which we hope will continue.

Founded in 1844, the Guardia Civil is one of the main pillars of Spanish democracy, playing an essential role in the fight against crime and protecting us all.

‘Firm without violence’ were the words used by the Duke of Ahumada, its founder and first general director.

A motto that the vast majority of agents do follow, and we, as citizens, are thankful to them for taking care of us.

But if there are individuals that deviate from this purpose, and abuse the power vested in them as officers of the law, they must be rooted out.

So we are publishing Diego’s story to speed up the Guardia’s investigation into the issue and ensure that all their officers are on the right side of the law.

Because, if the charges turn out to be true, they probably have done it before, and are likely to do it again.

And if they turn out to be false, we can feel satisfied that we still did our duty to society.

PUBLISHER / EDITOR

Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es

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Alberto Lejarraga alberto@theolivepress.es

Jo Chipchase jo@theolivepress.es

John Culatto

ADMIN Victoria Humenyuk Makarova (+34) 951 273 575 admin@theolivepress.es

ELECTION FE

ON July 23, Spaniards will be heading to polling booths for the fifth time in the last 10 years, to choose the next prime minister and the government.

But according to the polling, it is far from clear who will be picked by voters and indeed whether any party or parties will get enough votes to avoid a stalemate.

Here is a complete guide to everything you need to know ahead of this key moment in Spanish politics.

WHY ARE WE HAVING ELECTIONS NOW?

After forming Spain’s first coalition government since the country returned to democracy in the 1970s, PSOE Socialist Party Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has repeatedly stated that he would see out the entirety of his fouryear term.

His administration was formed in early 2020 thanks to the support of junior partner Unidas Podemos, and the PM could have called elections as late as December of this year.

But after the May 28 local and regional

WHO ARE THE MAIN PARTIES STANDING?

Sanchez is running for reelection as prime minister, despite his reputation having taken a hit over the last four years thanks to the deals he has done with smaller, nationalist parties such as the Catalan Republican Left and EH Bildu, the former political wing of Basque terrorist group ETA. His main opponent is Alberto Nunez Feijoo of the PP, followed by Santiago Abascal of the far-right Vox.

A newcomer is Sumar, a leftist alliance that has absorbed the two component parts of Unidas Podemos, the United Left and Podemos itself, as well as other smaller leftist parties from Spain’s splintered political spectrum. The candidate for Sumar is current deputy prime minister and labour minister, Yolanda Diaz.

HOW DO GENERAL ELECTIONS WORK IN SPAIN?

Spaniards will be voting for the 350 deputies who will take their seats in the lower house of parliament, the Congress of Deputies.

Spain uses the D’Hondt method, which allocates Congress seats in proportion to the number of votes received, as well as a closed-list system of candidates, meaning that voters choose the party rather than the politicians who are running.

As for the Senate, the 208 seats are allocated using an open-list system, where electors vote for candidates rather than parties.

WHAT DO THE POLLS SAY?

While the predictions vary as to what will happen, one thing seems certain: no single party will win an outright majority of 176 seats in the 350-seat Congress, meaning a coalition is inevitable. The latest poll from Spanish daily El Pais predicts the PP and Vox will fall eight seats short of an absolute majority, with 125 seats for the former and 43 for the latter, a total of 168.

The survey, carried out by pollster 40dB, also predicts 111 seats for the PSOE and 35 for Sumar, for a total of vative newspaper ABC has predicted that the PP tween 175 and 183 seats, potentially paving the way mation of

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‘GET TXAPOTE TO VOTE FOR YOU’

‘QUE TE vote Txapote’, roughly translated as Get Txapote to vote for you. This seemingly innocent Spanish phrase, which is nice and catchy thanks to its rhyme, is causing an ongoing headache for Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, and pain for the victims of terrorism.

But who is Txapote? And who came up with the slogan that has dominated the ongoing electoral campaigns in Spain?

The slogan first appeared on September 3, last year, when Sanchez was making a visit to Sevilla.

While he was received warmly by supporters, the Socialist Party leader was also confronted by a group of protestors, likely Vox supporters, who whistled, jeered and proffered insults.

Among the group was an older, portly gentleman, who was carrying a sign above his head with the now-immortal words: ‘Que te vote Txapote’.

Txapote’s real name is Francisco Javier Garcia Gaztelu, and he is a convicted terrorist from the now-defunct Basque group ETA.

Aged 57, he is currently serving a 152-year prison sentence for his crimes, which include some of the most shocking murders during ETA’s decades-long bloody campaign for an independent Basque Country.

Among these was the killing of Miguel Angel Blanco, a local PP councillor who was kid-

The slogan about ETA that is plaguing the prime minister and victims alike

napped by ETA, who demanded their prisoners be brought to jails in the Basque Country, closer to their families, in exchange for Blanco’s release.

The then-PP government of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar refused to negotiate, and Blanco was shot twice in the head and left to die.

The kidnapping and the murder shocked Spain, and galvanised social rejection of ETA and its bloody campaign.

In fact, more than 500,000 people turned out to a demonstration in Bilbao while Blanco was still alive and being held by ETA, a phenomenon that was repeated in several other parts of Spain. So what does Txapote have to do with Pedro Sanchez?

The reason why the slogan works, and why it has stuck, is to do with the political deals that the prime minister has had to make over the last nearly four years of his government.

After the inconclusive elections of 2019, Sanchez formed a government with junior coalition partner Unidas Podemos (United We Can), but the administration still lacked a working majority in Congress.

As a result, to pass legislation – including the

all-important budget – Sanchez has done deals to gain the support of a series of smaller parties, including EH Bildu, which is the former political wing of ETA.

This has caused huge controversy among victims associations, as well as opening up a political flank where the opposition can attack him – and also gave rise to the now-infamous phrase, ‘Que te vote Txapote’.

EH Bildu is a legitimate political party, but its history and its often-timid condemnation of ETA violence means it is anathema for parties such as the PP and Vox.

The appearance of the slogan has prompted hundreds of column inches in Spanish newspapers, and it became a regular phrase used on social media.

It gained further traction on January 25, when a man who was being interviewed by broadcaster TVE about a speed camera issue suddenly started shouting it and other insults against Sanchez.

It has also been seized upon by far-right party Vox, and members of the PP. The regional premier of the Madrid region, Isabel Diaz Ayuso, cited the slogan during a debate in the Madrid assembly as a way of criticising the Socialist Party.

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WHO COULD DO DEALS?

Polling data has prompted analysts to predict that a PP-Vox government is the most likely outcome of the July 23 polls.

But if the groups fall short of a majority, they could struggle to find support. This is mostly due to Vox’s hardline policies on issues such as LGBTQ+ rights, domestic violence and illegal immigration (see over).

The Basque Nationalist Party, for example, has already made clear it won’t support a PP-Vox administration.

ANOTHER ‘FRANKENSTEIN’ GOVERNMENT?

This paves the way for a repeat of the 2019 election result, whereby the PSOE teams up with new leftist alliance Sumar, and seeks support from a myriad of smaller parties. The current administration has been governing in a minority this way over the last few years, but it has cost Sanchez dear: his concessions to Catalan separatists, including pardons for the jailed leaders of the 2017 independence drive, have come with huge political fallout, while agreements with EH Bildu in order to pass legislation have raised the ire of conservative voters and victims’ associations alike.

A REPEAT ELECTION?

Another possible outcome from July 23 is that Spaniards will be forced to return to the polls: if the result is inconclusive, and no party can find the support in Congress to select a prime minister and form a government, the elections may have to be rerun. This, however, could mean that the country is left with a caretaker administration until well into 2024.

IT is in many ways the Doomsday scenario for Spain … and certainly Gibraltar (you’ll need to read to the end).

But, what seemed impossible a year ago is now a terrifying reality with Spain’s July 23 general election set for next weekend.

As Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez sweet-talks his way around Spain on the traditional campaign tour, he may just be sleepwalking his way into allowing a fascist party into Moncloa Palace.

For (far) right up his rear-end - and with activists shadowing his every move - is the extreme nationalist party Vox, which is odds-on to become the dealmaker by the end of the month.

With an anti-EU agenda and policies to ban abortion, scrap gender violence laws and eject immigrants from Spain, the new party has understandably been labelled as ‘fascist’ and ‘neo-Nazi’.

So it’s alarming that Vox will likely hold the balance of power, expected to win between 11 and 14% of the vote (37 to 40 seats, next week). As, when coupled with the expected 135140 senators (33-35%) for the right

THE COWARDLY HYPOCRITE Santiago Abascal

Leader Santiago Abascal will once again stand as the party's candidate for the Presidency.

The 47-year-old - who appeared a-la-Putin, riding a horse during the last election campaign as if he was a Spanish Conquistador - is wellknown for his blatant hypocrisy.

While he

SURPRISE VOX

The Olive Press analyses four of the most controversial members of Spain’s far right party with the general election looming this month

wing PP party, the chance of Vox getting into a coalition government inches ever nearer.

While left wing coalition, Sumar, is making in-roads and threatening to grab up to 15% of the vote, it may not be enough to save Sanchez.

Here, we take a look at four controversial characters in Vox.

strongly advocates the eradication of useless public bodies he refers to as chiringuitos, Abascal actually benefited from one in the past.

In 2013, in fact, he was appointed Director of the Foundation for Patronage and Social Sponsorship in Madrid. This was a public body with no obvious activity and only one employee, in addition to Abascal, who was assigned a staggering wage of €82,491 per year.

Abascal, a former PP member who has never worked outside politics, created VOX on December 17, 2013, the very same day the Foundation for Patronage was dissolved. He later described this organisation as ‘unnecessary.’ But didn’t, of course, give the money back.

The VOX leader has also - no surprise as a fan of former dictator Franco - vehemently supported the return of compulsory military service in Spain, which ended in 2001.

Something Abascal never undertook, coincidentally, as he asked for three consecutive extensions that allowed him to postpone his enlistment, until it was scrapped.

THE CLIMATE DENIER Marta Fernandez

Marta Fernandez is a 56-year-old lawyer who became Chairwoman in the government of Aragon last month.

Fernandez, from Zaragoza, be-

came infamous for her several tweets dismissing the existence of gender violence, the covid pandemic and, even, wait for it, climate change!

Indeed ‘gender violence does not exist,’ she insisted just two years ago, telling feminists ‘you are the granddaughters of the Christians, who kicked Muslims out of the Iberian Peninsula so you can now walk around topless in the street.’ Granddaughters, Marta? How well did you do at history?

Fernandez, who thinks climate change is invented, also thinks that the Covid-19 pandemic was a conspiracy.

“Wash your hands regularly, because the Government and media are responsible for brainwashing,’ she railed.

And of course, she is also against the LGBT movement and, predictably, defined the arrival of migrants as an ‘invasion.’

ANTI-ABORTIONIST Javier Ortega Smith

Javier Ortega Smith is one of the VOX founding members and most controversial characters.

Smith, a 54-year-old lawyer, became well-known in 2018 after swimming (yes splashing in the briny) to Gibraltar to erect a Spanish flag of 180 metres wide. “Gibraltar is Spain. Pirates out of the rock,” he later He also has an unserved arrest warrant, only effective in Gibraltar, for stealing a concrete block in British waters in 2014.

The councillor for VOX in Madrid, he was criticised for boycotting a minute of silence for the victims of gender violence by carrying a banner that said ‘gender has no violence.’

Smith, who will be number four in the Madrid list for the general election, also believes ‘abortion is not a right’.’ “A woman can decide what to do with her own body. She can decide what haircut she wants, her nail colour, or what to eat, but when you have created life, it is not your body, but an independent living being.”

WIFE-ABUSER

Carlos Flores

mother of his three children.

Sanchez himself is outright furious about it. He recently insisted: “It’s evil, it’s making use of the suffering of the victims without scruples nor principles.”

And ETA victims are equally unhappy. “The victims deserve to be treated with RESPECT,” wrote the sister of Gregorio Ordoñez, who was killed by ETA and heads up the victims association.

“Using a hashtag to trivialise the murder of so many innocent people, including my brother Gregorio, shows a lack of principles and how

unimportant we are,” she added. As for the man who carried the sign first using the phrase, no one has been able to track him down. But sources at El Confidencial claim he is a keen Vox supporter.

Whoever he was, he has created a slogan that has likely done untold damage to Pedro Sanchez and his electoral hopes.

As fellow politician, Pablo Iglesias, the former deputy prime minister and founder of Podemos, insisted: ‘the phrase has won the elections’.

Carlos Flores, who led the party’s list for the Parliament of the Valencian Community, was sentenced for gender violence in 2002.

Although many VOX members, including Marta Fernandez, don’t believe in gender violence, Flores was convicted for this offence as he ‘insulted, coerced and harassed’ his ex-wife, a staggering 21 times a court heard.

The 59-year-old was handed a prison sentence and given a threeyear restraining order against the

According to the court sentence, he once told her ‘I will be screwing you all your life until you die and I am done with you.’

Flores - who is also coincidentally a former member of pro-Franco party Fuerza Nueva - was forced to step down from the PP-VOX coalition for the Valencian Parliament because of his conviction…

However, it has not stopped leader Abascal placing him as number one in the list for the Valencian Community in the general election. Be careful what box you tick, fine people of Valencia!

July 13th - July 26th 2023 7
The polls put the conservative PP in the lead, but deals will likely have to be done with farright Vox in order to govern

THE Conservative opposition Partido Popular (PP) will create a National Water Authority to deal with Spain’s water supply issues for farmers and other sectors should it win the July 23 general election.

The proposal would provide ‘governance, investment, and management’ solutions to water problems right across Spain as the country grapples with the worst drought in decades.

A potential PP government would want a uniform approach to water policy and to do away with local governments coming up with ad hoc initiatives.

Its manifesto also talks about ‘the use of technologies to optimise resources’.

Despite opposition from some environmentalists, the party feels that defending farming and irrigation is a potential vote winner ahead of the snap

Climate goals

THE Spanish government has pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 32% of its levels in 1990, after receiving a backlash against the previous target of 23%.

The decision came after pressure from Greenpeace España, which has brought two lawsuits against Madrid demanding a 55% reduction of emissions.

They accused the government of failing to create a national climate strategy for the end of 2030 required by EU law.

The Spanish government countered they are not bound by law to meet a specific reduction percentage and the Ukraine invasion has led to a step back in climate change efforts.

election.

The PP, led by Alberto Nuñez Feijoo, wants the ‘participation and collaboration’ of the regional governments along with a ‘scientific and social consensus’ to set up the new national body.

It also aims to make the maintenance of irrigation for agriculture compatible with natural areas like the Doñana Natural Park, and those badly affected by farming overexploitation such as the Mar

The

Menor lagoon.

The commitment to irrigated crops is clear with the PP electoral programme: “We will promote a modern and sustainable irrigation, efficient in the use of water and energy, which generates an agriculture of greater added value and capacity to generate employment.”

It also mentions collaboration with the 17 regions and municipalities for a ‘more efficient’ use of water and fertilisers in irrigation and to modernise supply channels to cut water losses in distribution chan-

Cooling plant

nels.

The PP plan talks of ‘priority investments’ for sanitation, supply, and flood control, as well as ‘guaranteeing’ water needed for irrigation.

The proposal also refers to a plan to modernise the country’s infrastructures and to use resources to minimize flood and drought risks.

Over flooding the manifesto mentions the ‘prioritisation of restoring riverbeds, especially urban ones, which allow increasing the protection of people, property and the environment’.

ALICANTE is set to plant a swathe of new trees to help cool the city down.

The green areas are the brainchild of mayor Luis who wants to calm traffic in the Low Emission Zone (LEZ) .

The works on the Marva-Gadea axis are taking place until the end of the year, while works on the Paseo de los Martires de la Libertad will go on until September 4th.

Barcala also emphasised that trees that had been removed, including along Avenida de Jijona, were not gone for good but part of a tree replacement program.

“We are removing trees and replacing them with younger specimens. In fact, the 163 existing will be replaced by over 200.”

NOT FIRE….BUT ‘TYRE EXTINGUISHERS’

IT is quite amazing the way civil obedience can take on new formats.

Especially when it comes to climate protest. Get this.

There is an international climate direct action group called The Tyre Extinguishers.

They target SUV vehicles as this type of vehicle has disproportionately high carbon emissions. Their aim is to ban large 4x4 vehicles in the world’s urban areas.

ATTACK THE POSH/MIDDLE CLASS AREAS (all you need is a lentil and a leaflet) That’s what they say online, along with detailed instructions on how to stick a lentil or other type of pulse into the tyre valve of a car, then replace the cap, leaving it to bleed air overnight.

The activists / saboteurs then leave a leaflet on the windscreen with an explanation of why the owners have been targeted. The group is not the first to embrace this type of action .

Back in 2007 a Swedish group called ‘The Indians of the Asphalt Jungle’ targeted 1,500 SUVs. The Tyre Extinguishers kicked off last year and the movement is snowballing.

Last September the group claimed to have deflated over 600 tyres in the UK, France, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, the Czech Republic and Canada.

Last month direct action started in Australia.

The elegant upmarket zona de Sarrià in Barcelona was attacked last month.

The disciples of this group have now stepped their approach… many tyres are not just deflated, they are being slashed.

Vandalism in the name of climate action does not sit right with me.

The level of activity has increased since the lockdowns (Covid-19) have been lifted.

CHAOS IN MARBS

Just imagine the devastation that will happen if this movement takes hold in Marbella and Puerto Banus.

The Yummy Mummies will miss their Yoga classes. Mrs Oligarch will not get new nails.

Wayne will not be able to race between the speed bumps in his Wange Wover.

Oh dear, oh dear.

GREEN www.theolivepress.es July 13th - July 26th 2023 8 +34 951 120 830 | gogreen@mariposaenergia.es | www.mariposaenergia.es SOLAR PANELS GENERATE YOUR OWN ELECTRICITY Save Money • Save The Planet • Add Value To Your Home WATER VOTE WINNER?
PP hopes to win the agricultural vote
green energy company specialising in solar panel installations. Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es or call +34 638 145 664 Things you can do to reduce your carbon footprint
Martin Tye is the owner of Mariposa Energía, a Green Matters By Martin Tye ELEGANT: Upmarket areas targetted

SALTY: Lead ingots weighing 2,820 kg were found on board

World heritage bid for irrigation system

AN ancient Costa Blanca irrigation system is bidding for UNESCO world heritage status.

Orihuela council believes the ancient arabic watering network, which dates from the 13th and 14th century, deserves further protection.

In particular, the ancient Moquita and Pando water wheels in the Las Norias district, deserve support.

“We must value everything that makes up our traditional irrigation network because even after many hundreds of years, it still provides us with the most efficient use of water,” insisted mayor Pepe Vegara..

He added they were ‘unique’ and that most tourists were not aware of it.

“This is part of our culture, our history and our DNA,” he insisted.

RISING FROM THE BRINY

AN archaeological team has made an extensive survey of a 2,500-year-old Phoenician ship to work out the best way to extract it from the sea.

The Mazarron II is named after the town in Murcia, where it was found off the coast in 1994.

Eight metres in length it is regarded as the most complete ancient ship to

be discovered, but unless raised, it risks further damage from currents and storms.

The vessel was found largely intact with a cargo of lead ingots weighing 2,820 kilos.

A total of nine archaeologists have worked for

OP QUICK CROSSWORD

Ancient Phoenician ship surveyed for rescue bid

over a fortnight to log any cracks and fissures across the ship, which lies 60 metres from Mazarron's Playa de la Isla.

Later this year, the experts from Valencia University will recommend how to protect and retrieve the

wreck.

Its new home would be the National Museum of Marine Archaeology in Cartagena where Mazarron I - restored 30 years ago - is currently on display.

It was discovered by chance in 1988 during the construction of a new marina.

Historians have used the Mazarron II, probably made around 580 BC, to document how the Phoenicians shipped metals such as lead from the Iberian Peninsula.

After it sank, it remained buried in sediment for more than 2,000 years until changes in currents unearthed it in 1994.

It now lies under about 1.7 metres of water surrounded by sandbags and a metal structure built for protection.

The structure however is sinking into the sand at a faster pace than the wreck and threatened to crush it, so it was partially removed.

Pedro Valero, president of the 'Friends of the Twin Wheels' association said: “We are lucky to still have them due to the efforts of farmers over hundreds of years and they are the only examples of double waterwheels left in Spain.” He said he hopes that a new visitors centre being planned will finally come to fruition.

Music in the air

THE 135th edition of Valencia’s International Music Band Contest has started at the Palau de les Arts auditorium.

The competition, running until Sunday, involves 16 bands from as far away as Portugal and Columbia.

ACCIDENTAL FIND

A CORDOBA area farmer stumbled on a large ancient Roman artefact weighing three tons. He discovered the huge stone relic used for pressing olives, while uprooting an ancient olive tree. The mill stone is about 2,000 years old and it has a circular shape with three large grooves, possibly cracks, running down its side.

A circular track is carved into the top, giving it the appearance of an upside-down mushroom with its stalk cut too short.

These types of olive oil mills, known as a trapetum, originated in Greece and spread throughout the ancient Roman empire. It will be restored at Baena's Municipal Museum.

LA CULTURA July 13th - July 26th 2023 9
All solutions are on page 31 Across
Sandy shores (7)
Done at last! (5) 9 State of disgrace (5) 10 Musty rubbish (7) 11 Monastic life (8) 13 Social work gatherings (4) 15 Duration (4) 16 Relax (8) 19 Officer plays on cello (7) 20 Ransack (5) 22 Deadbeat (5) 23 Distinct sort or kind (7) Down
Where to find Timbuktu (4)
Capital of Bhutan (7)
Survey the top storey? (13)
Dog ends (5)
Run down apartment (8)
Faculties (6)
Plant flower (5)
Unidentified salesmen go berserk (8) 14 Protected (7) 15 Fishing gear (6) 17 Essentials (5) 18 Chemically unreactive (5) 21 Lay an egg (4) OP SUDOKU
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ANCIENT: Arabic watering network

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HEY! Getir going

HOME grocery delivery company Getir has announced that it plans to get rid of its entire workforce in Spain - barely two years after the Turkish firm began operations in the country.

1,560 Getir employees in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Zaragoza, Sevilla and Malaga are set to lose their jobs as the company begins discussions with unions. The redundancies will affect couriers, store and office staff.

MAÑANA MAÑANA

Jobs for life clocking off at 2pm: Spaniards prefer government jobs over entrepreneurship

A NEW survey seems to confirm what some might long have suspected: Spaniards prefer cushty government jobsfor-life over high-risk high-reward entrepreneurship.

The polling, conducted by Funcas, found that only a small minority of the Spanish public (13%) would advise a young person to become an

Terracotta Plan

entrepreneur and go into the private sector. Instead, over half would recommend young people to put their feet up in the public sector as civil servants.

The survey also reveals that 20% would advise young individuals to work as employees for others, 7% would suggest self-employment, and the remaining 13% were uncertain or opted for an alternative option.

The results surprised the researchers behind the study, Elisa Chuliá and Juan Carlos Rodríguez.

“It is striking that the proportion of respondents revealing a professional preference for the public sector exceeds the combined responses related to occupations in the private sector,” they said. They went on to speculate that preference for government jobs may be rooted in a perception of increasing uncertainty across various aspects

SME’s struggle

COSTS for SME have increased by 27% since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

And they crept up a further 2.2% in the first quarter of 2023.

A new report shows that labour costs have risen by 4.4% in the same period. This has been put down to increases in social security contributions and minimum wage.

But the main struggle for SMEs is linked to energy prices.

While electricity prices fell by 3.5% in the first quarter of the year, they are still 107.8% more expensive than two years ago.

SUMMER BOOST

TELEFONICA says it has ‘significantly reinforced’ its 5G phone coverage in nearly 500 Spanish coastal and inland tourist resorts to meet higher demand from summer tourists and avoid network saturation.

www.comparefuneral.org contact

of life, particularly in the last decade.

The public sector offers stability and shorter working hours - often clocking off at 2pm - in a time of economic insecurity. It is also more compatible with other responsibilities and appealing to the rising value of leisure time.

However, the researchers voiced concern about the findings.

“Is a society that overwhelmingly encourages its young people to work in the public sector forgetting that the income to pay these civil servants depends decisively on private sector businesses and workers generating sufficient wealth?”

The upgrade covers 442 coastal destinations all over the country, above all the regions of Andalucia, the Balearic Islands, the Canary Islands, the Valencian Community, Catalunya, Galicia, Cantabria and Asturias, as well as 56 inland localities, some with less than 1,000 inhabitants.

Telefonica has also followed rival Orange in launching a 5G standalone service in more than 700 parts of Spain. It means that customers with compatible devices in served areas will be able to browse the internet at speeds of up to 1.6 Gbps and access far lower latencies at no additional cost.

Going down Good job

INFLATION in Spain has dipped to below 2% for the first time since March 2021, according to provisional June figures published by the National Statistics Institute. Inflation fell by more than one percentage point in June, reaching 1.9% year-on-year, down from 3.2% in May, with fuel, electricity and food price increases easing. The June inflation rate puts Spain in a better place than most of its neighbours within the eurozone, where inflation reached 6.1% year-on-year in May.

It’s a significant change from a year ago when inflation in Spain hit 10.8% in July 2022- its highest level since 1985.

Electric incentive

SPAIN will pay back up to 15% of income tax to people who buy an electric vehicle before the end of the year in a bid to encourage sustainable driving. The maximum income tax deduction would be €20,000.

“The aim is to place Spain at the forefront of Europe’s rollout of electric vehicles,“ said Economy Minister Nadia Calviño.

IN more great news for the purring Spanish economy, the jobless total has fallen by over 50,000, to 2,688,842 in June.

It is at its lowest level since 2008, just before the financial crash.

Government figures show that 54,541 new workers were registered in the Social Security system, making a total of 20,869,940 - the highest number ever. And unemployment among people under 25 also fell by 3,552 last month, leaving the number at a new low of 184,491.

“These data are very positive,” Yolanda Diaz, Spain’s Ministry of Labour said. She insisted: “Unemployment has been reduced in all sectors and in every region of the country.”

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FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

RUN!

SAN Fermin is back once again and madder than ever.

The scenes in Pamplona on the eve of the festival were a sight to behold as the main square and every single balcony were packed with cheering sanfermineros. There was not an inch to move among

This year’s brave - or barmy - San Fermin participants take their turns to run with the bulls

a sea of red scarves as the president of Osasuna, Pamplona’s football club, gave the opening address from a balcony.

The festival is running from Friday July 7 until Saturday the following week.

Each morning at 8am six fighting bulls are released along with four oxen to

run the 825 metres route from the Corrales de Santo Domingo to Pamplona’s Plaza de Toros. So far the escapades have already seen 26 runners hurt at the time of writing. Here are some of the best pics of the action so far…

To kick things off, visitors wearing the traditional San Fermin white t-shirt and red handkerchief eagerly crowd around the gates where the bulls are being released. Eager participants hold their hand out in hopes of touching the bulls as they run past.

A bull runner doesn't dare look back as a bull barrels toward him. It is virtually impossible to run the whole 850 metres of the encierro. Instead, participants choose a section of it when the bulls are threateningly close and then run for their lives to stay in front of the horns.

Some fiesta-goers walk a pedestrian 'car' through the crowded streets of Pamplona. For San Fermin, the roads shut down and the fiesta pours out from every corner. The festivities are non-stop from sun-up to sun-down for seven days in July.

Taking rather a lot of care, participants run alongside the bulls, looking back to avoid being gored on the raging bull horns. Since 1910, 16 people have died and hundreds are injured annually.

The four angry bulls part the sea of runners with their horns. As well as the dangers of getting hooked by a horn, sprinters run the risk of being trampled by the 600kg animals—or stampeded by their fellow frightened runners.

A view of the bull runners from an Estafeta Street balcony. Spectators can rent space on a balcony, catch the finish at the bullring, or watch from the start, where the nervous runners sing the traditional “A San Fermín pedimos" before the bulls are released.

TIME TO CHILL

AS the weather heats up, nothing is more enticing than spending time in the water to cool down.

For those looking for a change from busy, sweaty beaches, there are dozens of natural bathing spots around inland Spain.

Be they rivers, reservoirs or man-made pools, they offer an amazing alternative and usually with scenic views and a decent walk around them.

These naturally-forming hideaways, most within an hour or so of the coast, offer visitors the ability to not only

ABARAN

Change your cool down routine in Spain with these ten inland natural swimming spots, writes

swim, but also participate in watersports or hiking.

From adventure seekers to those just wanting to take a dip to cool down, there are so many options from Andalucia to Valencia.

SALTO DEL USERO, BULLAS

LOCATED on the bank of the Segura River, the dams and shallow water in this area offer the perfect atmosphere for those wanting to cool off and simply wade in the water. This area is a popular rest stop for cannoneers and others participating in water sports in the main river but is also a great family-friendly option.

BERCOLON WATERFALL, CASERIO LOS FELIPES

THIS waterfall on the outskirts of Tuejar is situated underneath a naturally forming rock bridge where those who are more experienced with rock climbing can abseil down the canyon to directly access the water. Otherwise, visitors can walk down the rocks in order to enjoy a more private swimming experience.

POR CLAR, ONTINYENT

LOCATED three kilometers from the center of Ontinyent, this river consists of multiple pools with varying lengths. It can only be accessed on foot, bike, or by free bus service that runs from the local sports center on the weekends, but its clear waters and waterfalls make the area worth the journey.

Due to its popularity, you must book your reservation in advance in July and August here.

TURIA RIVER PARK, TURIA

LOCATED in the town of Bullas beside the Mula River, this natural pool area has several waterfalls and walkways for those wanting to explore the above canyons after a swim.

During the summer season (June 29th to September 2nd), access is limited and guests must reserve a trip here prior to visiting. Reservations are not required during the other seasons.

This large 27 kilometer river runs alongside a forest track, making it an excellent place to swim, go tubing, or participate in other water activities. It can be accessed through any of the Valencia municipalities through which the river passes and does not get too crowded due to the multiple entrance points.

GORGO DE LA ESCALERA, ANNA

NEAR the village of Anna, you can directly access this natural pool from the car park by taking stairs that descend into the water. Apart from the pool, visitors can see the area's large waterfalls by walking the

“route of the three waterfalls,” which begins in the village.

You can see the natural attractions throughout the year but in the summer it costs two euros per person due to council regulations.

FOOD,DRINK
July 13th - July 26th 2023 12
& TRAVEL
VALENCIA
EL JARRAL,
PIC CREDIT: FlickrWater Alternatives Photos PIC CREDIT: FlickrPablo SG

MURCIA

FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

SOMOGIL THERMAL POOL, MORATALLA

MAJACEITE RIVER TRAIL, BENAMAHOMA TO EL BOSQUE

THE upper part of the Majaceite River between El Bosque and Benamahoma is found in the heart of the Grazalema Natural Park, in Cadiz, and offers one of the most magical midsummer walks.

Mostly in the shade, the walk follows the course of the river, criss-crossing it with bridges. But best of all - with a dozen fantastic places to jump in for a swim.

Even better, there are superb restaurants for a cool, shady lunch at either end, in particular in Benamahoma.

CANON DE LAS BUITRERAS, CORTES DE LA FRONTERA, MALAGA

THIS hidden wonder in the town of Moratalla is for those looking to still enjoy a warmer atmosphere while swimming, this natural pool contains warm water from inside the earth. Its waterfall and surrounding vegetation create an oasis that is covered in shade.

AN official natural monument since 2003, this canyon makes for an adventurous swimming spot due to the Guadiaro river that runs through it, with its winding watercourse and vertical stone banks more than 100 meters in height. Visitors here can easily transition from swimming, to hiking and to canoeing. Due to its occasional fast-moving water, visitors are advised to wear a full wetsuit, to really enjoy the water.

July 13th - July 26th 2023 13
ANDALUCIA

2. Disfrutar, Barcelona

MODERN techniques and personal talents come together in Disfrutar’s gastronomic experience.

Set up by the trio of chefs, Mateu Casañas, Oriol

Castro and Eduard Xatruch, it sits behind a typical tapas joint, unfolding into a cavernous space behind. This is the first of ‘many surprises’ in what the judges describe as some of the ‘world’s most modish dishes’.

Punters experience the classic tasting menu,

3. Diverxo, Madrid

THE bold, rule-breaking flavours by chef Dabiz Muñoz are part of a greater, more marvellous story.

Immersed in a fantasy-world of outlandish decor, staff dressed in punky uniforms serve a range of stunning, creative dishes. For foodies, the DiverXO experience makes dreams feel tame. Passing through the hands of five or six chefs before plating, the gastronomy follows Muñoz’s love for avant-garde art from conception to completion – he describes the experience as ‘something like the Cirque du Soleil’.

which takes four hours, with its wine pairing options.

Playing with shapes, textures, and flavours, Disfrutar’s experimental style has earned it two Michelin stars and its place as Europe’s best restaurant.

TOP OF THE WORLD

Spain has officially ground down its rivals to once again prove it’s the global dining capital, insists Jon Clarke

WITH a trio of restaurants in the World’s Top Five, it’s fair to say that Spain is still leading the way in the kitchen.

The three long-time competitors have been jostling for their positions in the prestigious 50 Best list since 2019… but it’s the first time they all made it so high. Indeed, it’s the first time for over a decade that a trio of Spanish joints have dominated the top five in the 50 Best poll.

IN the small village of Axpe in the Basque region, the asador is a total contrast to its rivals on the list, favouring simplicity over experimentation. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t magic and his place has become a true destination restaurant noteworthy for its grill techniques.

Chef Victor Arguinzoniz’s more than 30 years of experience with ‘fire cooking’ contributes to his traditional approach and meticulous style –every dish that exits the kitchen is given his signature touch.

The restaurant thrives off local produce and elevating ingredients by highlighting their natural flavours.

20. Quique Dacosta, Denia 22. Elkano, Getaria

and when it shut they set up together in 2014.

JUST two years after he began his career as a chef in 1986, at just 16 years of age, Quique Dacosta began working at a restaurant that would later share his name. His food takes an artistic approach to the geographies and cuisines of the Mediterranean and nearby Montgo Natural Park. Putting Valencian cuisine very much on the map, his respect for nature — the roots of the restaurant — comes forth in every bite.

You have to go back to 2010 when legendary El Bulli, Mugaritz and Cellar de Can Roca were in the top five. The trio this year - Disfrutar, Diverxo and Asador Etxeberri - have been consistently leading the charge creatively for decades.

The team at Disfrutar, at number two, fittingly worked together under Ferran Adria’s incredible guiding eye at El Bulli from the late 1990s

AT this incredibly picturesque spot, Aitor Arregi uses his method of whole-grilling fish over a wood fire as the foundation of his flavour.

Playing off Getaria’s gastronomic heritage, this method of cooking has become an integral part of the town’s cuisine and a tradition for Arregi, whose father, Pedro, opened the first Elkano back in 1964. There is a distinct emphasis on sustainability and the local connection is reflected within the dishes and maritime decor.

AT Mugaritz, presentation is anthropomorphic in the most intimate and wondrous ways. Take the dish ‘heart that does not feel’ which is a flat, almost 2D slice of meat with ribbons of fat representing the aorta.

Mugaritz has long taken a phil-

64. Aponiente, Cadiz

At Diverxo, Dabiz Muñoz and his exwife even slept on the floor of their legendary food factory so dedicated were they to getting their first Michelin star.

While at Etxeberri, Victor Arguinzoniz just did his own thing on his rustic Basque grill for 30 years as he slowly found the world starting to beat a wooden spoon to his door.

But there is more. In the 50 Best list

osophical approach to food thanks to its intellectual chef Andoni Luis Aduriz. He’s probably now one of the world’s most boundary-pushing cooks and has been in the 50 Best list for well over a decade.

CHEF Ángel León is recognized as “The Chef of the Sea” for utilising ingredients from the Mediterranean and Atlantic sea in his evolving menus.

The current rendition, based on the infinite sea, commits to sustainability and new techniques. Even in the dessert section, the restaurant blends together traditional sweets with seafood.

82. Enigma, Barcelona

ENIGMA uses seasonal ingredients in their monthly menus and offers different wine experiences. The finishing touches on the meals are added right at the table so guests can witness the ever changing techniques.

this year Spain once again has six revolutionary restaurants… with Valencia’s Quique Dacosta very much back in the limelight, Elkano picked for its amazing use of turbot (and other fish) and Mugaritz, thanks to the legendary Andoni Luis Aduriz, Spain’s genius extraordinaire! And finally, four more restaurants make the Top 100 meaning 10% of the world’s best places to eat are in Spain. Here the Olive Press tells you everything you need to know about them:

81. Azurmendi, Biscay

AZURMENDI’S emphasis on sustainabili ty has contributed to its standout rela tionship with its environment, including its use of new technologies to develop dishes.

96. Ricard Camarena Restaurant, Valencia

THE different proposals offered here emphasis utilising every part of an ingredient, with menus based on homegrown vegetables that are added to sauces and even drinks.

A NOSE FOR SUCCESS

DIVERXO’S Miguel Ángel Millán has been voted the Beronia World’s Best Sommelier of 2023.

Millán has been working in the restaurant since 2019, expanding the wine cellar to include rare sakes, amongst other wines, and creating two pairing menus to complement Diverxo’s unique culinary experience.

After graduating top of his class in sommelier training, he gained experience at Spain’s Santceloni and Kabuki, a Japanese fusion restaurant. His acclaim is in part due to his dedication and perseverance as he often travels across the world in search of specific vintage wines.

In the dining room, his connection with diners allows him to meet their needs and cater to their experiences.

The award recognizes individuals who demonstrate knowledge of the craft and excellent customer service, showing how influential Millán has become in the dining world.

July 13th - July 26th 2023 14
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
31. Mugaritz, San Sebastian 4. Asador Etxebarri, Atxondo

Rescued from afar

AN 86-YEAR-OLD woman was rescued by police after her son called police from Belgium worrying why she wasn’t answering the phone.

Rojales police found the woman lying on the floor and unable to get up after she suffered a fall. She had been laid prone on the floor for two days with no access to food or water.

While there were no keys to get indoors, officers got in through a kitchen window and requested medical support. Paramedics stabilised her condition before she was taken to Torrevieja Hospital.

Last month, police in Torrevieja rescued a woman, 78, who fell out of bed and spent three days lying on the floor.

Help ourchildren

Authorities to take action as suicide rates among Spain’s teens soars

WITH rates of suicide creeping up alarmingly among teens in Spain, school teachers are being trained in techniques to support at-risk youth.

The move has been driven by the shocking statistic that 2022 saw 84 young adults take their own life, according to the INE - the highest rate since records began.

OP Puzzle solutions

Quick Crossword

Across: 7 Beaches, 8 There, 9 Odium, 10 Cobwebs, 11 Monkhood, 13 Bees, 15 Time, 16 Unbutton, 19

Colonel, 20 Rifle, 22 Loser, 23 Species.

Down: 1 Mali, 2 Thimphu, 3 Psychoanalyse, 4 Stubs, 5 Tenement, 6 Senses, 7 Bloom, 12 Nameless, 14

Guarded, 15 Tackle, 17 Needs, 18 Inert, 21 Fail.

The soaring rate at which young people have reported an increase in feelings of loneliness, situations of violence or abuse, and depression are thought to be contributing factors.

Psychologists with the Educational Inspectorate are deliv-

ering the training which it is hoped will reverse this worrying trend.

All of the autonomous communities in Spain currently have suicide pre vention plans in public and private school environ ments as required by the law. These plans involve telling students about risk factors and warn ing signs, and em ploying specific measures for those who have exhibited suicidal tendencies.

However, psychologists adamant that in order to make an impact within schools, the education system needs to incorporate professionals trained in prevention strategies within schools.

War on mozzies

VALENCIA City’s pest control unit has been kept busy with 118 complaints about tiger mosquitoes in June alone.

The Patraix, Pobles del Sud and Quatre Carreres districts have seen the most interventions, with June the busiest month so far.

Leading psychology authorities, including the General Council of Psychology of Spain and The Official College of Psychology of Madrid, have been fighting to create the role of educational psychologist in all of the autonomous communities.

Currently, it has only been implemented in eight of the 17.

Another plan being proposed is the creation of a ‘student helper’ role across the community. Students chosen for this are given the respon - sibility of watching out for warning signs amongst their peers as asrisk adolescents usually seek support from a trusted peer prior to an authority figure.

Visits to areas infested by mosquitoes involve a sweep of a radius of around 150 metres to eradicate the pest.

The unit works all year in the constant battle against the insect, with ditches and marshes of lakes inspected during the winter, as well as regular inspections of urban areas that are regarded as sensitive.

Guidance

They include hospitals, health centres, transportation centres, and landscaped areas that have a historical presence of mosquitoes.

The council has been running the ‘Door to Door’ project since 2019 where neighbourhood associations, owner communities, and any individual resident can request information and training on the fight against tiger mosquitoes. The pest control unit also runs educational talks and workshops as well as distributing guidance to anybody who requests it.

HEALTH July 13th - July 26th 2023

In case you missed it

CONTRARY to all perceptions, last month was actually the second-rainiest June of the 21st century, according to Aemet.

Dead body

A GROUP of kids in Cantabria fulfilled the plot of many an 80s movie by stumbling across a dead body while playing around in an abandoned wasteland.

Tone deaf

THE speaker in the Congress of Deputies, Meritxell Batet, was forced to apologise for claiming that ‘most of the population has no problem paying their rent’.

O P LIVE RESS The

KISSED OFF

A BRAD Pitt fan suffered anguish after her dream of starring in a movie with the Hollywood icon turned out to be a very expensive fraud.

The middle aged Granada woman was wooed by a charming con man, posing as the A-lister, into an online relationship that ended up costing her €170,000.

The victim joined a Brad Pitt fan club on social media and, over the course of exchanges

BUS TO HELL

Heartbreak for Brad Pitt fan scammed out of fortune by smooth-talking imposter

with an online figure, began to believe that she was actually in direct contact with the actor himself.

The fake Brad Pitt sent her images of his alleged attendance

at red carpet premieres and even some photos with a message addressed directly to the money to fund the bogus production costs.

woman. He even made grand promises that he would come to Spain and make a movie with her, if she would just transfer him

Look but don’t touch

BEACHES along Spain’s east coast are reporting strange fried eggs appearing in their waters - but not ones you would be advised to eat.

Thousands of jellyfish that resemble huevos fritos have been appearing in increasing numbers, according to authorities. Warmer temperatures are thought to have caused the proliferation of this unique species.

And although bathers won't enjoy spotting one of them, it should be noted their sting has little or no effect on humans, at most mild burning sensation and irritation of the skin. Handily, the Spanish Ministry of Ecology recommends washing the affected area with sea water - something which should not be hard to find.

The woman's lawyer, Antonio Estella Aroza, said that the fraudster gained the 'trust, friendship and even the love of the victim' with a relationship that became almost like that of a couple.

However, over time the victim began to realise that the man’s promises were not materialising and that perhaps something was off. The penny eventually dropped for the fan, who instigated legal proceedings after she realised she had been scammed out of a six figure sum. Her solicitor has filed a legal complaint for fraud, identity theft, and money laundering, but no arrest has been made.

VETERAN rockers Kiss have been playing to adoring crowds in their trademark black-andwhite face paint and outlandish costumes since 1973. But the curtain was pulled away a little when the members of the band were snapped heading to their gig in Cartagena on an Alsa bus.

The scene - with Gene Simmons and company in full regalia looking bored - went a little way to puncturing the image of the septuagenarian rock gods.

Booze blast

DRIVERS on the AP-7 in the Valencia region were treated to raining beer. But they were too busy dodging the exploding kegs on the back of a beer lorry to get out and try to catch a slurp.

The lorry had caught fire along the motorway between Corbera and Llauri and the barrels were blasting out the back as far as the opposite carriageway. Thankfully no one was injured in the incident but tragically a lot of beer went to waste.

FINAL WORDS We use recycled paper REuse REduce REcycle FREE Vol. 4 Issue 94 www.theolivepress.es July 13th - July 26th 2023
COSTA BLANCA SUR / MURCIA

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