OLIVE PRESS
The FREE
Vol. 6 Issue 174
www.theolivepress.es
June 1st - June 14th 2022
U -T U R
N
Olive Press campaign demands urgent action to restore driving rights to thousands
In for life
A BRITISH paedophile who the Olive Press revealed had changed his name by deed poll to forge legal documents to find work as a teacher in Spain has been sentenced to 138 years in prison by a court in Madrid. Ben David Rose was handed the jail term after being found guilty of proEstepona ducing child OLIVE pornography P RES S involving 36 children SCHOOLS after lying PAEDO his way into CALL one of Madrid’s most prestigious private schools. The case raised seFLASHBACK: Our rious safeexclusive guarding 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 where he found work as an au pair and then as an English teacher in several schools in the capital. The 32-year-old had in 2016 been convicted of sex crimes against children while running a summer camp in the UK when he used the name he was born with Ben David Lewis. In an investigation carried out by the Olive Press last year, it emerged that within days of being handed a suspended sentence and placed on the sex offenders list he changed his name by deed poll from Ben Lewis to Ben David, applied for a new passport and fled to Spain. With a new name and passport he was able to pass criminal record checks which he used alongside doctored education diplomas to gain employment, first at a well known English academy, followed by a teaching role at a bilingual concertado and finally at an expensive British syllabus private school in Madrid’s upmarket Arturo Soria, where he was arrested in June, 2020. Police were tipped off to the presence of a ‘dangerous sexual predator’ working in Madrid schools after an investigation by police in Australia into the online sexual exploitation of children identified that someone in Madrid was making and distributing images.
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THE UK’s leading child tion group is calling for protectighten the recruitmentSpain to process of English teachers. The plea by The Safeguarding Alliance aims to protect country against a British the legal 25 EGAP RATS GNINIHS - ’RATS NILEHCIM TSRIF YM HTIW DEYOJREVO‘ egaugnal-hsilgnE ylno dna lanigiro ehT aículadnA ni repapswen evitagitsevni
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Vol. 15 Issue 365 www.theolivepress.es March 24th - April 6th 2021
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THE START: The first edition of the Olive Press in 2006
15 YEARS OF FUN
As the Olive Press reaches its 15th birthday, we recall a few of our favourite interviews and remember a couple of our top readers, such as ex-prime minister Rajoy (above) and prime joker Paul Gascoigne...
EXCLUSIVE: Private school warning after a convicted British paedophile moved to Spain, dodged criminal record checks and found work as an English teacher
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INTERNATIONAL schools around Spain have been put on high alert after a British man began teaching at one of Madrid’s most exclusive colleges months after being convicted in the UK. Questions have been raised after Ben Lewis, 31, was able to work at the school despite being on the UK’s sex offenders register. The Olive Press has discovered that Lewis, who is now awaiting trial for child sex offences at Centro Penitenciario Madrid V, managed to hoodwink TWO schools and a
NAMES: two different passports
Fiona Govan in Madrid
language academy after creating a new identity, using forged documents. Former colleagues of the sex offender revealed that he created a new name to dodge criminal record checks in order to run summer camps and teach private classes to young children. He had changed his name to Ben David after being convicted in June 2016 of taking and possessing indecent images of children in England. As well as being placed on the sex offender list and being handed a two-year suspended sentence, he was barred from leaving the country or working with children. Yet within weeks he had moved to Spain and found work in Zaragoza as a livein au pair to a family with three young children. The following year he relocated to Madrid and began teaching children at a well-known language academy after getting a criminal record check from Zaragoza police to show he had no convictions in Spain over the previous 12 months. Then in December
DANGER: Lewis got teaching post
2017 he accepted a job as an English teacher at a leading semi-private (concertado) secondary school that receives subsidies from the state. “He was going by the name Ben David by then and was offered the job after another teacher dropped out mid-term,” a former colleague Natasha Fitzsimons told the Olive Press. “I think they were desperate to fill the position so maybe they weren’t as thorough as they should have been.
Horrified
“We worked together at the school for 18 months, took on private classes together going to the homes of some of the children for extracurricular teaching and ran a summer camp at the school during 2018,” said the Irish colleague, who is filled with horror at the access he had to children. The Olive Press has discovered that the day after sentencing in the UK he changed his name by deed poll from Ben David Lewis to Ben David, in a process that takes just 15 minutes. He then applied for and received a British passport in his new name, while he also presented a doctored photocopy of his Israeli passport stamped and verified by a non-existent law firm that showed his name as Ben David Rose. The Olive Press has seen photocopies of these, plus a teaching degree and Qualified Teaching Status (QTS) certificates presented in the name of Ben David Rose as well as certificates in his original name. What is amazing is that by April 2019 he had applied for a teaching job at a leading private school in the upmarket Arturo Soria district that teaches the British curriculum to the children of Madrid’s elite. By now he also had a DBS certificate
...meanwhile, we spend time at the home of the world’s most famous plumber as he announces he’s becoming a Spanish citizen, after 15 years here and losing €15m to his ex-wives...
EXCLUSIVE: OP splash Award Winning Rehabilitation Clinic
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ROM its very first issue in 2006 the Olive Press has been paigning for its community. camWhether fighting for the environment or digging into crooks, we have taken some big scalps. Starting from Issue One (see top right) we highlighted the ridiculous plans to build 2000 houses, two golf courses and two hotels on UNESCO-protected land near Ronda, as well A decade and a half of campaigning the madness of building as exposed has a 350-room scored some big wins for monstrosity on a virgin beach the Olive Press in Almeria’s Cabo de Gata. Both schemes - Los Merinos, in Ron- maverick Jeremy Griffiths, and Nigel When da, and the Algarrobico it comes to corruption hotel, in Alme- Goldman, a degenerate gold-dealing ria - went into reverse after the first English newspaper we were legends Ferran dirt-bag, to write Adria made the UK AND Spanishour stories in a localwho had a restaurant column about the ERE scandal at the Junta and Gordon Ramsey. newspaper, which he used national newspapers and green to de Andalucia that cost an estimated And it was nice to chat groups includ- cover his tracks. ing Greenpeace and Ecologistas billion euros en Ac- We also tackled timeshare crook Toni also tackled to the taxpayers, while we to Ciudadanos leader cion joined our protests. town hall theft on a local Albert Rivera, as well Muldoon, who certainly deserves a scale on dozens of occasions. And then there were the as the only newspaper crooks, like mention for conning thousands of Crimestoppers’ Most Wanted peo- Animal Daniel ple and eventually went to prison for bugbearcruelty has been a continual to be able to pose a Johnston, a bank robber, and we have exposed couple of questions to setting up fake escort websites. Sammon, a dangerous and Matthew Meanwhile, evil abusers, as well as the so many Michelle Obama scoundrels our crime reporting on her who we single-handedly paedophile, missing who teen Amy Fitzpatrick ‘blew on circusallowed hunters to kill innocent visit to Marbella a few to a village near Sevilla tracked down the case’, open lions and tigers at a finca and a car park to use the words of her grand- tremadura in Ex- years ago. in Fuengirola. (see below). Indeed, the positives mother, while our continuing And fraudsters like David investiga- On a more positive front, far outweigh the neg‘the dogman’ tion into missing Maddie McCann it Klein, pet transport has to interview everyone from was great atives and yielded exclusive after exclusive, with its ana’s ex-lover James HewettPrincess Di- prefer to bewe would frequent links to Spain. to cooking judged over 50 rather than the 15 years. As far as we are concerned we have only just begun.
C O ST
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...and our team of long-term writers, recall their decade and a half living in the world’s most exciting country. See pull-out inside.
OU
Opinion Page 6
Continues on Page 4
El Horrible opens While Brits’ dream home is demolished in Almeria
Selling Euros?
IMPACT: Tracking down covering the devastatingcrooked Nigel Goldman (above) and Costa del Sol fire in 2012
Here’s to the next 15!
On behalf of all at the British Embassy and Consulates, I want to wish huge congratulations at the to all Olive Press on your 15th anniversary. The English language press plays a vital role in keeping nationals in Spain informed. UK we very much appreciate And your help in getting key messages out to UK nationals here. After an incredibly difficult year for so many of us, including many businesses, it is great to see the Olive Press thriving. We look forward to seeing what the next 15 years bring. BRITISH CONSUL CHARMAINE ARBOUIN
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OLIVE PRESS EXCLUSIV investigation leads E to child protection plea from United Kingdom charity
By Fiona Govan
he photographed and filmed. in Madrid there is an He then disseminated the sick Spain to lead opportunity for material on paedo the way in tackloophole that has allowed po- the dark web aroundforums on ling it at a global level,” she said. tentially hundreds of the world. Her charity British Emily Konstantas, wants Spain to inpaedophiles to find work in The Safeguarding CEO of troduce the need to present an Spanish schools. Alliance, original birth applauded the Olive Press certificate alongThe campaign follows for side vestigation by the Olivean in- highlighting the issue: “The recorda passport and criminal checks that would allow that revealed how easy Press Ben Lewis case as revealed by potential it was the Olive Press employers to unearth for a convicted UK sex offender highlights loophole and as shockingthis a change of identity. to change his identity and as “It’s a simple way find this is, it is nothing to provide work as a teacher in new and that Madrid schools where several unfortunately represents just “The extra check,” she insisted. severity and danger this arrested for abusing at he was the tip of the iceberg as to the loophole least 36 magnitude of presents to the whole children. this problem.” world cannot be underestimatDANGER: Lewis got She warned: “Whilst the teaching post, with quo remains in situ this status ed.” help Criminal of ‘fake’ papers icant and very dangeroussignif- An extensive report by The We reported how Ben Lewis, guarding loophole will safe- Safeguarding Alliance is being contin- used to lobby very serious crimes,” states 31, ue to had changed his name the pose UK parlia- report, the a threat, not seen by the Olive Press. poll, applied for a newby deed UK Nationals, but to the just to ment for a legal change in the British the rest Through extensive research passport, and dodged criminal world putting children of management of sex offenders. and It explains case law The Safeguarding and record checks despite being those most vulnerable Alliat risk,” system relies how the current ance has identified on she warned. the UK’s sex offenders register. on the registered that offenders are sex offender to notify Police in Spain issued “There the po- and arenot notifying as required a state- dreds are potentially hun- lice with details continuing to abuse chilment last week describing of any - if not thousands - of change, alongside any name dren by changing their names is - or Ben David Rose, Lew- known sex offenders change and obfuscating slipping of address and as he is under their identities now known - as ‘a dangerous passport inforthe radar in the as seen through the case child sexual predator’. seek work abroad whereUK to mation. Lewis/Rose absconding of Ben The National Police said can continue to abuse they “Currently the onus lies solely chil- with the offender seas to continue to abuse. overhad used his position as that he dren,” she continued. and although it is an offence to er at private schools in a teach- “This loophole is arguably the one could argue fail to notify, to gain access to childrenMadrid biggest safeguarding Undermined scandal terrent as the this is not a dewhom the offender world has ever seen and has the propensity to already “As a result, the effectiveness commit of important legislation, Sex Offenders Register, the the Child Sex Offender Disclosure IN the United Kingdom a Scheme, the Domestic person does not need to follow an official process failure to so is a criminal Disclosure Scheme, the Violence offence which could DBS are name, but they require a to start using a new result in a term not exceeding undermined and effectively ‘deed poll’ to apply for five years imprisor to change official documents onment. dered redundant,” it states. rensuch as a new However, passport. “The case of Ben Lewis/Rose evidence demonstrates that not every This can be done simply registered sex offender will highlights why Spain should act with honesty and little or no cost in a processand easily online for report a change of name aware of this very serious be that takes no longer The as required. than 15 minutes to process Safeguarding Alliance discovered guarding loophole and safeand can even be Freedom through completed from a prison pioneer an international should of Information Under section 84 of the cell. UK’s 46 police forces requests to 16 of the ment to protect its childrenmove2003, an offender must Sexual Offences Act of offence convictions that 913 people with sex those abusers who slip from report a name change had gone missing after within three working days changing their names the radar using the name under without informing the to the police, and police. change loophole,” Konstantas added. Puede verificar este documento en https://sede.mjusticia.gob.es Código Seguro de Verificación SD:Lzou-Jz3F-aZYs-CcBb Juego de caracteres del Código Seguro de Verificación: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789-$:
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reipaN anoI :OTOHP
MINISTERIO DE JUSTICIA
REGISTRO CENTRAL DE DELINCUENTES SEXUALES
Gerente Territorial en ZARAGOZA
CERTIFICA:
Que, en el día de la fecha, consultada la Base de Datos del Registro Central de Delincuentes Sexuales, NO CONSTA información penal relativa a: D./Dª BEN DAVID ROSE con Pasaporte nº 22807454
Conforme a lo dispuesto en la Decisión Marco 2009/315/JAI del Consejo de 26 de febrero, relativa a la organización y al contenido del intercambio de información de los registros de antecedentes penales entre los Estados miembros, tratándose de ciudadanos españoles, el presente certificado incluye, en su caso, las condenas impuestas por otros Estados miembros de la Unión Europea, en los mismos términos en que tales condenas hayan sido notificadas, sin que exista necesariamente una equiparación entre los tipos delictivos del Estado de condena y los tipos delictivos nacionales.
El presente certificado refleja la situación del titular interesado/a en la fecha
de su expedición.
Zaragoza a 29 de agosto de 2017
Signature Not Verified
Documento firmado electrónicamente
Pagina 1 de 1 Ref: 00003143792/2017
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licence in the nick of time, his wife was left out in the cold and can no longer legally drive here. So angry was the lawyer, who cence others were bogged down moved here from Surrey a few by paperwork issues. years ago, that he has had diA series of three extensions to rect contact with UK transport give expats more time came to secretary Grant Shapps over the an end on April 30. debacle. Marbella lawyer Mark Wilkins, He told the Olive Press: “It’s exfrom ROS Abogados, came un- cellent you are doing this camstuck after believing that com- paign which I fully support. mon sense would prevail, as it “I have great respect for your pahas in many other EU countries. per and its campaigning, but you While he was able to transfer his will need the help of your friends at the embassy to THE SKY push this DOCTOR through. Go on ALL AREAS and kick ‘em!” COVERED He does however, 4G UNLIMITED remain INTERNET f a i r l y optimisIDEAL FOR tic and STREAMING TV during his conALSO versaIPTV, t i o n s SATELLITE TV By George Mathias
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THE Olive Press is launching a campaign to demand a U-turn in draconian new rules stopping thousands of British expats from driving in Spain. We have been sparked into action after hearing dozens of horror stories involving long-term residents around the country. Most were shunted into the hard shoulder after receiving poor advice from lawyers and gestors. They include pensioners, who have lived here for decades, employees of blue chip companies and even British lawyers, who were unable to get clear advice. The Olive Press’ very own salesperson Tina Brace has also become a victim, despite living here for 24 years. “A combination of Spain’s infamous bureaucracy and impenetrable laws has left far too many people prejudiced,” said Olive Press editor Jon Clarke. “We intend to put pressure on the powers that be in both the UK and Spain to try and get this rule changed.” The problem came about after years of discussions regarding the right for British expats to swap their licences over to Spanish ones. It started after a Brexit transition period begun in January 2020. The apparently straightforward exchange was made more complicated however, due to the confusing rules, which varied by region… and of course the pandemic. While some expats were able to simply turn up and swap their li-
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with Shapps he was told the problem would be ‘resolved shortly’ and that talks were ‘reasonably advanced’. “They seem to have their legs under the table,” he said, but insisted that no deal was ‘imminent’. “I feel a bit impotent and not sure what else I can do,” he added. The British Embassy meanwhile remained upbeat. “We are hopeful that an agreement will be reached in the coming weeks and remain fully committed to making this happen,” said a spokesperson.
Gaffe
She insisted it was untrue that the Spanish authorities had dynamited a deal because the UK refused to give access to its vehicle database to chase up holidaymakers with unpaid fines. The Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, which is responsible for the gaffe, refused to comment.
Tel: 952 147 834 TM
Naked
In a trial that began in early May the court heard how the defendant who used the name ‘Ben David’ and ‘Ben David Rose’ first gained employment as an au pair caring for three young See Page 5 children in Zaragoza. He photographed the children naked, photoOpinion Page 6 shopped images of his own genitals into the shot, and posted them on the dark web. He also took sexual photographs of some 30 students under his care at a private school in Madrid, See page 16 often by ‘upskirting’ – secretly filming up their skirts – and uploading them onto child porn sites.
2
CRIME
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NEWS IN BRIEF Shooting hoops THE Marbella Netball Club summer tournament has returned after a threeyear hiatus featuring teams from Gibraltar, Manilva, Madrid A and the UK at Laude International School in San Pedro.
Funding flop CIRCUSES with wild animals have been excluded from being eligible for government grants via the National Institute of Performing Arts and Music over animal welfare concerns.
Catwalk Charity Age Concern hosted a fundraising fashion show raising €800 in honour of its former secretary Carol Frost who died earlier this month.
Child taken A Belgian man has been arrested after kidnapping his son, 2, and bringing him to Spain. Police discovered he was wanted by Belgian authorities following a bitter custody battle
A BRITISH customs vessel was damaged by an arsonist who crept up on it and fired flares at its hull. A small inflatable boat approached the HMC Seeker where an unknown person fired a flare directly towards the boat, hitting the starboard side with an explosion before firing a second one which narrowly missed the vessel.
June 1st - June 14th 2022
Policing problems
Customs nautical flare up The person then sped off in the boat. The Royal Gibraltar Police was immediately informed of the incident and a forensics team was deployed to the scene, their investigation is ongoing. The incident occured on May 18 at 11pm.
The government of Gibraltar said: “The incident could have developed into a much more serious one had the targeted vessel caught fire and the blast impacted on other vessels or buildings in the area, likely resulting in injuries or worse.”
BITCOIN MOST WANTED
Spanish aristocrat and Brit crypto expert placed on FBI’s most wanted listed over North Korea links
A SPANISH aristocrat and a British Bitcoin entrepreneur formerly based in Gibraltar have been placed on the FBI’s most wanted listed over their alleged links to North Korea. Alejandro Cao de Benos, 47 and Christopher Emms, 30, are separately accused of breaking
sanctions imposed by the US to ‘illegally provide cryptocurrency and blockchain services to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).’ Cao de Benos, who comes from an aristocratic Spanish family, is well known as the only Westerner to officially work for
A TEEN was arrested after attempting to retrieve a bag he lost during a police chase following a robbery in Gibraltar. The bag was dropped when police chased the suspect after being alerted to a break in at a premises on Glacis Es-
North Korea’s regime. The 47 year-old from Barcelona has described himself as a ‘special representative’ of the dictatorship and has been making headlines in Spain as a propagandist for the country since founding the Korean Friendship Association.
Barefaced cheek tate. The suspect got away but days later he turned up at New Mole House to enquire about his lost property. He was promptly arrested by Royal Gibraltar Police and will be charged on suspicion of robbery.
History, adventure and romance. That’s just the setting.
When not working as a oneman publicity machine for North Korea abroad or making frequent trips to the country, he worked as an IT consultant. Then in 2016 he was arrested for suspected arms trafficking, after two unregistered pistols were discovered at his home.
Conferences
But the reason for his appearance on the FBI most wanted list is for his alleged involvement in organising cryptocurrency conferences in Pyongyang along with ‘co-conspirator’ Christopher Emms. It is alleged that Emms and Cao de Benós ‘recruited’ American Virgil Griffith to provide cryptocurrency services to North Korea in breach of US sanctions.
POLICE unions in Spain’s Campo de Gibraltar area are calling for more incentives to attract officers to work in the notoriously crime-ridden zone. The latest stats reveal that 40% of police officers currently posted within La Linea de la Concepcion and Algeciras have requested transfers to other areas of Spain. Police in the area have to deal with a multitude of serious crimes including drug trafficking across the Strait of Gibraltar and illegal immigration. The job can be dangerous, with drug mafias harassing and threatening both officers and their families.
Violence
Many officers choose to live far away from the towns they work in due to the threat of violence from those involved in organised crime. Officers often do not stay in posts in Campo de Gibraltar for long, and so teams are not able to be as thoroughly rooted and developed as they need to be to deal with the type of problems the area faces, explained Antonio Flores, provincial delegate of police union SUP. The union wants the area to be declared a Special Singularity Zone as was the case in the Spanish regions of Navarra and the Basque Country when policing involved the threat of ETA terrorists.
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Smoking!
THE Red Hot Chili Peppers are playing the first gig of their new tour in Sevilla. They will take to La Cartuja stage on Saturday, the first venue of a new tour that will see them visit 32 cities. Their second stop will be at Estadi Olimpic in Barcelona on June 7. The group is expected to perform classic hits like ‘Under the Bridge’ and ‘Californication’ as well as new tracks from their forthcoming album. All Spain gigs will feature warm up shows from US rapper A$ap Rocky and funk-rocker Thundercat.
Obama to visit
FORMER US President Barack Obama will be visiting Spain - but if you want to take part in a Q&A session with him it will cost you a cool €1,990. He will participate in the Digital Enterprise Show 2022 (DES 2022) in Malaga from June 14-16. The 44th US President will hold a question and answer session, but the only way to take part is to buy a three day ‘Honour Pass’ for just under €2,000. Obama is no stranger to Spain. He toured the country as a young man and has since visited several times, with wife Michelle and his daughters staying in Marbella and Mallorca.
YOU WHAT?: Pricey!
June 1st - June 14th 2022
HOLA MADRID!
England stars herald a bumper summer EXCLUSIVE By Dilip Kuner
SPAIN scores with the sporty set and it looks like it’s gameon for another outbreak of footy fever this summer. Barely had the season ended then English football stars had hopped on a plane and headed for the Costa del Sol and the Baleares. England stars Kyle Walker, Harry Maguire and Jordan Pickford arrived at favourite watering hole La Sala in Puerto Banus to finally let their hair down after a long season of kicking a ball around. La Sala boss Ian Radford was
SHAKIRA has lost her appeal to dismiss charges that she defrauded Spain’s tax office of €14 million and will face trial, a court has ruled. The 45-year-old singer is alleged to have failed to pay taxes on income earned between 2012 and 2014 when the tax office claims she was living in Spain. But the Colombian pop star‘s legal team claims she only moved permanently to Spain in 2015
Chilling to cool
THE Rolling Stones arrived in true rock n roll style in Madrid, touching down in their very own branded plane ahead of the start of their European tour. Keith Richards, Mick Jagger and Ronnie Wood stepped out of their private jet emblazoned with the iconic tongue sticking out of a pair of lips logo. The trio waved and laughed as they made their way down the staircase of the jet and onto a red carpet. This will be the first European tour since the death of the band’s legendary drummer Charlie Watts, who died last August at the age of 80.
BACK OF THE NET! STARS: Jack Grealish (left) and Kyle Walker with (inset left) Jordan Pockford and HarryMaguire happy to see them, saying: “They’re coming thick and fast now. Harry and Kyle and Jordan is out for a couple of weeks with his family. I hope to get a round of golf in with them too.” Meanwhile, fellow England star - and team mate of Kyle Walker at champions Manchester City - Jack Grealish arrived in Ibiza.
Shak tax date
and has paid tax here ever since. The prosecutor’s office could ask for a prison sentence as well as a substantial fine but no court date has yet been set. Shakira has been in a relationship with FC Barcelona player Gerard Pique since 2011 and the pair have two children.
The England international was in a jovial mood during the celebrations, with instagram footage from his teammates showing him in a somewhat inebriated state and speaking with a hoarse voice. He was photographed alongside Gary Lineker’s younger brother Wayne at O Beach Ibiza, which the 58-year-old owns and is known to be a celeb hotspot. The England stars are not the only ones expected to arrive in Spain on the back of a post-pandemic surge in tourism. Radford said: “We’re trading 25 to 30% up in sales over the winter months. It’s been the best start to a year ever for us - and it beats 2019. “Business is really, really good. La Sala Beach is so far 40% up on our best year. We had over 10,000 pre-reservations before we even opened at the beach.”
HE has long been an acting icon but now at the age of 84 Sir Anthony Hopkins is set to become a fashion icon. The double Oscar and four-time BAFTA winner has been unveiled as the ‘face’ of Spanish brand Loewe in a new campaign. The Welsh superstar, who played cannibal killer Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs, Lambs, modelled for celebrity photographer Juergen Teller. Actors, artists, singers, athletes, and models have been portrayed in different locations, both indoors and outdoors. But the one that stands out the most is Hopkins. Here, he poses in a long black coat, gold appliques, an eye-catching T-shirt printed with multicoloured donuts, and is pointing at a brown leather XL bag. It's all a far cry from the prison garb he wore as Lecter - from chilling to cool!
Off again SPAIN’S former King Juan Carlos returned to exile in Abu Dhabi after meeting with son King Felipe VI in Madrid. He came expecting ‘hugs’ but what happened behind closed doors at Zarzuela Palace between him and his son King Felipe VI remains private. It was the first time father and son - the old monarch and the King he abdicated for - have met face to face since he went into self-imposed exile in 2020.
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Militant fears soothed DEFENCE Secretary Ben Wallace has denied the UK is considering beefing up its military presence in Gibraltar. In a meeting with his Spanish counterpart Margarita Robles, Wallace described the two nations as having a ‘good relationship’. He said: “Gibraltar is not used in any way against Spain. That is a myth, it is not true. It is only used as a base for our forces if they act jointly in the Mediterranean, because we are allies.” He also said the British military relationship is not the same as it was in the 80s or 90s when it had a more significant presence while maintaining that the Rock remained ‘strategically critical’.
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THE Spanish Government has lodged a protest over the forthcoming visit of the Earl and Countess of Wessex to the Rock. A protest was made to London by Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares on May 25 branding the visit ‘inappropriate’ while negotiations continue between the European Union and the UK regarding Gibraltar´s post-Brexit relationship with the block.
Jubilee
Prince Edward and his wife Sophie are due to visit between June 7 to 9 as part of the celebrations for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. Although the content of the official complaint was not made public by the ministry, details were leaked to The Diplomat in
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June 1st - June 14th 2022
WE ARE NOT AMUSED Spain lodges complaint over ‘inappropriate’ Royal visit to Gibraltar for Jubilee celebrations By Kimberley Mannion
Spain website. Plans for the visit were announced in late March but it has taken two months for Spain to lodge a complaint. Visits by British royals to Gibraltar have long been a source of tension and grievance over the border in Spain which disputes British sovereignty over the Rock. Tensions were clear when Queen Elizabeth herself visited in January 1954 with Prince Philip and two young children, Prince Charles and Princess Anne. Spain’s Queen Sofia was forced to drop out of the
TOUCHY: The royal visit is controversial
last jubilee celebrations in London after the government of Mariano Rajoy lodged an official protest when the Wessexes last visited the Rock.
Honeymoon
While the Spanish royal family had to decline the invitation to Prince Charles and Lady Diana’s wedding after it was announced that the pair would start their honeymoon with a stop off in Gibraltar. A spokesman for the Gibraltar government de-
clined to comment on the latest protest except to say it would have no impact on the plans for the royal visit. Meanwhile, Chief Minister Fabian Picardo continues to insist that negotiations on the Gibraltar-EU deal are going well and that he is optimistic a deal will be reached. The issue of Gibraltarian sovereignty has been at the heart of both the Gibraltar and UK government’s comments during the negotiations. This continues to be the case.
BIG celebrations for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee and World Environment Day are planned in Gibraltar. The Gibraltar Botanic Gardens and Alameda Wildlife Conservation Park are hosting a ‘Zoobilee and Garden Party’ on June 5 with a royal celebration accompanied by a promotion of a greener future. Events at Alameda Park mark the first full open day of activities since before the pandemic with a whole host of family friendly activities on show such as
Great reception GIBRALTAR Mayor Christian Santos hosted a reception on Tuesday, May 31 for Gibraltar athletes who will be competing in the forthcoming Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. The mayor was presented with the Queen’s Baton by President of The Commonwealth Games Association of Gibraltar, Harry Murphy. CM Picardo was also in attendance as well as the Minister for Sport Steven Linares and Deputy Mayor Carmen Gomez. The Queen’s Baton commenced its 294 day journey on October 7, 2021, and will go through each of the 72 nations and territories of the Commonwealth before arriving at the Games. “Even though you are competing in different sports, you are collectively flying the flag of Gibraltar,” Santos said The Commonwealth Games begin on July 28. Gibraltar has competed at sixteen Commonwealth Games, having attended every one since 1958, however no athlete from the Rock has won a Commonwealth medal to date.
RECEPTION: (from left) Linares, CM Picardo, Mayor Santos and Murphy
Rocking Jubilee tree climbing, a village fete and even a garden tea party. The Alameda Botanic Gardens is home to a collection of both exotic and native species and is the only wildlife park in Gibraltar. Tickets for each event are available on the day from the Wildlife Park with the event running from 12noon until 16.30pm.
EU FORMAL REGULATED DEBT SOLUTIONS
Ireland’s leading Personal Insolvency Practice “IRS Ireland” is now available to facilitate personal insolvency applications in Ireland for people currently residing in Spain. If you have legacy debts, unsustainable debts secured on property, or simply unsustainable unsecured debts, did you know you may be eligible to make an application for a Personal Insolvency Arrangement in Ireland that can resolve debts incurred in any of the 27 EU member states? If you are in debt and living in Spain, whether your debts are owed to Irish creditors, or creditors in an EU member state, contact us on +353 58 23511 or email admin@irs-ireland.com IRS Ireland facilitates Bankruptcy applications, and applications for Personal Insolvency Arrangements (“PIA”) or Debt Settlement Arrangements (“DSA”) short of bankruptcy. Uniquely Ireland’s PIA mechanism allows for the restructuring of debt secured on a property asset without the requirement for the property to be sold or surrendered by you. Mitchell O’Brien, senior personal insolvency practitioner with IRS is Ireland’s most successful facilitator of PIA applications. A personal insolvency practitioner (“PIP”) is a regulated professional authorized by the Irish Government’s Insolvency Service of Ireland. Mitchell O’Brien was Ireland’s first licensed PIP. Formal Irish insolvency arrangements are recognized and enforceable in all EU Member States. Face-to-face consultations can be arranged with Mitchell O’Brien in the Malaga region, or using Zoom video conferencing.
www.irs-ireland.com
T
ony and Mandy Heaton both left well-paid jobs in the East Midlands to buy a house in Quesada, Alicante, in August 2020 during the transition period. They were approved for residency in the second week of November, but the post Brexit backlog meant they could not get an appointment to apply for permanent residency until February with their cards only arriving in April.
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IN REVERSE
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Margaret and Eric Wilkinson, who spend six months a year in Oliva on the Costa Blanca, wanted to make sure they were doing everything by the book. The pensioners, from Leeds, hired a lawyer to help them swap their licence and submitted their applications in September 2020, during the Brexit Transition period. They were told they had to register their intention to swap their licences by December 31 2020. However their lawyer incorrectly insisted they could not register their intention to swap their licences as the system would not accept NIE numbers, only TIE numbers. “Obviously we accepted this as fact so as a result did not register by the deadline,” said Margaret, who retired in 2011. This is the crux of the issue - advice given varied widely depending on the region and in many cases different rules were arbitrarily applied.
They then obtained a medical certificate to demonstrate they were fit to drive from a clinic in Guardamar, which assured them everything was in place. “We were told everything would be fine, but we could not get an appointment with the DGT.’ They were then told the only way to solve it was to drive to Elche DGT, but when they got there they were refused entry as they did not have an appointment. “We are being held to ransom by those at the top,” Tony, a former engineer, said.
To make matters worse, Mandy, who had just secured a job as a chef 10 kilometres away, could not take up her position as she was unable to commute. She even purchased an electric bike and planned on cycling 30 minutes, but by the time it arrived, they had given the job to someone else. “We are running down our savings and we now cannot afford the money it would cost for us to learn to drive and pass our test. We might have to abandon our plans and move back to the UK”, the upset couple explained.
Thousands make demands Brits in Spain launch petition to call for driving licence recognition
THOUSANDS of people have signed a petition calling for the Spanish government to recognise British driving licences. The recently-launched document has so far got 2,500 people demanding action.
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It comes after the Spanish government refused to extend a transition deal to swap licences for a fourth time. It meant that from May 1, Brits who have been in Spain for longer than six months are no lon-
DEAD END STREET
OLIVE PRESS sales rep Tina Brace has been driven to distraction by the new ‘draconian’ rules that have stopped her from driving in Spain. Brace, who has lived in Malaga for 24 years, had been hearing ‘continually conflicting news’ about what she needed to do to get a new Spanish licence. As well as talking to a lawyer and a gestor, she sought advice from the British embassy. “I was continually being told that an agreement
ger allowed to legally drive here on a British licence. Instead they must pass the Spanish driving test, an ordeal that has left thousands of expats without a means to drive a car. The petition, titled ‘Seek to ne-
was in place like the other European countries. It made perfect sense and so I stayed optimistic,” she explains. “Then out of the blue as the third deadline approached I was told by friends I had to pay for a medical certificate in order to swap my licence over. Then a month later I was told it wasn’t necessary, but when I scrambled to get things done on time it was too late.” She adds: “As a field saleswoman, I can now only speak to clients over the phone. I’m down to shanks’s pony!”
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gotiate mutual recognition of UK and Spanish driving licences’ was launched by a group of anonymous expats.“There are many factors which affected expats' ability to register their intent to exchange their UK licence prior to the December 2020 deadline imposed as a result of Brexit,” explains the petition. “Please help expats who are stuck in Spain and need to be able to drive to access shops, doctors, and hospitals.” The petition can be signed at petition.parliament.uk. Online petitions require 10,000 signatures for an official response from the UK government while 100,000 signatures guarantees it is considered for debate in Parliament.
Odd one out!
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June 1st - June 14th 2022
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OLIVE PRESS SPECIAL CAMPAIGN
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MOST European countries are happy to allow Brits to swap their driving licences for domestic ones. And curiously, France - which normally takes a hardline against ‘le rosbif’ - has one of the most lenient rules in place. Here, the Olive Press takes a look at the map: In France if your UK licence was issued before January 1, 2021 then it is recognised in France for as long as it is valid. In Greece if you hold a valid UK licence you can drive around without ANY restrictions. In Germany, Austria and Cyprus you can swap for the local counterpart without taking a test within six months. In Iceland, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Lichtenstein, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Romania, Belgium, and Switzerland you can drive with your licence, but are advised to swap ‘as soon as possible’. Negotiations between Italy and the UK have been less smooth. Currently residents can drive using their UK licence until the end of the year, however they must take an Italian driving test within that time to swap it. Similar to Spain, both the UK and Italian governments continue to negotiate long-term arrangements for exchanging driving licences without needing to take a test.
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NEWS FEATURE
www.theolivepress.es Voted top expat paper in Spain
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.
OPINION Horsepower to the people IT’S time to kick the mandarins into gear! The grey-shirted ghosts of Whitehall (and Madrid) need to pay heed to the shameless way they have again sold thousands of expats down the river! As if dealing with the shambles of Brexit was not enough. We are now, yet again, in the front line of the problems being caused by Boris and co’s disastrous withdrawal agreement. But when the man in charge is Grant Shapps, is it any wonder that talks have stalled this badly? The tricky Transport Minister once ran businesses under the pseudonyms ‘Michael Green’ and ‘Corinne Stockheath’ to avoid declaring income outside of his job as an MP. He was also exposed as having spent significant time editing his very own Wikipedia page. But this is not just Shapps’ failure. Spain must also take the blame. The very fact that it’s the only country, apart from Italy, forcing expats into the hard shoulder, says everything. When even the French are being more favourable to us Brits, you know something, somewhere, has gone badly wrong. The Olive Press is taking a stand and saluting the 95% of European countries who are letting common sense prevail. We hope you will join our campaign and support it. And just like previous campaigns to act on drink spiking, protecting our coasts or the mountains from golf developers, we will not give up. With the backing of you, our readers, who pour tens of millions into the Spanish economy every year, we believe this is a fight we can win. Send us your thoughts at newsdesk@theolivepress.es and, of course, sign the petition at petition.parliament.uk PUBLISHER / EDITOR
Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es Dilip Kuner dilip@theolivepress.es
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AGE OF THE SUPERFIRE W As temperatures rise and we enter fire season, Sorrel Downer looks back at the 10 most dramatic blazes
ITH a drought and unseasonal high temperatures, no wonder AEMET (the Met Office) has been issuing extreme fire risk warnings. Spain has an average of 11,700 forest fires a year. Small ones are nature’s way of clearing out dead vegetation and making way for the new, but a lot of these are big. In fact, the number of large blazes (anything spreading
Riotinto Mines (Huelva) July 27, 2004 The worst fire in Andalucia in 20 years, started with two bins set alight on the hottest day of the year, and raged through 30,000 hectares of pine, oak and cork forest. A married couple from Sevilla died trying to escape when their car got stuck in a ditch. A man was arrested on suspicion of arson but released.
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over 500 hectares) has increased 20% in the last decade. Nearly half the municipalities in Spain are within High Risk Zones for fires, though most fires aren’t where you’d expect them to be, in the hot, dry south, but in the northwest: Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria and the provinces of Leon and Zamora account for nearly 60% of fires and 86% of the area affected.
Nine hikers from Madrid had a barbecue in the picnic area near the prehistoric Cueva de Casares then left to swim in the river. The wind reignited the embers and fire spread through the surrounding dry scrubland at speeds up to 121/km
Tejeda (Las Palmas) - July, 2007 To persuade his boss that fires were always a risk therefore his summer season contract should be extended, a forest ranger stopped his car en route to work, took out his matches and started an inferno that destroyed 19,200 hectares. Judged stupid rather than mentally ill, the arsonist was sentenced to eight months in prison. "I didn’t want to cause this catastrophe,” he said, “it just got out of hand".
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Sometimes the cause is natural, for example, the molten lava spewed by the Cumbre Vieja volcano in La Palma, or lightning, responsible for three in 100 fires. But 95% of the time wildfires are caused by humans making a mistake as they go about their business in extreme weather and a tinder-dry landscape, and occasionally, on purpose. Here are 10 of the worst fires in Spain this century.
Riba de Saelices (Guadalajara) - July 16, 2005 hour, destroying 12,800 hectares. Eleven firefighters – the youngest just 22 – died, just metres away from safety, trapped behind a wall of flames when the wind switched direction.
Horta de Sant Joan, Tarragona - July 21 2009 The fire destroyed over 1000 hectares of the Els Ports Natural Park but it was also one of Spain’s worst this century in terms of human cost: Five firefighters from the Grupo de Actuaciones Forestales died fighting the blaze. A sixth, Josep Pallas, suffered serious burns, but, incredibly, later returned to work for the fire service. The cause wasn’t lightning, as first supposed, but two men who had lit a bonfire.
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EXTREME SURVIVOR Earth’s oldest living species gets a helping hand
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ITH three eyes, hundreds of legs, and elongated antennae, these critters are not going to win any beauty contests. Yet they are fascinating organisms. In fact, they are the oldest living species on planet earth – 300 million years old (you read that correctly) – out-surviving dinosaurs, mammoths, and mastodons by a long chalk. Known in everyday vernacular as Tadpole Shrimp and scientifically as ‘Triops cancriformis’, these are extreme survivors. Throughout their 300-million-year history, the Triops’ skeletal structure has remained unchanged. Today’s tadpoles are virtually indistinguishable from their distant ancestors. They can survive floods and droughts, boiling water and ice and are found in
the Arctic as well as geothermal waters. They can survive Hiroshima-type radiation because their eggs are able to go dormant for centuries until more favourable conditions resume. Uniquely, triops build ‘egg banks’ enabling their population to persist through bad times. And experiments have shown that the tadpoles can even survive in space!
Poison
They can self-fertilize as they possess both testes and ovaries. First described by Charles Darwin, this reproductive mode has the advantage of allowing a single individual to perpetuate the population. But all is not well with these crustaceans. In spite of the remarkable survivability of the species, there has been a progressive disappearance of the tadpole shrimp. Declining habitat, landscape changes, poisons and pesticides, and climate change have all drastically modified their populations. However, recent research by Valencian scientists dedicated to saving the tadpole shows there is hope. Valencian bodies, in concert with universities, have taken an active role in protecting and preserving the population of
Triops. The Valencian Ministry of Climate Emergency and Ecological Transition has begun breeding them in laboratories and rebuilding new populations in local protected areas. They have achieved success in the Natural Park of the Sierra de Espadan (Castellon) and in Albufera National Park near El Palmar, Valencia. In parallel, local university students have received international recognition for their research. Student scientists at the Santa Maria Vila-Real School won national acclaim for their study entitled Triops Cancriformis: How to survive Climate Change. Their project received a medal at the prestigious Science Genius Olympiad in New York. Meanwhile, student scientists at the University of Valencia, working with the Valencian
June 1st - June 14th 2022
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BEHIND THE COSTA DEL CRIME
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Tejeda (Las Palmas) - September 20, 2017
Corte de Pallás & Andilla (Valencia) - June 28, 2012
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Two men chose a 40-degree day to install solar panels at a casa de campo. A welding spark
plus strong wind combined to whip up an inferno that destroyed 30,000 hectares, affected a dozen communities, and resulted in the death of a fire services helicopter pilot. In this one incident, half a million tons of CO2 was released into the atmosphere – the amount produced by 380,000 cars in a year. The next day, in Andilla, 100km to the north, a farmer who had allegedly been burning stubble, started a fire that devastated a further 22,500 hectares. .
Wildlife Service, have developed a ‘thermal insulator’ and provided further evidence that the species has survived due to the incredible resistance of its eggs. Collectively, as a result of these efforts, Triops – the bizarre-looking tadpole – will soon be a protected species, incorporated into the official Valencian Catalogue of Threatened Fauna Species. Given the threat to today’s habitat and climate, the need to pursue and understand the attributes of an extreme survivor is paramount. Carl Sagan once famously said, ‘extinction is the rule, survival is the exception’. Given the work done by the Valencian scientific community, let’s hope that the tadpole shrimp, can challenge Sagan’s theory – at least for the next 300 million years.
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Started by a shepherd burning brush to clear a grazing area in the old, traditional – but illegal in summer – way. Rain helped bring the blaze under control after four days, but not before thousands had been evacuated and a Swedish woman, Carin Brigitta Ostman had died.
Galicia and Portugal - October 5, 2017 Not a single fire, but an apocalyptic cluster of fires that jumped and reignited and covered a total of 300,000 hectares on either side of the border in the space of a week. Experts say dry, hurricane force winds pushed in by tropical front Ophelia made a bad situation a disaster. In total, 49 people died.
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EURO MONTHLY NEW S
Valleseco (Gran Canaria) August 10, 2019
Navalacruz (Avila) August 14, 2021
A badly maintained power line rubbing against a pine tree at the bottom of a forested ravine caused a fire that lasted 40 days, destroyed 10,000 hectares and resulted in 10,000 people being evacuated. Though not categorised as a sixth generation fire, this inferno created its own weather system, with swirling winds and a column of cloud visible from space.
A motorcyclist saw smoke coming from a vehicle on the Avila-Cordoba road, and flagged the driver down. But the engine was on fire, the grass on the verge caught and, propelled by 70km gusts, a wall of flames rushed across 22,000 hectares of farmland and forest, all dried out after a heatwave of 38-degree days, to become the worst fire in the history of Castilla y Leon.
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SIERRA BERMEJA (MALAGA) - SEPTEMBER 8, 2021 This was the first sixth generation fire to be registered in Spain. Linked to climate change, superfires – as they’re known – are extremely explosive, high speed and erratic. It burned through 10,000 hectares in the mountains above the Costa del Sol, caused 3000 people
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to be evacuated, and cost the life of firefighter Carlos Martinez Haro. Investiga-
tors suspect it was started with a flammable liquid in three places.
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S skilled and courage firefighters are, the ous as Spain’s creasingly dangero y face an inwith the advent of us challenge the superfire. Even more effort is be tion, into making Spaining put into prevenpersuading people no more fireproof, and t to be idiots. Do you part, and keep vigilant. r FOR FIRE EMERGENC
IES CALL 11 2.
RESSED up like spokesmen for ETA - or a pair of armed robbers - the Olive Press has been getting behind the scenes of Spain’s crack National Police detectives this week. At an unknown, unmarked HQ on the Costa del Sol the team of 30 investigators go about their business in secret and with stealth. Getting new orders from Madrid every month and with the group constantly changing means they are among the hardest to corrupt in Europe. Their success rate is staggering and there are only four such teams in all of Spain, we discovered. The Olive Press has been helping to tell their story in a new crime series on Amazon due out this Autumn. Our team of journalists, including Jorge Hinojosa (pictured), are also interviewing their counterparts at the Guardia Civil, as well as grilling a series of politicians this month. All thanks to our knowledge and contacts on the infamous Costa del Crime, where we have been based for nearly two decades. The exciting commission from one of the world’s biggest TV streaming companies comes hot on the heels of various jobs for Sky TV, the BBC and Times Radio over recent weeks. And that’s not to mention a key role for editor Jon Clarke in a recent Sat1 German TV documentary on the Madeleine McCann case.
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The top five most read stories on www.theolivepress.es in the past two weeks are: summer flights threat as unions in 1- RyanairSpain and Europe plan strikes linked to outbreak in gay 2- Monkeypox cases sauna killed in cliff jump on Mallorca named 3- Man as dutch footballer Mourad Lambarette weather forecast temperatures 4-inBlistering Spain to reach historic highs this weekend holidays in Spain 2021- full list of 5- Bank dates for every autonomous community
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Crying wolf A BID to overturn Spain’s wolf hunting ban by Spain’s conservative opposition party has been rejected by parliament. The Popular Party (PP), supported by several farming organisations, were seeking to repeal a law that came into force last September designating wolves as a protected species.
Welfare
The issue has become the latest battleground in Spain’s continuing animal welfare debate with farmers claiming wolves are a menace that cause immeasurable damage to farmers’ livelihoods while naturalists say they are a vital part of the ecosystem. Thanks in a large part to restrictions on hunting Spain and Portugal are now thought to be home to about 3,000 wolves, the largest lupine population in Europe, according to data from Ecologists in Action, a conservation group.
June 1st - June 14th 2022
MEATY DEMO By Alex Trelinski
GREENPEACE protestors dressed staged a protest at the headquarters of Murcia-based meat company El Pozo. Around 20 environmentalists struck at different areas of the firm’s Alhama de Murcia complex. Protestors blocked off access to the main building and displayed banners opposing macro-farming and demanding a five-year moratorium on such farming. Group members changed one of the company slogans from ‘El Pozo for the environment’ to ‘El Pozo kills the environment’. A Greenpeace statement said
Greenpeace target El Pozo over nitrate pollution
the protest was about ‘exposing a company which benefits the most in Spain from the destructive business of macro-farms’. The lobby group has called for a meeting with El Pozo bosses. They want them to ‘develop a plan to reduce the number of exploited animals’ as the only ‘effective way to reduce the brand’s brutal environmental impact’. Greenpeace claims nitrates from El Pozo’s macro-farms are contaminating drinking water supplies in surround-
ing towns and villages. An investigation last year suggested that slurry from pig farms was a key factor in polluting the Mar Menor lagoon with excess nitrates. Consumer Affairs minister, Alberto Garzon, angered farmers and meat produc-
ers at the start of the year by saying meat production from large farms is ‘causing the end of Spain’. El Pozo in 2018 was among the top 40 richest companies in Spain and one of the 25 main meat producers in the world, according to Greenpeace.
Hot and cold SPAIN will impose limits on air-conditioning in public buildings this summer in a bid to slash its energy bill as prices soar. Civil servants will have to endure a minimum temperature of 27ºC during the hottest months under measures published in a government decree. In winter, offices will not be heated above a maximum of 19ºC. The plan is part of an EU-wide effort to reduce dependence on Russian energy designed to reduce Spain’s central administration’s energy usage by 25%.
Cigarettes don’t just poison smokers - they poison the environment too I’VE never understood smoking. My father died when I was 14 of throat cancer caused by smoking. I could not see what was big, clever, or attractive about poisoning yourself. I accept the freedom of choice argument. If you want to adversely affect your health, all well and good. However, polluting the environment is not acceptable. Some 4.5 trillion cigarettes are discarded every year worldwide. That’s 4,500,000,000,000. That’s a lot of noughts! They are the most littered item on Earth. According to the World Health Organisation, tobacco waste contains up to 7,000 toxic chemicals. The plastic in the filters takes up to 10
A BUTT TIME
Green
years to biodegrade. Commonly found in the bodies of dead fish and seabirds, they can also be lethal to freshwater and marine species. A BIG ROUND OF APPLAUSE FOR CATALUNYA In a bid to reduce pollution, smoking will be banned on all of Barcelona’s beaches from next month. The Spanish government is also planning to make it illegal to smoke on the outside terraces of bars and restaurants, and at open-air sports venues. Their next initiative is pure genius. Catalunya will introduce cigarette butt recycling as a source of income. The Catalan government is planning to pay €4 to people who hand over a pack’s worth of cigarette butts at nominated recycling points. WIN WIN This initiative could become a source of income for homeless people. Sreets and beaches will become cleaner. The stroke of genius is that all of this will be funded by raising the tax on every cigarette sold by 20 cents. The environment wins, and people
SAY NO: For the sake of the environment are deterred from smoking as the cost of a packet of cigarettes will almost double. This isn’t about revenue generation. It’s to reduce the environmental impact of these filthy fag ends. The Spanish government is introducing a law that will prohibit the sale of plastic cotton buds, cutlery, and plastic straws. Cigarette butts are not yet covered by law, so this is a great initiative. Why should the minority pollute the majority? (19.7% of Spaniards smoke on a daily basis).
Martin Tye is the owner of energy switch company Mariposa Energy. +34 638145664 ( Spain Phone ) Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es
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LA CULTURA
A NEW online system has been launched to streamline booking for all cultural events taking place in Gibraltar. The online platform allows internet users to pay for tickets directly from the Gibraltar Cultural Services at the Culture.gi website.
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WITH the coming of the internet came an explosion of ‘fake news’ but a new exhibition shows that there is nothing new about it. The exhibition at the National Library of Spain (BNE) in Madrid shows that fake news was a thing hundreds of years before former US President Don-
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PLANNING has been approved to finally finish Malaga’s cathedral after 240 years - sort of. Construction work has been given the green light by the government’s culture ministry following calls from the Bishop of Malaga to put a sloping roof over the structure, as the original architect intended in 1764. But there are no plans to build the missing second tower which has led to it being nick-named ‘La Manquita’, or ‘the onearmed lady’.
Walkway
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Across 7 Operatic lyrics (8) 8 Torn clothing (4) 9 Seal round a ship’s propeller shaft (5) 10 Restaurant practice desired by waiters (7) 12 Heroes matter when allocated a saint (6,6) 14 Coordinated sequences of chess moves (12) 16 Use up (7) 18 Gold, silver or bronze award (5) 20 Comes together (4) 21 Brought about (8) Down 1 Venetian bridge (6) 2 Margaret Thatcher’s birthplace (8) 3 Label of incorporation (3) 4 Bluebottle (9) 5 Support (4) 6 Items for a meeting (6) 11 Essex town between Bishop’s Stortford and Colchester (9) 13 Lofty place (8) 14 Masticated (6) 15 Approached (6) 17 “--- we forget” (Kipling, “Recessional”) (4) 19 Company’s top money manager (1,1,1)
All solutions are on page 13
Dodgy tales on show in new exhibition By Kimberly Mannion
ald Trump popularised the phrase during his 2016 election campaign.
News
And the fake news even pre-dated newspapers, with crazy tales of mermaids and children with horns, printed on single sheets of paper. The BNE holds a valuable collection of old documents littered with propaganda from the 16th and 17th centuries encompassing around 4,000 documents from Spain as well as other European cities and Spanish colonial cities. Many of the stories fall into the same categories covered by modern journalism: politics, war, religious events and sporting events like bull
fights, the latter of course being in 16th century Spanish fashion. The types of propaganda found in this early journalism is perhaps more obviously false than the fake news of today. Popular stories during the ‘Golden Age’ included appearances of monsters, mermaids, giants and talking fish.
Enemies
Institutions like the Church were among the first in society to recognise the power of the printed word with military tales or cases of non-believers printed under the words ‘enemies of the church’. Elsewhere in Spanish printed media at the time, popular falsehoods included military victories which did not actually happen.
Goya’s return SPAIN'S Goya Awards for film will return to Sevilla next year, it has been announced. Considered by many in Spain as their country's equivalent of the American Academy Awards, the 38th Goya Awards will be held in Sevilla at the start of 2023. It will be the second time the ceremony has been held in the Andalucian capital, the first being in 2019. The last time the awards were held in the city was only the second time in their history that they had been held outside Madrid, after having been held in Barcelona in the year 2000. Andalucia also got another turn when Malaga hosted in 2020, while this year's awards were held in Valencia. President of the Spanish Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain, which runs the Goya Awards, Mariano Barroso commended “the Andalusian city's commitment to Spanish and European cinema and culture".
The new roof will be made of wood and steel to match the stonework of the cathedral and will include a walkway that allows visitors to tour it. Final agreement on funding has yet to be agreed, with the church needing to find €10 million, though some of that is expected to be filled by the council. Work on the cathedral was halted in 1782, and since then a weaker makeshift roof has had to protect it from the elements. A ‘new roof’ was installed 12 years ago but not to the original plans. The stop-gap measure has since started to leak, with concerns that the structure could suffer foundational damage if action is not taken.
Explosive feria KO THE firework opening to the Malaga Feria is one of the biggest and most popular events in Malaga and this year spectators will be able to enjoy a dazzling 20-minute long show. With three months to go before the start of the much-awaited fair, having been cancelled for two years in a row due to the pandemic, Malaga City Council has just closed the contract with the company that will carry out the fireworks display - kick-starting the biggest summer party in the province with a whopping 500 kilos of explosive material.
Back on! AFTER a two year hiatus due to Covid-19, Marbella will celebrate its traditional San Bernabe Fair and Festivals. The town fair will take place from June 7 to 12 with a full programme of concerts and tributes. The festivities will begin on June 5 with the traditional pilgrimage of the Patron Saint. The daytime festivities will be held in the Alameda Park and the Avenida del Mar. Meanwhile, the Night Fair will be located on a plot of almost 40,000 metres in the Arroyo Segundo.
BUSINESS Food gloom June 1st June 14th 2022
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Pockets hit by €200 a year and more price hikes to come
ANNUAL food costs are expected to rise by an average €200 per family in Spain this year according to an Allianz Food Inflation survey. The yearly food spend is projected to go up to €2,300 due to rising prices but the study says further hikes are likely. Food costs in Spain are lower than the EU average, which comes in €200 higher per annum at €2,500. Increases in fuel, electricity, and fertiliser costs caused firstly by the Covid-19 pandemic and then the war in Ukraine, are seen as the main contributory factors to the price hikes.
Events in the Ukraine have affected the supply of basic foods such as wheat and sunflower oil, with prices going up for alternative sources. The Allianz report warns the situation could get much worse as current food prices are not rising at the same proportion as increases in raw material costs over the
HARD hit motorists will soon have more opportunities to fill up on the cheap. Budget petrol station company Ballenoil is planning to open eight new sites in the Malaga region, with rivals Plenoil opening four. Ballenoil will open stations in Torremolinos, Antequera, two in Marbella, Cancelada (Estepona), Malaga city, San Pedro de Alcantara and Benahavis before the end of this year. Plenoil is going to open 10 petrol stations in Andalucia, four of which will be based in Malaga province.
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past 18 months. It warns that food and beverage producers in the EU have already increased their prices by an average of 14% since the beginning of 2021.
Pasta
In supermarkets, the most significant price increases have been for oils (+53 %), flour (+28%) and pasta (+19%). The average of a full food shopping trip though has only gone up by 6% as retailers have absorbed around 50% of price hikes to consumers. Allianz warns that high inflation coupled with reduced sales will add pressure to the profitability of businesses, which will probably work its way into a further 'increase in consumer prices'.
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THE Pound Euro (GBP/EUR) exchange rate continued to trade in a wide range through the second half of May as fears of a UK recession were stoked following a dramatic surge in UK inflation. Elsewhere a hawkish shift by the European Central Bank (ECB) has also infused volatility into the pairing. This has seen the pairing trade in a range of between €1.16 and €1.18.
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WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING? The past couple of weeks have seen the GBP/EUR exchange rate continue to trade unevenly, with the pairing fluctuating in response to mixed UK data and signals from the ECB that it will soon begin tightening its monetary policy. In terms of UK data, the pound found itself coming under considerable pressure after the UK’s consumer price index revealed domestic inflation soared to 9% in April. The surge exacerbated concerns over the UK’s cost of living crisis and revived recession fears. A surprisingly upbeat retail sales reading and Bank of England (BoE) rate hike bets helped the pound to quickly bounce back, before a worrying drop in the latest UK services PMI then erased a good portion of these gains. Meanwhile, a more hawkish tilt from the ECB has helped to underpin the euro through the second half of May, with ECB President Christine Lagarde signalling the bank is likely to start raising interest rates in July. This has helped to offset heightened tensions over the war in Ukraine, with Russia’s threats against Finland for applying to join NATO stoking fears the conflict could spread to other parts of Europe. Looking ahead, it seems safe to assume that the pound will remain highly sensitive to negative UK data as this would likely feed into recession fears. Any more signals that consumer spending is faltering could leave GBP exchange rates vulnerable to significant pressure.
MARBELLA For EUR investors the focus is likely to be on the ECB. Markets will be looking for additional hints as to how aggressively the bank will look to tighten its monetary policy. Expect to see the euro strengthen if ECB policymakers grow increasingly hawkish. Meanwhile the war in Ukraine will no doubt continue to impact the GBP/EUR exchange rate. While the euro is likely to be more sensitive to any developments, any risk-off flows could weigh on Sterling sentiment. PROTECTING AGAINST VOLATILITY This kind of volatility can cause some nasty surprises if you need to transfer money overseas. On a £200,000 transfer, that twocent gap between €1.18 and €1.20 translates to a €4000 difference. And the larger the sum, the higher the discrepancy. Fortunately, there are ways that you can protect against volatility. Specialist currency brokers, such as Currencies Direct, offer different tools to help you navigate the ups and downs of the currency market. For instance, you can use a forward contract to secure an exchange rate for up to a year. This way, you won’t lose out if the market moves against you. Services like rate alerts and daily updates make it easy to keep track of what’s going on in the forex world so that you can make informed decisions. And with Currencies Direct you’ll have a dedicated account manager there to provide guidance and support whenever you need them. At Currencies Direct we’re here to talk currency whenever you need us, so get in touch if you want to know more about the latest news or how it could impact your currency transfers. Since 1996 we’ve helped more than 325,000 customers with their currency transfers, just pop into your local Currencies Direct branch or give us a call to find out more.
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12
HEALTH
June 1st - June 14th 2022
ALARM RAISED
Monkeypox worries grow as more cases found
Smokiest regions EXTREMADURA and Murcia have the highest percentage of daily smokers in Spain’s regions according to figures released to coincide with last Tuesday’s World No Tobacco Day. The AECC cancer charity says 25% of people in Extremadura smoke every day, closely followed by Murcia on 24%. Andalucia, the Balearic Islands, Catalunya, the Canary Islands and Castilla la Mancha come equal third on 21%. The number of daily smokers in the Valencian Community is 20%. The fewest smokers are found in the North African enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla(15%) and in the Basque Country(16%). A 2005 Smoking Law backed up by EU measures in 2010 to stop smoking inside bars and restaurants has produced a substantial lowering in people consuming tobacco. Some 28.1% of people in 2003 were smokers but that fell to 19.8% by 2020.
GLOBAL health officials have sounded the alarm over rising cases in Europe and elsewhere of monkeypox, a type of viral infection more common to west and central Africa. The first cases in Europe were detected in the UK with Spain now accounting for more cases than anywhere else, although cases have now been identified across Europe, the US, Canada, Israel, and Australia.
Rose
The number of monkeypox cases in Spain rose over the weekend by 22 confirmed cases to 120. Spain now has the most cases in Europe followed by the United Kingdom with 106
By Fiona Govan
and neighbouring Portugal where 74 cases have been confirmed. The majority of cases within Spain have been detected in Madrid and are linked to an outbreak traced to a gay sauna in the capital. One woman has tested positive but all other cases confirmed in Spain are among men. Another spike in cases is believed to stem from a Pride festival on Gran Canaria in Spain’s Canary Islands. Protocol issue by health authorities require that those diagnosed with monkeypox self-isolate and wear face masks to stem the spread. Although most of the known cases in Europe have been
SPAIN’S government has approved a new draft law to regulate the sales of electronic cigarettes. It means that e-cigarette shops will disappear within five years with tobacconists becoming the only outlet for the product. The law aims to bring e-cigarette standards in line with conventional tobacco products. Quality control, advertising and the prevention of online sales and
Doctor’s orders THE Junta has announced a military hospital will be transferred into the public healthcare system. Speaking at a forum about challenges faced by the Junta, President Juanma Moreno confirmed the old Doctor Pascual military hospital will be appropriated and incorporated into the Andalucina health service early next year.
Space
among men who have sex with men, experts are emphasising that it can be spread by
Vaping change availability to children all come under the measure. The government says the move will bring Spain into line with European regulations. The draft law now needs to be approved by Congress before hitting the statute book.
any close bodily contact. Spain’s LGBTQ community has expressed fears that the recent outbreaks of monkeypox could lead to an increase in homophobic sentiment based on misunderstandings of the disease.
Sexual
Although the recent outbreak has affected men mostly involved in sexual relations with other men, it is not defined as a ‘sexually transmitted virus’ and is in no way limited to gay men.
The hospital, which is currently unused, has space for 200 beds, four operating theatres, consulting rooms and a diagnostic test facility. Moreno said: “This hospital, which has been closed for years, will significantly improve healthcare for the people of Malaga, especially patients with chronic illnesses and those suffering from several conditions. People who accuse us of wanting to privatise healthcare should note that we are turning what was a private hospital into a public one.” It will mark the fourth health service hospital in Malaga city.
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FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
June 1st - June 14th 2022
FLIGHT THREAT
PLANS have been unveiled for the largest artificial beach in Europe. Permission has been given to create a giant water park with 25,000 square metres of pools surrounded by 15,000 square metres of sandy beach in Alovera in Guadalajara province. The beach will include water slides, zip lines, as well as a sailing school, watersports, beach volleyball courts and chiringuitos. The project has been drawn up by Grupo Rayet with a budget of €15.6million and if it all goes ahead as planned, it should be open in time for summer 2023. While the local town hall is poised to approve the project which has met environmental regulations, there is much local opposition. Ecologistas en Accion has criticised the project over what it said was ‘unsustainable water management’, saying it will use treated drinking water and need emptying every five years. One of the most frequent complaints by those who live in Madrid is its distance from the coast.
RYANAIR flights across Europe could be disrupted by strikes this summer over cabin crew working conditions. Spain’s USO and SITCPLA unions have joined forces with counterparts in Belgium, France, Italy, and Portugal to coordinate protest action. They argue the budget Irish airline has not listened to demands first made four years ago to improve work contracts for cabin crews. One-day walkouts in September 2018 led to some
By Alex Trelinski
concessions, but unions now want more substantial changes. They say European strikes will be called this summer if no progress
is made. Union demands include the application of basic non-negotiable worker rights and to recognise the right of staff to organise as union members to participate in collective bar-
OP Puzzle solutions Quick Crossword Across: 7 Libretto, 8 Rags, 9 Gland, 10 Tipping, 12 Mother Teresa, 14 Combinations, 16 Deplete, 18 Medal, 20 Gels, 21 Effected. Down: 1 Rialto, 2 Grantham, 3 Ltd, 4 Policeman, 5 Prop, 6 Agenda, 11 Braintree, 13 Eminence, 14 Chewed, 15 Neared, 17 Lest, 19 C F O.
gaining. The unions say Ryanair has lost court cases over the way it employs people but governments have been slow to take action.
Water
Criticisms range from cabin crew having to work without access to water on planes, poorly prepared payrolls and a lack of transparency over job transfers and promotions, which unions claim is used as a form of pressure on staff to accept worse employment conditions. Ryanair employs 6,000 people in Spain.
SUDOKU
Beach bum
Travel chaos in store after strike call by Ryanair staff
13
Cruising to the top
GIBRALTAR is making significant strides in the cruise industry according to Tourism Minister Vijay Daryanani. The positive comments come after the minister's recent attendances at the Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) conference in Southampton from May 20-22 and then at the Medcruise General Assembly in the town of Palamos on Spain's Costa Brava from May 24-27. The CLIA conference is the largest of its kind in the UK and hosts a number of major players in the cruise industry.
Executives
Daryanani held meetings with senior executives from cruise companies to push the Rock as a top destination on the Mediterranean, which he sees as imperative given the competitiveness of the tourism industry. The minister stated: “This is the continuation of my targeted promotion of Gibraltar as an outstanding cruise destination. We have made tremendous inroads within the industry. “It is great to see the prominence that we are getting, in the international cruise press, at conferences and in all fields of cruising. This is an important industry for our economy.”
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14
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
June 1st - June 14th 2022
TO THE HEAVENS A
S you take a deep breath of mountain air from one of its many viewpoints, you can just about make out the hubbub of the fleshpots of Fuengirola and Benalmadena miles down below. Although no more than a 15-minute drive from these anglicised resorts, the village retreat of Mijas seems thousands of miles away from the urbanisations down below. A classic white pueblo with enchanting streets comes gift wrapped by a backdrop of picturesque mountains with the glistening sea in the foreground. You are in the foothills of the Sierra de Mijas - now designated a National Park for its important ecology and nature, that includes eagles, vultures and deer - and a series of hikes head straight out of the village uphill towards ridges and peaks at well over 1,000 metres. But, before heading off on an adventure of a lifetime, make sure to take your time poking around the village. Discovering the charming Moorish pueblo is well worth the journey up the winding mountain road from Fuengirola. My driver had only just passed his test the day before, so the steep climb and sharp bends made for a brilliant baptism of fire. But when we got there it was immediately worth it. Mijas looks exactly as one would imagine a classic white-washed Andalucian town. Exploring it is like peeling an onion and each turn onto a new street seems to provide more beauty than the last. It’s almost impossible to put your mobile phone camera away. But let’s be honest: no photo will capture Mijas’ true charm. It is so much more than its individual constituent parts and there are lots of little treasures to discover. Your first decision is what mode of transport to take around the town. While I usually prefer shanks pony, the most iconic way to get
It’s not just about donkeys. World-famous for its chocolate box charm, Mijas is always adding flavours, discovers Kimberly Mannion around is by donkey. Known as ‘burro taxis’ or donkey taxis, the tradition started in the 1960s after tourists started to stop farmers on the narrow roads leading up to Mijas, admiring their animals and commenting on how strong they were. Soon, the savvy farmers had plonked them in the saddle. Plodding around donning their beautifully embroidered bridles, there is no doubt the donkeys provide Mijas with a lot of its character, if there is increasing controversy regarding their welfare. Luckily you can also take a horse taxi as well as a 100% electric tuk tuk from just €5.50 per person. As you buzz, or walk about, make sure to take in the bullring, which has a unique oval shape - and was built in 1900, making it one of the oldest in Spain. Also look out for the ancient Arabic wall of
the old fortress, as well as two Mudejar churches, adding to the general Moorish feel, that gives a flavour of the larger Andalucian gems of Granada, Cordoba and Sevilla. I would also suggest a visit to the Museum of Miniatures which collects miniature pieces of art , including Da Vinci’s Last Supper reproduced on a grain of rice. For history lovers, the Ethnological Museum takes you through the village’s colourful past, how
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
its locals used to live and how the village grew. Its most fascinating exhibit is a replica of the bedroom where a former Republican mayor, better known as the Mole of Mijas - hid for 30 years following the Spanish Civil War. There is no shortage of bars and restaurants to stop for dinner, a coffee, a wine, or anything in between, and if you want to take things into your own hands, this can be done at Mayan Monkey Mijas, the smallest chocolate factory in the world. Located just in front of the town hall, here you will find two cafes and a workshop which puts on sessions for both adults and children to make their own chocolate bars. One of the most notable characteristics of Mijas though, is the general sense of contentment - backed by the locals I spoke to. Take Chema’s Terrace, where I found locals and expats swapping banter during a regular Thursday art class as they copied a painting of Picasso, who famously hails from nearby Malaga. Owner Chema Castellano, 52, fell in love with the charm of Mijas when he moved here from Barcelona 19 years ago after a holiday. “My friends back home said I was crazy, that to come on holiday here is one thing but to live is another. “But when you live here you realise every day is varied… in Barcelona you just go to work during the week and go out at the weekend. There is no way I’m going back.”
George Clooney Argentinian Jessica Santander, 41, moved here after being offered a job at Restaurant Meson Meguiñez nine years ago by a man who looks like ‘George Clooney’. She’s referring to Canadian Thomas Weller, one of the two owners of the
restaurant. “They were the two most beautiful men I’d ever seen. One was like George Clooney. I knew I had to take the job and stay,” she explained. A decade later she has no regrets. “I still love it here.” In particular, she loves the town’s wonderful tourists, explaining that many customers come back year after year and bring her and her three-year-old daughter presents. “I was here working when I was pregnant and they got to know my daughter when she was one, two, three…that is very special and I am still in touch with many of them.” It is easy to see why so many tourists flock to the town, and why so many return and stay. The pueblo is quite clearly a gem of the Costa del Sol, and one not to be missed.
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MALAGA’S maternity hospital has begun using virtual reality technology to help distract kids in their own virtual world while they are being administered drugs intravenously.
Worth a try SPAIN has lodged a formal appeal against being thrown out of the 2023 Rugby World Cup for fielding an ineligible player in two qualifying matches.
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POETIC JUSTICE
Eurovision comeuppance for Spain 54 years after rigged vote THE UK has been accused of robbing Spain of second place at Eurovision thanks to a dodgy algorithm. After six countries voted for each other in the semi-finals of the contest in a pact, the organisers opted to scrap their votes and instead use an algorithm. Had this algorithm not been used, a report by the BBC says, Spain would have pipped the UK to second. Some may see this as a long awaited reckoning for Spain as
Spaced out A TEAM of Basque engineers has received funding from the European Space Agency to develop a concept that will attempt to convert the CO2 on Mars into methane for rocket fuel.
in 1968 Massiel famously beat English crooner Cliff Richard and his classic Congratulations with her somewhat repetitive La, La, La. It was later revealed the singer had a helping hand by none other than Spanish dictator Francisco Franco who had rigged the competition. He reportedly had the competition fixed to improve Spain’s image abroad, buying television programmes from European neighbours in exchange
54 YEARS LATER: Cliff’s revenge on Chanel for ‘douze points’ on the night Charlotte McDonald a Euroof the contest which was held vision reporter, told BBC Rain London’s Royal Albert Hall dio 4’s More or Less: “If I was Spanish, I would certainly be claiming that Spain beat the UK. I think it would have been a really big scandal if Ukraine hadn’t blown everyone away HAMSTERS which have been in contact with suspected caswith an extraordinary audies of monkeypox will have to quarantine in Andalucia ence vote.” The Junta has confirmed that the furry creatures will have to The contest, normally a disstay behind bars in isolation to stop the spread of the virus. mal failure for the British, was The region’s health advisor Jesus Aguirre explained that deturned on its head as Sam Ryspite being named monkeypox, other animals such as squirder’s Space Man outstripped rels - and hamsters - can also transmit this virus. And their is Chanel’s ‘SloMo’ by seven a high chance of humans passing the disease on to their pets. points to come in second.
Hamsters jailed
A HUMPBACK whale who made international headlines after being freed from illegal netting off Mallorca has died off the Valencia coast. The 12-metre long whale was spotted in difficulty in shallow waters off Tavernes de la Valldigna beach. It eventually washed up on Friday, with Valencia's Fundacion Oceanografic planning an autopsy to determine what caused it to die. The whale was originally saved by divers after getting entangled in illegal fishnets two kilometres off Cala Millor in Mallorca. Experts said it swam to the Valencia coast with several cuts on its dorsal fin and was 'extremely weak' before it eventually died.
Too slow F1 driver Sebastian Vettel was in a race of a different kind when he unsuccesfully tried to chase down thieves who had snatched his bag. The four-time world champion hopped on an electric scooter and weaved through the streets of Barcelona after his possessions were grabbed.
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