OLIVE PRESS
The
MALLORCA
FREE
THE UK’s leading child protecBy Fiona Govan tion group is calling on authorin Madrid ities to tighten the recruitment process of English teachers abroad. that he had used his position as The plea by The Safeguarding a teacher at private schools in Alliance aims to protect the Madrid to gain access to chilcountry against a British legal dren whom he photographed loophole that has allowed po- and filmed. tentially hundreds of British He then disseminated the sick paedophiles to find work abroad material on paedophile forums including in Spain. on the dark web around the The campaign follows an in- world. vestigation by the Olive Press that revealed how easy it was Sick for a convicted UK sex offender Emily Konstantas, CEO of The to change his identity and find work as a teacher in several Safeguarding Alliance, applaudMadrid schools where he was ed the Olive Press for highlightarrested for abusing at least 36 ing the issue: “The Ben Lewis case as revealed by the Olive children. We reported how Ben Lewis, 31, Press highlights this loophole had changed his name by deed and as shocking as this is, it is poll, applied for a new British nothing new and unfortunately passport, and dodged criminal represents just the tip of the icerecord checks despite being on berg as to the magnitude of this problem.” the UK’s sex offenders register. Police in Spain issued a state- She warned: “Whilst the status quo remains ment last week desserp evilo in situ this scribing Lewis - or significant Ben David Rose, as and very he is now known - as OLIVE NAYMTDLLIOUGG dangerous ‘a dangerous child PRESS safeguarding 15 YEARS sexual predator’. OF FUN 13:30 loophole will Lessons The National Police continue to press release ruled needed pose a threat, E n d s 3 1 / 1 2 / 1 9 . not just to UK Nationals, but to the rest of 21/6/19 13:30 the world, putting chilJREVO‘
NILEHCIM TSRIF YM HTIW DEYO
ro ehT egaugnal-hsilgnE ylno dna lanigi evni aículadnA ni repapswen evitagits
5102 dn22 - ht01 rebmeceD
See pages21/6/19 5
t o
c o n d i t i o n s .
Mijas Costa
s’olbaP ...kcab
noitcelE
S
aL fo sredaeR tnew aidraugnaV ni regnorts neve -vig ,troppus rieht -notsa na mih gni daeha ,%55 gnihsi ,)%61( areviR fo zehcnaS )%61( -naS ed zneaS dna .)%31( airamat
FREE
LTTOB sredael eerhT )tfel morF(a:tE airam naS dna
legiN retsduarf tapxe suomafnI emit htruof a rof detcivnoc namdloG V nevig neeb evah niapS ni SMITCI
rf namdloG legiN retfa epoh hse w eht ni duarf fo ytliug dnuof saU .K A saw sserP evilO eht woh draeh yruj ni -raey-85 eht gnignirb ni latnemurts lo ot ,etnoM led drawoH dellac won ,duj .ecits fA owt ,enilno stroper ruo gnittops ret m snioc dlog eviecer ot deliaf ohw neht dellac mih morf desahcrup dah ye ni dnuof saw eh ,retal raey A .ecilop ug won dna duarf fo stnuoc owt no ytli af .liaj sec
Your
voice in Spain
ot tekcit yaw enO 4 egaP !liaj
THE START: The first edition of the
Olive Press in 2006
s March 24th - April 6th 2021 Vol. 15 Issue 365 www.theolivepress.e
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...
after a EXCLUSIVE: Private school warning moved to Spain, convicted British paedophile and found dodged criminal record checks work as an English teacher
NAMES: two different passports
Fiona Govan in Madrid
idenlanguage academy after creating a new tity, using forged documents. reFormer colleagues of the sex offender to dodge vealed that he created a new namerun sumcriminal record checks in order to to mer camps and teach private classes
young children. after He had changed his name to Ben David and being convicted in June 2016 of taking in possessing indecent images of children 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
Award Winning Rehabilitation Clinic
post DANGER: Lewis got teaching teacher 2017 he accepted a job as an English secat a leading semi-private (concertado)from ondary school that receives subsidies the state. David by “He was going by the name Ben another then and was offered the job aftera former teacher dropped out mid-term,” the Olive colleague Natasha Fitzsimons told Press. posithe “I think they were desperate to fill as tion so maybe they weren’t as thorough they should have been.
Horrified
for 18 “We worked together at the school gomonths, took on private classes together for ing to the homes of some of the children summer extracurricular teaching and ran a said the camp at the school during 2018,”horror at Irish colleague, who is filled with the access he had to children. the day The Olive Press has discovered that his after sentencing in the UK he changed Lewis name by deed poll from Ben David just 15 to Ben David, in a process that takes minutes. a British He then applied for and received also prepassport in his new name, while he Israeli sented a doctored photocopy of his a passport stamped and verified by non-existent law firm that showed his name as Ben David Rose. The Olive Press has seen photocopdegree ies of these, plus a teaching and Qualified Teaching Status (QTS) certificates presented in the name ALL AREAS COVERED of Ben David Rose as well as certificates in his original name. 4G UNLIMITED What is amazing is that by April teaching a for applied had 2019 he INTERNET job at a leading private school in the IDEAL FOR upmarket Arturo Soria district that STREAMING TV teaches the British curriculum to the ALSO IPTV, children of Madrid’s elite. By now he also had a DBS certificate SATELLITE TV
...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 + SKY + THE DOCTOR
21/6/19 13:30
Portals Nous, 07181, Mallorca.
SPONSORED BY CHEAPER, GREENER ELECTRICITY
Vol. 15 Issue 365 March - April 2021
Getting things done
F
ROM its very first issue in 2006 the Olive Press has been campaigning for its community. Whether 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 as exposed the madness of building a 350-room monstrosity on a virgin beach in Almeria’s Cabo de Gata. Both schemes - Los Merinos, in Ron- maverick Jeremy Griffiths, and Nigel da, and the Algarrobico hotel, in Alme- Goldman, a degenerate gold-dealing ria - went into reverse after our stories dirt-bag, who had a restaurant column made the UK AND Spanish national in a local newspaper, which he used to newspapers and green groups includ- cover his tracks. ing Greenpeace and Ecologistas en Ac- We also tackled timeshare crook Toni Muldoon, who certainly deserves a cion joined our protests. And then there were the crooks, like mention for conning thousands of peoCrimestoppers’ Most Wanted Daniel ple and eventually went to prison for Johnston, a bank robber, and Matthew setting up fake escort websites. Sammon, a dangerous paedophile, Meanwhile, our crime reporting on who we single-handedly tracked down missing teen Amy Fitzpatrick ‘blew open to a village near Sevilla and a car park the case’, to use the words of her grandmother, while our continuing investigain Fuengirola. And fraudsters like David ‘the dogman’ tion into missing Maddie McCann has yielded exclusive after exclusive, with its Klein, pet transport frequent links to Spain.
A decade and a half of campaigning has scored some big wins for the Olive Press
When it comes to corruption we were the first English newspaper to write about the ERE scandal at the Junta de Andalucia that cost an estimated billion euros to the taxpayers, while we also tackled town hall theft on a local scale on dozens of occasions. Animal cruelty has been a continual bugbear and we have exposed so many evil abusers, as well as the scoundrels who allowed hunters to kill innocent circus lions and tigers at a finca in Extremadura (see below). On a more positive front, it was great to interview everyone from Princess Diana’s ex-lover James Hewett to cooking
legends Ferran Adria and Gordon Ramsey. And it was nice to chat to Ciudadanos leader Albert Rivera, as well as the only newspaper to be able to pose a couple of questions to Michelle Obama on her visit to Marbella a few years ago. Indeed, the positives far outweigh the negatives and we would prefer to be judged over 50 rather than 15 years. As far as we are concerned we have only just begun.
The deed poLl loophole tel: (0034) 952 763 840 info@theskydoctor.com www.theskydoctor.com
Opinion Page 6
Continues on Page 4
DON’T MISS OUR 20-PAGE
SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT
ON ESTEPONA
April 30 - May
FREE
Vol. 8 Issue 186
girls A PAIR of young Max Clifdophile PR guru on the ford sexually assaulted have led to his Costa del Sol conviction. visiClifford - a long-time and involved tor to the coast local events in charities and guilty of - has been found sexual assault, eight counts of mostly on minors.groomed on At least two were being lured in the coast, afterof stardom. with promises here with his He is pictured Kenny Lynch showbiz chum at a bash in Marbella.
www.theolivepress.es
CONMAN FOUND
PEDDLING COINS
the olive press
14 2014
FROM ENGLISH
Andalucía’s Fortnightly
VILLAGE
The Olive Press
Issue 26, January 24th 2008
**Western Edition**
Andalucía’s
OH TO BE IN OLVERA
page 14
F: 952 587 T: 952 587 573 Protec Group
HUMILLADERO TEL: 680 152 690 OR 629 340 126
On behalf of all at the British Embassy and Consulates, I want to wish huge congratulations to all at the Olive Press on your 15th anniversary. The English language press plays a vital role in keeping UK nationals in Spain informed. And we very much appreciate 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
News Publication
HOW TO DEAL WITH A MID LIFE CRISIS
**Western Edition** PR ON THE PROWL
Living Consciously
page 16
We send our hot new columnist to interview designer Sophie Cranston
OLIVE PRESS ANDALUC
Vol. 13 Issue
LAUNCHES
www.century21gibraltar.com
Century21 202-204 Main Street · Gibraltar Tele: 00 350 Mob: 00 350 200 51020 56523000 info@century21gibraltar.com
Monkey bites fox
Foxes star Louisa monkey on a trip bitten by to Gibraltar
€2.95 Carvery - Tues, Wed & Thurs evenings. Lunchtimes on Wed, Thurs, Fri & Sun. 2 course Pensioner’s lunch €3.50 - Thursday lunchtime 3 course Valentines Night 14th February - €9.95 Quality leather handbag & watch sale noon on the 26th of Jan. We have introduced a New Menu. the Race Nights, last Saturday of month - Steak platters at €7.95
FREE
Vol. 10 Issue
251
Don’t let the banks cash in!
www.hifx.co.uk
(902 879 135
www.theolivepress.es
October 26th
- November 8th
HEALY 461 952 575MAC
ESTEPONA PORT
Irish Bar & Restaurant INSURANCE SERVICES FOR EXPATRIATES Motor - UK & Spanish Plates
Health, House,
Travel, Life, Business Policies Awarded by Diageo & Theavailable in English Tel: 951 517 015 Irish Times We cover the entire Granada www.healymacs-estepona.com and
2016
Malaga provinces
Tel: 952 934
963
www.rightwaysl.com
ÍA
www.theolivepress.es
TO PROTECT
A
S
errania
de Ronda
deep,high River mountain
T
AN ecological nightmare, hundreds of “This is ancient oaks parently stand ap- attempt a cynical and botched to create ambience Pulled up for dead. a huge golf mac- around the golf roproject, they course and create space,” line up in rie rows like said tree surwar graves in ee- geon Kit Hogg. Somme. “I am sure the very few of these Many centuries old, they have trees will survive. protected been sacrifi It is disgusting.” ced for Europe’s insatiable desire Despite ongoing holiday homes. for golf and stop the work, EU efforts to Part of investigations and – crucially costaficationthe unrelenting guarantee – no of Andalucia, of they sound Los Merinos,water, work at the death knell nature conservation near for continues unchecked. Ronda in southern Spain. This is the true price of golf.
THE SKY + DOCTOR + ALL AREAS COVERED
4G UNLIMITED INTERNET
2 FOR 1
2 complete glasses
W FRO NO
Specialist of Sherry Wine Special Flamenco Friday & Saturday
Including
sunglasses See our ad inside for details.
National Gastronomic Award
C/ Andalucía,
10º San Pedro de Alcántara
Tel: 952 927 188 labodegadelcantinero@gmail.com
Est 1984
& Pawnbrokers
952 588 795 or y Cajal 40, Fuengirola, 609 529 633 Malaga
29640 (EASY PARKING)
COASTS
DS O
C O ST
Bar
Exclusive story
Longest established British bar
Open
f o r
n e w
ALSO IPTV, SATELLITE
page 4
TV
TV
tel: (0034) 952 763 840 info@theskydoctor.com www.theskydoctor.com
c u s t o m e r s
o n l y .
S u b j e c t
t o
The hulking shell SWATHES of rural Andalucia set for a 311-room of concrete - once danger of being are in mega resort remained an eyesore has a new planning concreted over after for years after work was halted by the regional law was brought in Bunkers are also by the courts. Green groups government. 700-home golf being dug to stop a tas en Accion including Ecologisand Greenpeace Nerja, which course scheme, near joined with hundreds have ment of one will see the developof local associations to fight final stretchesof the Costa del Sol’s fronts opened on a series of new up during the And protestersof pristine coast. crisis. COVID digging in to in Mijas are also SOON LEGAL?: They are up Algarrobico used to build stop the law being called LISTA in arms over the so- one, but TWO in woods overlooking the sea at El Chaparral. new hotels on the lockdown law - passed during beaches in virgin The - that is set to the dozens of previously allow ed natural park supposedly protect- took first of many planned protests of place outside outlawed proj- The ects to go ahead. council offices first involves Cabo de Gata. la in In particular, a 30-room hotel the green light for It Cala de Mijas this week. activists are outraged could also see about a controversial famous Bahia near the globally Valdevaqueros the controversial de Los Genoveses new golf beach, while course in Nerja, of homes go project of hundreds stand of woodlandas well as a final star hotel the second is for a twoup on a heavily-proclose tected in Mijas. They are also de San Pedro to the pristine Cala Under virgin beach, near Tarifa. furious about bay the recently not Protestors fear the(pictured above). resubmitted project, backed new law will now allow the legalization of also Rosa Quintana,by TV celebrity Ana nearby the stunning El Algarro- between Bolonia and Tarifa area bico hotel, see a series of hotels get built.would Ecologists are built also worried disgracefully Los Merinos project for that the on a virgin courses and hundreds two-golf of housbeach, near es on UNESCO-protected Carboneras, land near Ronda could be virgin due to a despite being quashed by revived, the Sup l a n n i n g preme Court. mix up. Fairway to hell: See page 6 TM
c o n d i t i o n s .
What have Han
E n d s
Solo, Franco
3 1 / 1 2 / 1 9 .
and Prince got
in common?
21/6/19 13:30
Within an hour, team scrambled the Olive Press car, Sammon learning from to Fuengirola, and remainedcovered his face another builder silent when that he was currently questioned by the Olive camped He was out at the feria then bundled Press. ground. After a day working into the BMW and taken nearby, the be Londoner duly fingerprinted to Madrid to English-plated arrived in his for extradition. and prepared cream Moncayo campervan. Following the Parking up, he two Reid said arrest, father-ofhe was ‘relieved’ as he took his looked relaxed to see Sammon dog for a walk taken away. around the feria “As ground and the soon as I saw his face among spoke with neighbours. most wanted I felt sick,” Once identified, said Reid, from we called the Guardia Civil “I let him hang Blackpool. and Crimestoppers and so began dren, we took around my chila tense threehim in with open hour waiting arms and at first game, with Reid were none the sitting in the car wiser. Sky News crime beside us. “But we always reporter Martin Brunt was a bit weird, he’s thought he was Eventually, assoon there too. never talks abouta real loner and his family. and truly fell, night had well “He creeped an unmarked my family out black BMW much that so plain clothes arrived and two Incredibly, I fired him.” detectives swiftly police moved in for the evidence from did not take any his campervan cating his passportarrest, confis- cluding his computer and inand phone. Frisking him other at the side of the CONTINUES ON
ANTHONYS
Antiques, Jewellers
A huge variety of over 1 carat diamond jewellery. HIGH STREET PRICES: 7,000€+ OUR PRICE: 1,500 - 2,000€ UNBEATABLE PRICES GUARANTEED WE BUY, WE PAY MORE, WE Diamonds@anthonys-diamonds.com PAY CASH
Avda. Ramon
OLIVE PRESS – 70mm x 40mm FRONT COVER
26 October
AN
R
GREEN CAMPAIGNS: Against golf courses (left and top) Tel: 952 147 834 in issue See page 24 one and coastal lopment (above) develast year
IDEAL FOR STREAMING
952 147 834 Morente
Sarah Tilley
LTCL MLC Hom
Complimentary Health Practitioner
Homeopathy, in Mollina and Nutrition Bio-resonance All types of food and tapas Treatment of asthma, * O f Live f e Premiership allergies, IBS r v a football l i d and excema
Calle Nueva, Ronda from 10am till late t: +34 680 752 Closed Thursday 400 e: sarahtilley@mac.com TheOlivePress-256x170-HOME02.indd w: www.sarahtilley.com w: http://es.juiceplus.com/+sarahtilley Calle Carretera, 1
44, Mollina
EXCLUSIVE: snare one of Expat tip leads Olive Press UK’s most wanted team paedophiles to
EAGLE-EYED readers helped Olive Press snag one of BritWORDS AND ain’s most wanted By Rob HorganPICS Spain, just hours fugitives in and Laurence Dollimore after he had been named. Following a tip off to the paper, al Crime Agency, who arrived suspected paedophile the scene after at the arrest. Matthew “Well Sammon was campervan in dragged from his thanks done Olive Press and to the expat community time raid and a dramatic night- for tipping us off, this is the an unmarked whisked away in son we reapolice car. run these Working closely The dramatic campaigns.” day had started Daniel Reid, with informant when Crimestoppers firstly track we were able to annual issued its to Fuengirola, down Sammon tives in list of most wanted fugiTorremolinos Guardia Civil tothen call in the day morning. on ThursOn the run for arrest him. two years, Sam- Leading to hundreds mon - a blackbelt of press stories around in Jujitsu the world and was wanted in the UK for shar-- on national television, ing indecent images the hunt was immediately on. His seizure came of children. But, it was to popular just 10 hours after he was named local newspaper the in Opera- that Olive Press tion Captura and expat plasterer recorded arrest is the quickest reached Reid, in the joint UK out to, trusting 40, and Spanish police us to SUCCESS: ‘do the job properly’. Reid, Horgan, “It was a fantastic operation. Reynolds and result,” said In a series of Facebook Brunt Steve Reynolds, from the Nation- sages, he announced that mes- as a labourer and was Sammon, 45, had worked for him living in a campervancurrently around the Mijas and Fuengirola area.
INVESTIGATIONS: Tracking 59€ down paedophile Matthew Sammon, probing missing Amy (right) and exposing animal cruelty (far right)
Fuengirola
See page 7
SPACES AND
UPROAR: Beach protestors and virgin in Tarifa Cala de San Pedro (below)
page 24
Telephone 627135939
BANGED UP: into police carSammon bundled and (inset) campervan his
PAGE 8
PAGE 16
PAGE 19
For all your insurance needs!
Estepona 952 887 125
952 465 588
OLIVE PRESS
21st 2020
page 3
19th 2007
the
olive INVESTIGATES press
Voted BEST expat paper in Spain
PAGE 3
Mafia town
How the CEO crime corrupted of organized a town hall
Secret Malaga
It’s a true city Malaga has so of culture, but much more
In the Serrania
Don’t miss our 12-Page Ronda supplement
estepona@ibexinsure.com
fuengirola@ibexinsure.com
SPAIN’S NUMBER 1 GREEN ENERGY BROKER AND SOLAR PANEL PROVIDER IS PROUD TO SPONSOR THE OLIVE PRESS.
OLIVE PRESS WINS KEY JOURNALISM AWARD
Your
expat
voice in Spain
July 8th - July
OUR LAST GREEN
La Cala Cougar moves inland
CHRIS STEWART WRITES FOR THE OLIVE PRESS
His take on the Brits jailed for “saving the environment”
By Dilip Kuner
A fairway to treat S nature?
BROADBAND INTERNET & TELEPHONE WHEREVER YOU ARE!
Voted BEST expat paper in Spain
Gotcha!
347
CAMPAIGN
Last stretches by new law, of pristine coast endangered alongside inland EXCLUSIVE beauty spots
Issue 20, October
page 22
See pages 4 and 5
Selling Euros?
KAT’Z CAFÉ-BAR
info@grupo-protec.com www.grupo-protec.com
Here’s to the next 15!
Fortnightly
EU steps in to investigate El Algorrobico hotel opening after Junta u-turn that “disgraces” Spain... while a pair of British pensioners watch as their house - which DID have a licence - is torn to the ground.
Cartel behind Putin’s mystery costa home
For further information543
FREE
*FREE*
Full story on page 16
While Brits’ dream home is demolished in Almeria
in the sun
IMPACT: Tracking down crooked Nigel Goldman (above) and covering the devastating Costa del Sol fire in 2012
Mijas Costa
OLIVE PRESS
HANDS OFF!
www.theolivepress.es
the olive press
for Sick safari hunters jailed shooting tigers and lions Hypocrisy in Spain
See page 8 & 9
on page 2
It’s MORE fun
CAGED!
And were these men involved?
El Horrible opens
can Nigel
EXCLUSIVE: fraudster and By Tom Powell using reveal that convicted Jamie Micklethwaite is back in business Del Monte’ fraudster Ni- Goldman COSTA del Solis hiding out false name ‘Howard Spain last year gel Goldman country the fled in a classic English of fraud, Couling Goldman the false name his partner Suzannewares via amid accusations cottage under dozens of vicleaving behind peddling their mil‘Howard del Monte’. account called tims owed a total of €15 ‘Del Monte’ - are Goldman - aka to the busi- a joint Ebay lion. has also returned and selling ‘Bensons Emporium’. staff told the While he refused to answer ness of buying antiques, it Village post office he seems happy he regularly Olive Press that addressed to questions, Couling, her two coins, stamps and with can be revealed. month lease collects parcels ‘sends living two cats in the daughters and Monte’, and also propRenting on a six Berkshire ‘Del packages’. modest three-bedroom in the charming he and many erty. village of Kintbury, are Kintbury’s (top) with Suzanne While the pair conversation, UK bolthole and hottest topic ofseen and ‘keep HIDEOUT: Goldman’s ticket. he to you, with a parking they are rarely themselves’. understand whytrafnothing to say if a themselves to live nearby “I have forward to meeting “I don’t hasn’t been arrested, but I look happier in Couling’s family find him then he called down. BRITS are stillreports sugfic warden can in Hungerford.secretive man you again,” can,” said Spain, despite have abansurely the police In fact, the who wished to is seemingly gesting 90,000 dream. the neighbour, from Del Monte leaving the Parking ticket doned the expatOlive Press remain anonymous. village only ever seen the post office. An exclusive but “Everyone in the more than whathouse to go to Press conhair was disheveled, he’s Goldman, survey found that of our readWhen the Olivehis country- His did not have the mous- knows three quarters since makhe he ever name he goes under.” his fronted him in refused tache some have claimed who deleted is ers are happier EXCLUSIVE part of his Goldman, side retreat, Goldman recently, door, instead now sporting as ing the move. Facebook accountinvestigated can reveal that to come to thehis head out of is The Olive PressPresident may disguise. Coul- currently being see No briefly poking the Russian a multimillion to return millions For the full story, The previous morning, dream on leaving the for failing his bedroom window. in his fihave bought mansion with a end to Spanish ing was seen load up their of euros to investors euro Marbella page 4. house at 9am to Zafira with nancial companies. the Olive group of six businessmen. silver Vauxhall off, possibly Various victims told on page 3 are practically boxes and head See full story Press that theylosing their life after to a car boot sale. Building explained that destituteto his schemes, that One neighbour Costa Del Sols Leading into the savings since 1996. Page 4 the day they moved warden arContinues on and Window Specialist, house, a traffic the couple rived and issued see our advert inside.
See full story
News Publication
Where are they?
The man from Del Monte
EXPOSED: COSTA
Clifford guilty pae-
www.theolivepress.es
only English-language The original and in Andalucía investigative newspaper
olive press
the
you Let HiFX help reach your destination. www.hifx.co.uk
M
www.villaparadisospain.com
...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
Are you feeling depressed? Addiction problems?
3 1 / 1 2 / 1 9 .
SP18206EN - Front page Ewn adverts v2.indd 4
nwodtnuoc noitcelE
expat
Discover hassle-free currency transfers
E n d s
7-6 egaP noitan speews revef
hsinapS eht yas EMO dna hcuot fo tuo si retsiniM emirPfo regnfi sih nekat sah .eslup eht f rp yojaR onairaM tuB sih gnitteg yb gnorw sretbuod devo t ni thgiarts seitiroirp -neg gniticxe tsom eht ot pu-nur ehotsih hsinapS ni noitcele lare .yr sredael yt rap rehto eht elihW no etabed V T laicurc a ni degagne erp saw ssob PP eht ,yadnoM tnat ropmi erom eht htiw deipucco gnineppah s’tahw ...fo rettam .aiculadnA ni hc sih dnA !no tops saw rettam gnidaer fo ecioyek a retfA ps ngiapmac eton ,anopetsE ni lufhtiaf yt rap rof hceeo pu hctac ot emit dnuof eh yrev ruoy gnidaer yb swen tapxe nbailer-repus ,dlo-edaced ,nwo .sserP evilO el
I olbaP GNIMAEB A .seitrap htob emac saiselg gnirud gnigniws tuo VT laicurc a si yojaR rM nosaer eht si sihT“ -napS eht wolb ot etabed ’sredael lagelli deviecer oot eh :ereh ton .nepo ediw noitcele lareneg hsi .saiselgI deraor ”,stnemyap -aR onairaM retsiniM emirP htiW ton dluow eh gnitsisni oslA -deecorp gnihctaw dna - tnesba yoj eht tog ylraelc eh ,airyS bmob somedoP eht - samajyp sih ni sgni suovren sih no dnah reppu eguh a deviecer ytiralupop s’redael -lA lavir noitpurroc-itna niam -lim 2.9 drocer a fo tnorf ni tsoob .sonadaduiC fo ,areviR treb VT tsegral s’niapS ,sreweiv noil -mob anu‘ saw tluser dne ehT .5102 fo ecneidua ,yas dluow hsinapS eht sa ,’ab -gnol eht ,raluguj eht rof gnioG ni elim a yb pot no tuo gnimoc - PP eht demmals redael deriah .yadretsey sllop suoirav -purroc fo tfar a revo - EOSP dna -nael-thgir eht dedulcni esehT deflugne evah taht ,sladnacs noit flah ylraen htiw ,odnuM lE gni .seitrap rieht )%24( sredaer s’repap eht fo dnoces-15 lanfi gninmad a nI per PP elihw ,mih htiw gnidis -eb dluohs eh yhw fo pu-dnuor -amatnaS ed zneaS ayaroS detsil eh ,MP wen s’niapS emoc dna %22 areviR ,%03 tog air dekcor evah taht sesac yek evfi .%7 tsuj ,zehcnaS ordeP s’EOSP
FF
d i t i o n s .
ANDALUCÍA
nosirp gnitiawA :NAMDLOG
Spain INTERNATIONAL schools around a British have been put on high alert after most man began teaching at one of Madrid’s conexclusive colleges months after being victed in the UK. Lewis, Questions have been raised after Ben be31, was able to work at the school despite ing on the UK’s sex offenders register. Lewis, The Olive Press has discovered that sex ofwho is now awaiting trial for child V, fences at Centro Penitenciario Madrid and a managed to hoodwink TWO schools
TM
EERF
igeb
ni ssob somedoP kcabemoc evissam
oba segar llits etabed elihW eh ,hsilgnE kaeps ot ytiliba sih tu ruo ni dessorgne ylraelc saw a gnidneps erofeb ,egap tnorf tsal si eht hguorht gnikcifl etunim .eus tiw ,tseretni fo ytnelp gnidniF ododneB sailE ssob PP s’agalaM h eh ,redluohs sih revo gnikool -rappa gnihtemos tuo detniop neht .revoc eht no gniugirtni yltne n a gnikam saw eh spahreP -refer erutuf rof etisbew eht fo eto dirdaM ot nruter sih no ecne ? aw eh ,ebyam tsuj ,ebyam rO eht no derutcip flesmih gninigami s ollof noitide txen ruo fo revoc rebmeceD no yrotciv edilsdnal a gniw .eurt emoc nac smaerD .02
X
e c t
agalaM :EVISICNI tuo stniop ssob PP sserP evilO rehtona yojaR ot evisulcxe
reipaN anoI :OTOHP
T: 952 147 834
eht
822 eussI 01 .loV
The
3 1 / 1 2 / 1 9 .
The
E n d s
se.sserpeviloeht.www
im etabed V T lanoitasnes htiw sn
anopetsE ni saw ohw MP eht sun
yojaR elihw...
no pu sehsurb swen tapxe sih
PAGE 2
Bracing for Brexit
FREE
Vol. 11 Issue 257
www.theolivepress.es
January 18th
- January 31st
2017
They’re all in our new Property magazine out this week
Property G
New Year, new house?
PAGE 13
www.century21gibraltar.com
Century21 202-204 Main Street · Gibraltar Tele: 00 350 200 Mob: 00 350 565 51020 23000 info@century21gibraltar.com
THERESA May has vowed Britain won’t half out’ Brexitaccept a ‘half in, speech that is in a landmark likely to have long-lasting effects on Gibraltar and all expats in Spain. The Prime Minister issued 12-point plan to take Britaina out of the EU, ing Street looking with Downto scrap EU single market and current customs union access. In the biggest month tenure,speech of her sixclear, what I amshe said: “To be proposing cannot mean membership of the single market.” She added Britain would no longer give ‘huge EU, however she sums’ to the Parliament will conceded that vote on the deal. have the final Maintaining the common travel area between the United Kingdom and EXCLUSIVE Ireland is also the Republic of By Gabrielle a priority during Pickard-Whitehead the Brexit negotiations. and Laurence Dollimore However, the tar with Spainborder of Gibral- A BRITISH was not menexpat rushed to the tioned. after finding five has called in police vets he died 30 later. of her dogs executed minutes a late-night massacre. in An X-ray showed The Guardia in 2004, found Control shot through the he also had a bullet ing the horrificCivil are now investigatin their pens onthe five rescue dogs shot Meanwhile, roof of his mouth. “We want to attack that one of the Reyes (ThreeJanuary 6, the night of was migration fromcontrol our im- of Illona Mitchell’s horses also left one also attacked, Mitchell’s 12 horses Kings). with its eye Her beloved seven-year-old so savagely May. “We also the EU,” said gouged out. eye may have The detectives to be removed. that its of the friendliest Dizzy, ‘one Vets importance of recognise the have been struggling section Sepronafrom the environment the brightest meet’ and a puppydogs you will ever four-year-old, and the best coming to treat the called Maisie it was one of the told Mitchell, 48, that shot dead at the here. We were he has become named Rocco, because recognise the seen and were worst attacks they had too nervous and Meanwhile Cocogates of their pens. have made.” contribution they Deeply traumatised skittish. They have put visibly shocked by it. shot in their beds, and Domingo, were thankfully by the May is believed with Mitchell was not seen attack - that an eye on the on extra patrols to keep ing they had by her daughpermit system to favour a workestate at weekends cowered in their believ- ter Ella, 11 - Mitchell night. before being killed and at kennels so angry continued: “I trigger Article as she looks to in cold blood. am that someone “I am sickened Coco, two, had would do someIt comes as the50 by March. thing as disgusting would carry out as to why someone range betweenbeen shot at point-blank animals.” as this to innocent published data House of Lords the eyes, while baric attack on such a cruel and bar- week. year-old Domingo three- Mitchell, der closure withshowing a borinnocent, defenceless was shot through from animals,” she side of his face. put 40% of jobs Spain would The the tack is linked Chester, believes the attold the Olive to her recent Press this her mother-of-one, above, who at risk in GiThey later found braltar. ban hunters from decision to estate in mountains bought Jack, a six-year-old near Granada German Shepherd, having The 32 page-report, estate that sits her huge 173-hectare in under a nearby convulsions the based on Gibraltar Sierra de Baza. stunning scenery in tree, but despite government evibeing dence, estimates Continues on Rock’s 26,000 10,500 of the Page 4 the border daily.workers crossed Opinion Page Est 1984 6 “A frontier which necessary fluidity lacked the fore put directly would thereAntiques, Jewellers of 40% of the at risk the jobs For all your Gibraltar workforce,” said a spokesman. & Pawnbrokers insurance needs! May’s speech A huge variety was cheered of over Leave campaigners, by 1 carat diamond pushing for a ‘hard’ who are Brexit. jewellery. She said:“We adopt a model do not seek to HIGH STREET PRICES: already enjoyed estepona@ibexinsure.com by other countries. Choose one of 7,000€+ We do not our great OUR PRICE: 1,500 seek to hold on lens offers or - 2,000€ get 30% bership as we to bits of memoff selected “The British leave,” said May. Fuengirola frames UNBEATABLE change. And people voted for PRICES GUARANTEED See our ad inside it is the government’s job to deliver WE BUY, WE for details. fuengirola@ibexinsure.com it.”
SLAUGHTER Expat’s rescue animals mercilessly killed over ‘hunting row’
ANTHONYS
6
MASSIVE
LENSES
SALE
Estepona 952 887 125
952 465 588
Opinion Page
PAY MORE,
100% Certified Green Energy WE PAY CASH Diamonds@anthonys-diamonds.com
952 588 795 or y Cajal 40, Fuengirola, 609 529 633 Malaga
Avda. Ramon
29640 (EASY PARKING)
OLIVE PRESS – 70mm x 40mm FRONT COVER
18 January
Happy 15th anniversary!
IN the United Kingdom a person does not need to follow an official process to start using a new name, but they require a ‘deed poll’ to apply for or to change official documents such as a new passport. This can be done simply and easily online for little or no cost in a process that takes no longer than 15 minutes to process and can even be completed from a prison cell. Under section 84 of the Sexual Offences Act of 2003, an offender must report a name change within three working days
14/02/2020 23:25
dren and those most vulnerable at risk,” she warned. “There are potentially hundreds - if not thousands - of known sex offenders slipping under the radar in the UK to seek work abroad where they can continue to abuse children,” she continued. “This loophole is arguably the biggest safeguarding scandal the world has ever seen and there is an opportunity for Spain to lead the way in tackling it at a global level,” she said. Her charity wants Spain to introduce the need to present an original birth certificate alongside a passport and criminal record checks that would allow potential employers to unearth a change of identity. “It’s a simple way to provide that extra check,” she insisted. “The severity and danger this loophole presents to the whole world cannot be underestimated.” An extensive report by The Safeguarding Alliance is being used to lobby the UK parliament for a legal change in the management of registered sex offenders. It explains how the current system relies on the registered sex offender to notify the police with details of any name change, alongside any change of address and passport information. “Currently the onus lies solely with the offender and although it is an offence to fail to notify, one could argue this is not a de-
to the police, and failure to so is a criminal offence which could result in a term not exceeding five years imprisonment. However, evidence demonstrates that not every registered sex offender will act with honesty and report a change of name as required. The Safeguarding Alliance discovered through Freedom of Information requests to 16 of the UK’s 46 police forces that 913 people with sex offence convictions had gone missing after changing their names without informing the police.
ión SD:Lzou-Jz3F-aZYs-CcBb es Código Seguro de Verificac 23456789-$: en https://sede.mjusticia.gob. bcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz01 Puede verificar este documento ión: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZa Código Seguro de Verificac Juego de caracteres del
OP exclusive investigation leads to child protection plea from UK charity
25 EGAP RATS GNINIHS - ’RATS
o n s .
See La Cultura inside
May 7th - May 20th 2021
The
TM
voice in Spain
Schools paedo call
H
TM
expat
S
Fatal kick
Waugh, from Middlesbrough, was acquitted of manslaughter by nine jurors on the basis the kick was not picked up on CCTV. The defendant admitted to slapping the 30-year-old shopkeeper’s son after taking the stand at the start of his two-week trial at the Audiencia Provincial Court in Palma. Waugh denied being the person who delivered the kick to Henderson’s head, said to have caused his death as he lay on the ground. A witness said someone else had committed the assault. Waugh’s Spanish boss who stood accused of trying to cover up the attack was also cleared of any wrongdoing.
Your
A
A BRITISH expat has been acquitted of killing a holidaymaker in the tourist resort of Magaluf. Paul Waugh, who worked at Mulligans bar on the popular party strip, was cleared of manslaughter after he was accused of kicking an Irish holidaymaker in the head in April 2018. Waugh, 35, was alleged to have caused father-of-four Aaron Henderson to suffer a bleed to the brain after launching the savage attack outside the nightclub where he worked. Henderson, 30, who had been on holiday with his girlfriend at the time, died in hospital four days later. Spanish cops then arrested Waugh as well as the 40-year-old manager of Mulligans bar on Magaluf's infamous Punta Ballena strip.
X
Brit cleared of killing
www.theolivepress.es
Vol. 4 Issue 105
An exclusive account of a surreal encounter with Spanish maestro, Salvador Dali
MINISTERIO DE JUSTICIA
REGISTRO CENTRAL DE DELINCUENTES SEXUALES
A
Gerente Territorial en ZARAGOZ CERTIFICA:
de la Base de Datos del Registro Central Que, en el día de la fecha, consultada a: NO CONSTA información penal relativa
Delincuentes Sexuales,
nº 22807454 D./Dª BEN DAVID ROSE con Pasaporte 26 de febrero, relativa a la organización Marco 2009/315/JAI del Consejo de Conforme a lo dispuesto en la Decisión entre los Estados miembros, de los registros de antecedentes penales y al contenido del intercambio de información caso, las condenas impuestas por otros el presente certificado incluye, en su tratándose de ciudadanos españoles, condenas hayan sido notificadas, sin tales que en en los mismos términos Estados miembros de la Unión Europea, de condena y los tipos delictivos Estado del delictivos tipos los entre que exista necesariamente una equiparación nacionales.
El presente certificado refleja la situación
del titular interesado/a en la fecha de
su expedición.
Zaragoza a 29 de agosto de 2017
DANGER: Lewis got teaching post, with help of ‘fake’ papers Pagina 1 de 1 Ref: 00003143792/2017
terrent as the offender already has the propensity to commit very serious crimes,” states the report, seen by the Olive Press. Through extensive research and case law The Safeguarding Alliance has identified that offenders are not notifying as required and are continuing to abuse children by changing their names and obfuscating their identities as seen through the case of Ben Lewis/Rose absconding overseas to continue to abuse. Signature Not Verified
Documento firmado electrónicamente
Undermined
“As a result, the effectiveness of important legislation, the Sex Offenders Register, the Child Sex Offender Disclosure Scheme, the Domestic Violence Disclosure Scheme, the DBS are undermined and effectively rendered redundant,” it states. “The case of Ben Lewis/Rose highlights why Spain should be aware of this very serious safeguarding loophole and should pioneer an international movement to protect its children from those abusers who slip under the radar using the name change loophole,” Konstantas added. Opinion Page 6
2
CRIME
www.theolivepress.es
NEWS IN BRIEF Teen assaults THREE teenagers have been arrested for brutally beating up a father and his young son after they asked the group to respect the COVID-19 measures inside a cinema in Palma’s Coll d'en Rabassa centre.
Looking up THE summer season is in sight for the capital with 60% of its hotels opening this month. The Palma-Cala Mayor Hotel Association said its biggest wish is to get as many out of work employees off the ERTE.
Bitten off A MAN has been jailed for two years after admitting to biting off another man’s ear during a fight outside a bar in Palma. The victim had to have most of his lobe removed after the assault.
Long wait ACCORDING to a study by the Appraisal Society, a Balearic resident will take an average of 16 years to be able to buy a medium sized home in the region the longest period of all of Spain.
A 38-year-old Spaniard has been arrested for allegedly murdering her 25-year-old Italian boyfriend and covering up his death with a ‘web of lies’. According to the woman’s first and one of many contradictory statements to police, she claimed that while in Palma’s Son Valenti industrial estate, she started her car without noticing that the passenger door was open and as the vehicle began to move forward,
Death cover-up her boyfriend fell to the ground and hit his head. He was rushed to hospital but the man died in intensive care the next day. CCTV footage was analysed and showed the couple first arguing in the estate. The woman then gets into the car and the man climbs onto the bonnet to
May 7th - May 20th 2021
‘Ate own mum’
A MAN is on trial for killing his mother, chopping her into pieces and eating her remains. The self-confessed cannibal also admitted feeding pieces of her to his pet dog. Alberto Sanchez Gomez is accused of strangling his 66-year-old mother before chopping her into pieces and cooking her. When he was arrested in 2019
Madrid cannibal goes on trial for ‘killing, cooking and eating’ mother By Fiona Govan
at his mother’s home in Madrid, police said they found body parts scattered around the apartment - some kept in tupperware boxes.
A POLICE officer in Mallorca has been arrested for allegedly paying a 15-year-old girl for repeated sex sessions. The Spaniard, who is described as being ‘middle-aged’ and a resident of Inca, was taken into custody over the weekend where he was charged with the corruption of a minor. Although few details have been released by investigators in a bid to keep absolute secrecy around the
Stupid cougher
stop her from leaving. She then accelerates forward for several metres before the man is thrown off and when he lands on the ground she drives straight over him and out of the camera’s shot. He is seen on the ground bleeding profusely and approximately one minute later the woman can be seen walking over to his body and retrieving her phone to call the emergency services.
At the time of her death, his mother, Maria Gomez, had a restraining order against her son after repeated incidents of domestic violence. Police were called by a concerned friend who hadn’t seen the pensioner for several days
Bad cop case, it is alleged that the Guardia Civil officer was able to persuade a minor to engage in sexual activity with him in exchange for money. It is also known that a disciplinary file has been opened on the officer and he has been removed from his duties while the investigation is ongoing.
and who worried that some harm may have come to her. On entering the apartment they came across a gruesome scene; the corpse had reportedly been cut up using a carpenter’s saw and kitchen knives. Dozens of pieces were discovered stored in plastic boxes and mixed up with household waste in bin bags. At the time of the arrest, it was reported that Sanchez, then 26, confessed to police that he had cooked her up before eating her and feeding bits to his dog. He told the court that he ‘heard voices on the television and in his head’ telling him to ‘kill his mother’. But the defendant has told Madrid’s Provincial Court that he does not remember dismembering and eating his mother. State prosecutors are calling for a sentence of 15 years and 5 months.
A MAN who ignored COVID-19 symptoms and coughed on work colleagues has been charged with intentionally causing injury after allegedly infecting 22 people. Police on Mallorca arrested the 40 year-old man, whose name has not been publicly released, after he was blamed for a coronavirus outbreak that swept through his workplace. He reportedly showed symptoms of COVID-19 including a fever of 40ºC but refused suggestions to go home and self isolate. His bosses insisted he take a PCR test and wait at home for results but instead he went to the gym then returned to the office, walked around with his face mask lowered and coughed near people saying: “I’m going to give you all the coronavirus.” When the PCR test came back positive later that day, his colleagues were also tested and five were found to be positive. Three people also tested positive after being in contact with the man at the gym. In turn those people infected by him went on to infect members of their families, including three infants, although none serious enough to require hospitalisation.
Friends.
Reset.
Music.
At OD Port Portals we have our own star rating. In fact, we have all the stars of the Mallorca sky and we will enjoy them all together every summer night at OD Sky Bar, on our spacious terrace and at our restaurant On Top. A hotel full of local experiences, music, art, gastronomy, yoga, pre-parties, flea markets, brunches, concerts, Pilates, tardeo, sea, sun and all the stars. A hotel full of life.
Horizon.
Sunset.
Memories.
NEWS I’ll be back
www.theolivepress.es WHETHER it was jealousy, disgruntled staff or unfair competition, Elliott Wright has promised that the arsonists who razed his Costa del Sol restaurant will ‘only make it better’ in the long run. “I’m devastated, but it’s not going to stop me from my plans to have the best restaurant on the coast,” he told the Olive Press this week. “It’s going to be absolutely stunning, a million miles better than anywhere else. “We are working on the dein
BADDIE: Mikkelsen
Mads for Spain EXPAT actor Mads Mikkelsen has praised Spain for creating complex leading roles for actors. The A-lister, who lives in Mallorca, said the country had been very influential in his career. Mikkelsen, who originally trained as a gymnast and dancer in Denmark before becoming Hollywood’s favourite bad guy, recently spilled the secrets behind the making of the Spanish flick, Torremolinos 73. The 2003 film starred Mikkelsen alongside Javier Camara who played a struggling encyclopedia salesman in the 1970s who turns to the adult film industry when he falls on hard times. Mikkelsen, who played Magnus in the movie, said: “It was a crazy project. “Nobody spoke English on set. They forgot me on a beach once — the entire crew. I had this blonde hair, and blue-tinted contact lenses, and I was wearing this Speedo (costume) from the ’70s with a cape you wear when you’re Mr. Death.
Shot
“I had no phone, no money on me, and everybody left. I was like, What’s happening? Come back!” He even revealed that the director, Pablo Berger only shot 50% of the film he wanted. “He came home with 50% of the film that he shot — the rest he didn’t shoot. He was always running out of time. I was like, ‘There’s no way he can make a film out of this’. But when I watched it, it was sweet and fun. I mean, I can see a lot of stuff missing but it was a good tone.” Mikkelsen, who became famous playing baddie Chiffre, in James Bond film Casino Royale, revealed that he had better opportunities to make interesting films in Europe, unlike in Hollywood where is often typecast as the villain. He said: “I definitely wouldn’t mind if somebody would give me something else in America. That would be great for me. It would be great for them. Let’s do it.”
May 7th - May 20th 2021
EXCLUSIVE By Jon Clarke
DESTROYED: Olivia’s signs over the next few days. It will be beautiful. The upstairs part in particular is
going to be completely different.” The entrepreneurial Playa
Marbella TV star - who also owns Eduardos in Villamartin, which was originally opend by his late father - had only just recruited a brand new team - including a chef and manager and vowed to fight for a Michelin star when arsonists torched his restaurant in the middle of
the night two weeks ago. The popular celebrity hot spot in La Cala de Mijas was badly damaged in the fire, which began around 5am on April 26. A police investigation is still probing the blaze, which Wright, 41, believes was started by a competitor. “The Guardia Civil told me that is their theory although they can’t say too much,” he revealed this week.
Gin and bear it
Battle to protect unspoiled coast goes on as Larios family clear major hurdle, writes James Warren PROTESTORS have vowed to carry on the fight after a controversial golf macroproject for an untouched stretch of coast cleared a major hurdle. More than 200 people, including many expats, had gathered at Nerja town hall to oppose the scheme, put forward by the powerful Larios gin family in nearby Maro. They had hoped to stop Nerja mayor Jose Alberto Armijo and his M a r o counterpart Encarnacion Moreno, join coun-
cillors and unions to let the proposal move to the next stage at a critical planning meeting inside the town hall. While they voted to allow the proposal to progress, as yet no decision has been taken on whether the land will be reclassified for development. Local farmers, who fear losing their land, set up a stall to display the vast array of fruit and vegetables grown on the Maro allotments that will be lost under the development scheme. “We cannot let this project continue,” said Rafael Yus, of
PROTEST: 200 gathered Ecologistas en Acción in front of the gathered crowd. “The project has been born from lies and will destroy an untouched and beautiful stretch of land surrounding Maro.” His group has been joined by Greenpeace in opposing the scheme that will see over 45 hectares of protected land levelled to make way for a luxury hotel, golf course and urbanisation of over 500 villas.
It’s bound to happen
O
NCE upon a time, when the world was young and the Costa del Sol was only just waking from its slumber, I halted on a hilltop somewhere east of Malaga and surveyed the coast, writes David Baird. Bordering an empty, sandy beach, fields of sugar cane stretched to the horizon. Maybe here, I thought, I could buy a piece of land to build my dream house. "Señor," I said, accosting a passing countryman. "Who owns this land?" He gaped at me, amazed at my ignorance. "Lario, hombre, Lario!" He said. "All this belongs to Lario."
Richest
The name meant nothing to me. But I soon learned that ‘Lario’ was, in fact, the Larios family, one of the richest in Spain. The family owns a great mansion in the centre of Madrid, estates in Albacete — and vast stretches of the Málaga and Granada coast. A statue of the second Marquis de Larios stands in the centre of Málaga near Calle Larios, the most expensive retail street in Andalucia. Travel from Estepona to Motril and you come across various ancient sugar mills that once treated the cane from the family estates. Then, when Larios could no longer compete with cheaper sugar from the West Indies, Egypt and Pakistan, along came the tourism boom and the value of Larios’ land multiplied. Tourists proved much more profitable than sugar cane and Larios has since sown innumerable apartment blocks along the empty beach I once viewed. Far removed from this tourist cacophony was the village of Maro, just east of Nerja. There
the Larios family still has a mansion, the Virgen de las Maravillas, visited every August for many years by the Marquesa de Larios. Virtually all the land she could see belonged to her family. The ‘colonos’ (or tenant farmers) paid peppercorn rents for small plots of land and shacks and worked for Larios at cane-cutting and sugar-making. Though these local farmers had been there forever, few had paperwork proving their rights. Feudalism was a way of life in Maro. And had been for centuries. No problem...until, back in the 1990s, Larios decided to take over the land so that a golf course and hundreds of luxury villas could be built. That provoked a revolt. Angry colonos marched in protest and staged a days-long sit-in inside the famous Nerja cave. Eventually some sort of settlement was reached. Some colonos received compensation for handing over their land, some legalised their arrangement with Larios, some families were torn apart by squabbles between relations. Eventually the project will happen, of course, after all the legal barriers, the red tape etc. have been negotiated. That piece of land is too valuable to leave untouched and Nerja folk are not going to say no to anything that attracts more visitors and ultimately more cash. They’ll argue the vast majority of the town is on their side…insisting of around 20,000 locals how many turned up to voice objections? A few hundred is not enough. The next protest will need to be much bigger.
“The entire project does not abide by European regulations, and we doubt the legitimacy of the agreement,” ex-mayor Rosa Arrabal, of the PSOE told the Olive Press. “We are still going to try to stop the final approval of the plan. While they have a majority we are going to ask again for it to be tabled to demand that the legal requirements are met. “I’m hopeful. If we all unite, there are holes in the agreement that they are trying to pass, and these things have to be addressed,” said Arrabal. “We must search for a more sustainable solution,” added Andres Jimenez, from the UPNer party. “We only have to look at other golf projects along the coast to know that they are not a viable tourist model, despite the numbers that Larios SL promises.” Jon Stein, local activist and resident of Maro, said: “The decision today is disappointing, but the fight goes on.”
3
“They have CCTV of them and they are investigating. “It’s either jealousy, a member of staff I sacked, or competition. I’ve got no enemies and think it’s competition. “Quite a few new restaurants have opened up off the back of my success. Eradicating me then you have 600 people a night going to eat elsewhere. That is a lot of people and a lot of money. The Guardia Civil told me that.” He added: “I just can’t believe the timing just a week after I buried my dad. How could they do that?’ His main problem now is timing to try and get the place up and running before the summer season. The insurance company handling the claim are ‘taking longer’ than hoped and he is juggling a lot of things’. “I’m pulling my hair out and having to juggle a lot of things,” he told the Olive Press. “I was hoping they were going to pay out in two weeks but the insurance is saying 40 days now. “We are also trying to source things from all over the world during this pandemic - trying to get 300 to 400 square metres of tiles quickly is proving difficult.” He meanwhile thanked all the goodwill from expats on the coast and from friends and family back home.
Rebuild
In particular he thanked his former TOWIE colleague James ‘Arg’ Argent who vowed to come over and help him rebuild. “If Arg wants to come out and help he’s more than welcome,” he revealed.”But I’ve seen him labouring before and he’s more of a hindrance than a help. He spends all his time talking to the builders and getting in the way. It would be better for him to come at the end for the relaunch.” It came after Arg appeared on TV show Loose Women in the UK to say he was ‘rooting for him’. He said: “If anyone can turn this around and build Olivia’s back to where it was, it’s Elliott and we’re all rooting for him.”
KIM CLARK
Benefits Consultancy If you suffer from... • Mobility problems • Pain / Breathlessness • Falls / Stumbles
Or you need... • Help with washing /dressing • Supervision
You could be entitled to extra income by claiming UK sickness/disability benefits while living in Spain FOR ADVICE OR TO BOOK A CONSULTATION call 950 169 729 or 663 297 568 www.ukbenefitsinspain.com
4
www.theolivepress.es
IN a whirlwind tour of the Balearic Islands, the British Ambassador to Spain has expressed his optimism that Britons will be able to holiday in the archipelago this summer. As part of a tour with the aim of ‘reactivating British tourism in Spain’, Ambassador Hugh Elliot visited Ibiza and Mallorca, two islands which usually welcome millions of holidaying Brits each year.
Members
Elliot met with Balearic president Francina Armengol and other members of the government such as tourism minister Iago Negueruela and finance minister Rosario Sanchez. Elliot said that the Balearics had much in favour for them to be considered a ‘terriBRITS living in homes in Spain between three and six months have launched a campaign asking the Spanish government to reconsider the post-Brexit rules. Since the UK left the European Union, thousands of Brits have been forced to choose between either Spain or the UK, or else be limited to only spending 90 days there in a rolling six-month period, in the entire 26-country Schengen zone. Diane Lavender, 70, who has owned a second home in Andalucia for 15 years, said the rules are ‘shambolic’ and ‘unfair’. Originally from Wales, Diane and her husband typically spend up to six months of the year in Es-
NEWS
May 7th - May 20th 2021
fired Diplomatic trip APolice CONTROVERSIAL ‘partory independent of the peninsula’ in the UK’s soon to be revealed traffic light system of COVID-19 risk levels for travel. “We will have to wait a few more weeks to know the UK’s decision on whether British tourists will be able to return to the islands this year”, said Elliot. The ambassador also explained that for tourism to be re-activated, three things would need to happen first: “First, the British have to allow it, secondly, we must wait for Sanchez’s government to re-evaluate the ban on the British in Spain, and thirdly, we need a good outcome of the vaccine campaigns.”
Let us stay!
Expats launch campaign to change Brexit rules By Kirsty McKenzie
tepona spread across various visits but said she now feels that their freedom to move between their two homes has ‘been completely taken away’. She added: “It’s bad for everyone. We want to be able to live in our homes without limitations and the Spanish bars and shops rely on Brits to spend their money here in the winter months. It is in everyone’s interest if we can come to a better agreement.
Heartbreaking
“It’s heartbreaking to see Spain so quiet and so many businesses being forced to close. Andrew Hesselden, who voted Remain, launched the campaign group ‘180 days in Spain’ to help people who have a home in Spain but also want to keep one foot in the UK,
agrees. Andrew told the Olive Press: "I think the UK gov probably intended for this to be resolved via many bilateral agreements in the years to come, but in the rush to ‘Get Brexit Done’, it left most of Brexit Undone." The 40-year-old, who has a home in Mallorca, created the group which now boasts nearly 2000 members across Spain to find a solution for part-year residents.
Going nowhere SPAIN’S government has extended a ban on all non-essential travel to Spain from outside the EU and Schengen area for another month. Confirmation of the extension due to the continued coronavirus pandemic was published on Friday in the Official State Gazette (BOE). The extension continues the recommendations by the EU that have been in place since June 30 last year.
Banned
In addition, the notice confirms a ban on all travellers from those places where dangerous new variants of Covid-19 have been detected. These include India, Brazil, South Africa, Botswana, Comoros, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Peru and Colombia. Under this rule only Spanish citizens or those with residency in Spain are allowed to enter and must quarantine for ten days on arrival. Because of Brexit, citizens from the United Kingdom are now considered third country nationals and must follow the same rules as other non-EU member states.
ty’ held at the Policia Local headquarters in Mallorca has led to two officers losing their jobs. Last edition, the Olive Press revealed that a leaving party for a retiring officer was held at the Policia Local’s Palma headquarters with 15 on-duty cops in attendance. Although being held during the working day and among those that worked together, it was deemed by Palma City Council to be a breach of the current coronavirus restrictions in Mallorca which limits social interactions to a maximum of six people.
Refused
As a result, councillor Joana Maria Adrover announced at a press conference that two officers had since been fired. Both were in charge of coordinating the day-to-day activities inside the force’s headquarters. Androver however refused to call the farewell celebration a party and said that it was held ‘in the dining room like any other day that officers meet to eat’. She also expressed her hopes that this matter would not ‘overshadow the good work that the force has done throughout the pandemic’.
Kids’ plasticine ‘porn’ THE far right VOX party has slammed a sex education class in Mallorca after finding out that children used plasticine to learn about the reproductive organs. Eleven-year-olds at Felanitx’s IES Academy were taught about reproduction and in a bid for the class to be more interactive for the children, they used plasticine to make models of genitalia. Learning of the contents of the class, members of VOX took to their social media platform to express their anger over the children being taught about human development, labelling it as ‘pornography’. Balearic VOX spokesman, Jorge Campos, said: “Eleven-year-old students have participated in an alleged course on sexuality, or shall we call it pornography, which has been taught during school hours and where the main activity was to make genitalia out of plasticine.” The school has however defended the lesson, stressing that the pupils took part in various activities including reading books as part of their educational material. In recent years, sex education has been taught more actively across schools in Spain after being banned by law in Francoist Spain.
NEWS
www.theolivepress.es
Bottom of the table PALMA has been ranked alongside Madrid and Barcelona as the three Spanish cities with the worst quality of life. A survey by the Organisation of Consumers and Users (OCU) asked thousands of participants across the country to assess the overall quality of life in the city that they lived in. This included factors such as mobility, citizen security, cleanliness, health and educational services, pollution levels and the environment. Participants were also asked about the cultural, sports and leisure facilities on offer, employment opportunities, the cost of living, as well as properties up for sale and to rent in their city. Alarmingly, the OCU reported that Barcelona, Madrid and Palma de Mallorca had been placed at the bottom of the table with Galicia’s Vigo being ranked as having the best quality of life. Palma got its lowest marks for education, while mobility and the cost of living were also perceived as a major problem for its residents. Meanwhile for Barcelona and Madrid, the cost of living, the property market, the environment and its pollution levels were considered the worst aspects of both cities.
POLICE in Germany are said to be significantly closer to charging paedophile Christian Brueckner with more sex crimes in the month that missing Maddie McCann turns 18. Detectives told the Sunday Times they are ‘within three months’ of formally accusing him of the rape of an Irish expat in Portugal in 2004. Cops in Germany believe he was behind the vicious sex attack on Hazel Bevan, then 20, in 2004.
Maddie move
That attack - which he also filmed took place in the same resort Praia da Luz that Maddie went missing on May 3, 2007. Brueckner, 44, who lived on and off in Portugal and Spain, when not in prison in Germany, spent large amounts of time on the dark web, former friends and colleagues told the Olive Press. He was officially identified as a suspect in the case of Maddie in June last year.
Theysay he climbed in and filmed the assault at her apartment in Praia da Rocha, just 25 minutes from where toddler Maddie was snatched in May 2007. The assault was similar in planning and execution to the one on a 71-yearold American in 2005, for which he is currently in prison for seven years.
Dive tragedy TRIBUTES have poured in for a much loved British expat who died in a free diving accident in Ibiza. Kevin Smith, aged 35, got into difficulties in the Punta Galera waters. Paramedics had tried to revive him with CPR after he was pulled unconscious out of the water by his friend at 6.15pm on April 28, but de-
Expat dies after being pulled from water unconscious By Isha Sesay
spite their best efforts, he was pronounced dead at the scene. Initial reports suggested that the Briton had been taking
Flight woes A BRITISH couple were turned away from a RyanAir flight after airline staff refused to take the one hour time difference between Spain and the UK into account. Mark and Zoe Ryder were due to fly back to Alicante from Manchester, but were denied permission to board the plane. Ryanair staff said their test results were outside the 72 hour validity period for when they would land in Spain. The Ryders argued that the company had not taken into account the time difference between the two countries, which would have meant their PCR test was still valid.
5 Cashing in
May 7th - May 20th 2021
photos underwater, however it has since been confirmed that he died after running into trouble while free diving – a form of underwater diving that involves learning to hold your breath for long periods of time. The sports enthusiast, who was described by his friends as an ‘action man’ and loved by everyone who met him in Ibiza, had moved to the island two years ago and built a successful personal trainer business. Personal trainer and friend of Kevin, Dan Cater, told the Olive Press of the sadness he felt about his death. “So sad about Kevin. I played football with him, so it was pretty rough news when I heard. “You just need to look at his fundraising page to see how
RESIDENTS of the Balerics are to be given a €100 voucher to spend on minibreaks on the islands. In a bid to boost domestic tourism, the Balearic government announced that all residents of Formentera, Ibiza, Mallorca and Menorca will be able to benefit from this campaign. The voucher can be used to pay or go towards the cost of a hotel booking where the minimum stay must be at least two nights.
Hotels
MISSED: Kevin Smith many people he had an impact on,” said Cater. His death has rocked Ibiza as well as back home in the UK with Love Island star and friend Jack Fowler breaking down in tears in an emotional video shared online about his pal. He said he felt ‘broken hearted with knowing you’re not here anymore’ and how he reminded his friend ‘many times that people like you are so rare to find and that anyone who met you or had you in their life was extremely lucky’.
The trip must be booked through approved travel agencies or hotels and residents must apply through a online portal which will be launched in the coming weeks. Revealing the €11 million initiative, president Francina Armengol said it would be ‘key to promoting the Balearics as a safe tourist destination’ amid the coronavirus pandemic. She said: “With this, the Balearic Islands can now present themselves to the world as a territory with great tourist potential, an excellent health system and an exemplary epidemiological situation.”
952 147 834 * O f f e r
v a l i d
TheOlivePress-256x170-CAR0421.indd 1
f o r
n e w
c u s t o m e r s
o n l y .
S u b j e c t
t o
c o n d i t i o n s .
E n d s
3 0 / 0 7 / 2 1 .
13/4/21 12:36
6
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 Lead the way! In a stark warning the UK’s leading victim protection group Safeguarding Alliance have insisted there are thousands of convicted child sex offenders who have slipped under the radar in the UK using legal means to change their name and avoid criminal record checks leaving them free to abuse again. Unfortunately, Spain is proving an attractive destination for these abusers, not just for those qualities we all enjoy; the good climate, great food and improved quality of life but because the recent drive towards bilingual education demands a constant supply of native English teachers not only in schools but for summer camps, au-pairs and private classes. Now we learn that it isn’t enough for schools or education boards to carry out the basic checks required, because a serious failing on the side of the British legal authorities has created a loophole that is ripe for exploitation. Spain isn’t to blame for that lack of joined up thinking on the side of the UK authorities but with one simple step it can instantly make it harder for British paedophiles to slip through the net and find work here. Demanding an original birth certificate alongside a passport and criminal record check will immediately identify someone who has changed their identity, and prove a vital step towards protecting our children from known sex offenders. Spain has already modernised its approach to tackling sex abuse with the introduction last month of Rhodes Law, named after British pianist James Rhodes, which extended the statute of limitations against abusers and makes it easier for victims to report crimes and testify against abusers. Now it has an opportunity to take steps before such crimes are committed and fix a UK failing by making it more difficult for known British abusers to gain employment in schools. Spain, this is your chance to lead the way. Publisher / Editor
Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es Dilip Kuner dilip@theolivepress.es
Fiona Govan fiona@theolivepress.es
Kirsty McKenzie kirsty@theolivepress.es
Alex Trelinski alex@theolivepress.es
Isha Sesay isha@theolivepress.es
James Warren james@theolivepress.es
Simon Wade simon@theolivepress.es
Glenn Wickman glenn@theolivepress.es
Office manager Héctor Santaella (+34) 658 750 424 accounts@ theolivepress.es
Admin Sandra Aviles Diaz (+34) 951 273 575 admin@ theolivepress.es
Distribution ENQUIRIES (+34) 951 273 575 distribution@ theolivepress.es
Newsdesk: 0034 951 273 575 For all sales and advertising enquiries please contact 951 27 35 75 Head office
Carretera Nacional 340, km 144.5, Calle Espinosa 1, Edificio cc El Duque, planta primera, 29692, Sabinillas, Manilva Deposito Legal MA 1097-2020
AWARDS
2016 - 2020 Best expat paper in Spain and the second best in the world. The Expat Survey Consumer Awards.
2012 - 2021
Named the best English language publication in Andalucia by the Rough Guides group.
Charity begins in the homeland Migrant who wants Africans to stay at home wins top award in Spain By Graham Keeley in Barcelona
D
UMPED in the Sahara Desert by traffickers, forced to scavenge for food and drink his own urine to survive, Ousman Umar believed like scores of other African migrants before and since that he was going to die. But against all the odds, after a harrowing five year trek across the continent, he made it from Ghana to Spain where he became a successful entrepreneur with a masters degree from one of the country’s top business schools. He could have been the poster child for the
RECOGNISED: Ousman Umar
African dream of a better life in Europe. But Ousman didn’t want his fellow Africans to go through the same ordeal. So he set up a charity to help them make better lives at home instead of following in his own tortured footsteps.
Looking south
D
ominique de Pradt (pictured right) could not contain his malice towards Spain. As a diplomat for Napoleon (1808 Peninsula War) he found negotiating with the Spanish frustrating to the point of an impossibility, writes Jack Gaioni. He famously said: “Africa begins at the Pyrenees. It is an error of geography to assign Spain to Europe. Everything is African - its blood, manners, the way of making war, doing business and living life!” He argued that the two entities have ‘mixed too long and confused the race and customs’. Clearly, Dominique did not mean this as a compliment. Now Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sanchez, expounded on this sentiment but from a completely different perspective. Sanchez has launched what he called ‘the decade of Spain in Africa’. He met with the president of Ghana, the foreign ministers of Senegal and Kenya, and with the President of the African Development Bank, Sanchez announced an ambitious strategy to build closer economic and institutional ties between Spain and Africa. Calling the initiative the ‘Africa Focus 2023 Plan’, the formal event represents more aggressive support of economic partnerships, environmental issues, educational exchanges and energy development. Sanchez emphasized the fact Spain was receptive to the idea of working with the governments of Africa to stem the tide of perilous migration flows. He said that a ‘lack of opportunities’ was driving people away and that Spanish investments in Africa might help them stay.
Priority Sanchez is serious. Less than 10 days after the March conference, he boarded a plane for Angola and later Senegal – two priority countries in Spain’s efforts of stepping up collaboration with African nations. Sanchez views Angola as offering a great opportunity as that country seeks to diversify its economy from its status as an oil dependent nation. While in Luanda, Sanchez signed ‘agreements of understanding’ designed to strengthen cooperation in agriculture, fisheries, engineering, energy, exports, insurance and banking. The Prime Minister then visited Elecnor - a Spanish energy substation which has a 30 years presence in Angola. His final visit was to the Dom Bosco Selesian School. Run by Spanish clergy, the school is active in promoting literacy, vocational training and care for high-risk youth. Sanchez continued his diplomacy with a visit to the West African coastal nation of Senegal. There, meeting with President Macky Sali, they signed a ‘memorandum of understanding’ to help mitigate migration flows. Calling the issue a ‘circular migration’, the leaders discussed ways to discourage the illegal (and sometimes deadly!) migration into Spain. Simultaneously they addressed ways of improving the organisation of the 71,000 Senegalese who live and work in Spain’s seasonal agricultural industry. Spain and Senegal hope the partnership would create 65,000 jobs in Senegal as well as promote entrepreneurship and vocational training. Sanchez concluded his charm offensive in Angola and Senegal by expressing his hopes that Spain continues as ‘Europe’s southern gateway to Afric’. Given the potential of Africa as the next big market, combined with that continent’s huge energy prospects, we wish Sanchez all the diplomatic luck in the world. Regarding the sentiment that ‘Africa begins at the Pyrenees’? Dominique de Pradt may have been partially riPYRENEES: Is this where Africa starts? ght but for the wrong reasons…
Now that work has won him a prestigious Princess of Girona Award ‘for social projects with innovative and tangible achievement’. "I still cannot believe I won this award,” says Ousman, who set up NASCO Feeding Minds with his brother Banasco Seidu Nuhu to buy computers, support educational projects and give children in Ghana a choice in their own future. “We are an NGO that is only funded by private donations and only functions thanks to our volunteers. “This recognition gives me the strength to keep working every day on this project and to continue helping with education so that no one should ever have to go through what I had to go through. Thank you from the bottom of my heart." The Princess of Girona Foundation praised the charity’s work in ‘building a transformative project which combines education, technology, and alliances and contributes solutions to the migration problem.
Corruption
For a time Ousman worked with rescue charity Proactiva Open Arms but now believes saving migrants from flimsy boats in the sea is not the answer. In his book, Journey to the Land of the Whites, published in Spain, he writes of the beatings and corruption he witnessed during his tortuous trek to Europe. He wishes he had never made the journey but carved out a life in Ghana instead. His remarkable story only came to light when the Canaries became the focus of Europe's migration crisis, where more than 23,000 migrants have poured in since January last year. The son of a witch doctor from a remote village, his mother died during childbirth, leading the elders to condemn him to death for being a 'bad spirit'. Only the intervention of his father saved him. Fleeing his homeland at 13, he trekked through Niger to the Libyan border with a group of around 40 migrants. Traffickers left them at the edge of the Sahara, where many died trying to cross the desert without food or water, eating what they could find and drinking their own urine.
Flimsy boat
After about a month they reached a village in southern Libya where he collapsed and was taken in by locals. Later he found work as a welder but life in that country, too, was tough for a black man. Determined to move on, he saved $2,000 to travel through Algeria to Morocco and Mauritania where he took a flimsy boat to the Canaries. At 18, he made it to Barcelona, the City of Dreams, where he spent two more years living rough, finally finding help from a generous Spanish family. They supported him while he studied for an MBA in business administration at Esade, ranked one of the top schools in Spain, and everything else is history. But he has never forgotten his homeland and regular visits to Ghana through his charity work have only strengthened that bond.
May 7th - May 20th 2021
www.theolivepress.es
7
Big dig at Franco’s legacy Excavations into the lives of the prisoners who built the Valley of the Fallen give Europe’s last monument to facism a more PC spin
Olive Press We reach readers others can’t
T
HE Olive Press has been in a continuous state of growth for the past five years - and there’s no secret to our success. We are the only English-language paper dedicated solely to news about Spain. We also hire NCTJ trained journalists who write their own exclusives 38 and know how to source andMENS deliver A OR DENSA? Accused of faking COVID - live on air the most relevant and intriguing A stories for expats. This ethos has to our mind made us the most relevant English language newspaper to expats in Spain. And it seems that we are not alone in thinking this - a whole host of official government organisations have chosen the Olive Press’s six editions to publicise serious issues, which make us the newspaper of record for the expat communities in Spain. The AGE UK government OF PRINT!no less has used our pagTHE to reach Brits in Spain with a campaign of Ies informational adverts aimed at expats. These have been a crucial part of the government’s mission to help Brits deal with Brexit. Now the Diputacion de Malaga has followed suit to OPurge people to register on Puzzle solutions the padron. This is vitally important, not just so local councils can access improved government funding, but also so British expats can abide by Brexit rules and be protected by the UK Spanish agreement. And who is it the Norwegian police turned to when they wanted to put out a call for information? None other than the Olive Press of course. They knew that our newspapers - and website too - have roots deep in the local expat communities of many different nationalities in Spain. The best chance they had of reaching the people they needed was through us. The Government of Gibraltar too has turned to the Olive Press to try to attract, as has the University of Gibraltar in search of new students. And they are not alone - the Junta de Andalucia and local councils such as Benahavis have also recognised the advertising power of the Olive Press in the past few months. All these major governmental organisations have recognised that the Olive Press reaches readers that others can’t - call us to see how we can help you reach new customers too.
COLUMNISTS
March 24th - April 6th 2021
Getting a grip
IT was the last caller that did it. I was into the final three minutes of ‘Viewpoint’, the live radio show that I host every Tuesday that discusses the ‘issues of the day’. In the past four years those have tended to be Brexit, Boris, Trump and of course, coronavirus. Being the man in the middle of Viewpoint is always a white-knuckle ride, because you have no idea of just what the caller will say. As it is a live show, I‘ve developed a sixth sense that starts to tingle if I think they are about to swear or come out with something slanderous, and I am always poised to bring the fader, which controls the volume, down sharply. The caller now waiting on line one had a bit of a reputation for rubbishing the existence of coronavirus, but I had less than 200 seconds before the end of from Giles’s casita the show so I thought ‘What’s SOOTHING: View of the valley and lake ers and hiked up the track shocked laughter as I pulled from the Casita. Exercise is the harm?’ nally shook it off. On the posHe got to the point right away itive side, I managed to catch the fader down, before I could one of the few options that I “You never had coronavirus” he up on a huge stack of reading, be accused of being one of the am allowed these days, and said, “You just had a bad flu for and the cat loved having me liberal elite, lackey of the MSM I was debating the futility of of the three days”. as I tended or fully paid up memberI have it all when I looked back. The Especially around. tested I aware, Illuminati. (Although If you were not Casita and the to feed her when I woke at 5am positive for COVID-19 at the every morning, a practice she heard that the lake looked was and January, snazrobes are beginning of stunning, and has continued since my recovI still live in a unable to return to the radio, ery by singing me the song of zy). suddenly it which I love, for three weeks. her people at some ungodly The weird thing me rebeautiful place made however, was, Although I was fortunate not to hour, demanding breakfast. alise: end up in hospital as several I was so dumbfounded by the that this comand I now also I still live in of my friends did, it still pole- accusation that I had faked ment sent me a beautipeculiar health my I most have back into what axed me in the ful place, my illness that I burst out in call ‘Mabellaise”, way, and I was glad when I fiI have my back fed where I get health back up with my adand I am lucky and opted town to lots of friends who helped everything about it. It normally when I was ill. As the saying happens around this time of goes – This Too Shall Pass. year, and the pandemic has not Nevertheless, I am not putexactly helped. ting that caller on air for a In an effort to clear my mud- while… dled head, I pulled on my train-
RE you a digital doer or a real-life print reader? The OlOLD HACK IN ive Press alternates weekly THE SUN publication of my columns Benny Davis between actual print and ether-controlled messages beamed from Ramblings of an 80-something expat outer space. But if you are one of the 75% of over 65’s who do not are safe access so called digital platforms, you to stretch managed have who those However, in my hands. of accessing digital intheir little grey cells to master the art Mensa achievers who do formation are more likely to be high instead of me. crosswords with a pen, and say, moi, I find reading a real Personally, I am of the Densa brigade.sun, very relaxing, and newspaper, especially while lying in theas an umbrella over the it has the added advantage of acting in. Laptops tend to be face when getting some extra ZZZZ’s on the nose. balance to difficult and uncomfortable
Worship
the God of ethernet culDevotees who worship at the altar of news items quickly ture will also tell you that you can compare or fake news. But before by surfing the net, to establish real that fake news happens you don your wetsuit, may I point outthe rare occasion the unfar less frequently in print, and if on action far more quickly thinkable happens, lawsuits leap into caution on the part of extreme encouraging web, than on the newspaper editors and owners. is available in information instant that understand I Bing, etc. seconds through sites such as Google, doesn’t Call me old fashioned, but that method coming give me the same satisfaction as finally hours, up trumps with answers after spending files and even days, of searching through old reference libraries. article At the moment, I am writing an havabout a serial killer who wrought am oc back in the Victorian era and running barefooted through my enormous collection of information, amassed over countless years as a writer. If I cannot find the answers, I will have to revert to my fail-safe solution, ‘Gertrude,’ grandmother of Amazon’s virtual assistant ‘Alexa.’ Although she answers in a shaky voice with the occasional additional sound me effect of flatulence, she never lets down and fits into my lifestyle far more comfortably than the pre-mentioned Miss Smoothy-Pants.
Terenia Taras
OSLO CONCILIATION BOARD
S
PAIN’S most controversial monument is on the brink of an image makeover with the families of the prisoners who built General Francisco Franco’s monstrous mausoleum moving centre stage. The Valley of the Fallen, a huge basilica carved out of the living rock on a hillside north of Madrid, was Franco’s final resting place until two years ago when the dictator’s body was unceremoniously exhumed. Constructed by 20,000 political prisoners and conscripts between 1940 and 1959, the families of these slave labourers had to settle on the premises in order to survive the post-war period and a shanty town sprung up. From this month, according to archaeologist Alfredo Gonzalez-Ruibal, the area of the Cuelgamuros Valley 57 kilometres from Madrid where the families’ shacks once stood is to be excavated in a bid to reconstruct their lives. “After I paid my first visit to the Valley of the Fallen in 2007, I realised that putting the focus on the shacks instead of the monument itself would be a way of changing the Francoist narrative,” Gonzalez-Ruibal tells the Olive Press, explaining that as the prisoners’ families would often come from afar to visit, they started to camp close by.
Shacks
Even those visiting from Madrid began to make a home in the Valley of the Fallen as the trip back and forth from the capital during the 1940s and 1950s was hard to do on public transport in one day. “They started building huts, which turned into shacks measuring around 4m2,” says the archaeologist who works for the Spanish National Research Council and will head up a team of 10 on the dig. “They used rubble for the walls and branches for the roofs and probably knew how to build well enough to stop the rain coming in, as they would have been used to building shepherds’ huts. But they would have been freezing in winter.” The curious shanty town that emerged over the years was obliquely accepted by the authorities. The presence of the prisoners’ families provided psychological support, meaning they worked better, were more disciplined and less likely to escape. According to Gonzalez-Ruibal, the prisoners eventually received a food allowance for their families that could be spent at the canteen, while their children would likely have joined the local one-teacher school set up for the ’free’ labourers’ families. Enduring this tough, no-frills existence, without electricity or running water and little light within the shacks, was not done solely out of choice. “You have to take into account that this was Spain in the 1940s and 1950s when many women depended entirely on men to survive,” he says. “But there would also have been a desire to be together.” Lying a stone’s throw from the four settlements or poblados that accommodated the prisoners’ barracks and labourer’s cottages, this community of women and children has often been used by far-right revisionists to depict the Valley of the Fallen as something akin to a holi-
to the ConciliaThe Defendant is ordered to reply stating whethtion Board in writing by 04.05.2021 and accepts er or not the Defendant acknowledges has not been dethe Complainant’s claim. If a replystated time limit, livered prior to the expiry of the on the basis judgment by default can be pronounced of the facts of of the Complainant’s representation the case. address, service will As the Defendant has no known the Courts Act Secbe executed with authority in to reply will be tion 181. The complaint and order when it has been deemed to have been legally servedweeks. posted at the legal venue for four case can be collectThe documents pertaining to the offices at Pilestreed from the Conciliation Board’s documents can be det 19, 0033 Oslo, Norway. Theby the Defendant if sent to a new address supplied the Defendant so requests.
By Heather Galloway in El Escorial
A Sierra Nevada ll about
February
LONG TIME IN COMING: But residents of Mallorca can hopefully soon hit the slopes
2021
Slide away www.theolivepress.es
Vol. 14
FREE
CA MALLOR
Vol. 4 Issue 100
Issue 363
off to finally slopeheaven, You can skiing Andalucia’s Smith writes Charlie is There ILENCE. single peep not a upwards to as I climb the valley through maker. of the meet mymy head out and the I poke window fresh alcable car Nevada’s Sierra hits my lungs. pine airhear it – a sweeping white Then I down the crisp crunch as a snowboarder piste, past below. and whizzes tears through, Another third, all weaving at then a mountainside down the speed. more terriblistering Spanish I’m definitely the three carriage the fied than guys sharing the with me. left behind We have and restaurants the main cosy bars only ski in Pradollano, Andalucia’s town of resort. out at Borreguiles, meWe step some 2,700 which sits sea level. for tres above the basecampruns, This is the Sierra’s the many of range from facil’ ‘muy which black, lagreen-coloured those in pistes to dificil’. belled ‘muy overleaf
S
Your
expat
voice in Spain
www.theolivepress.es
February 26th
Continues
See page 11
- March 11th 2021
Model patient
PICTU EXCL RE USIVE
has had expat centenarian year. A POPULAR jab in her 101st Costa her first COVID based on the Pfizer of the Peggy Bloomfield, her first dose Centre this Blanca, got Medical vaccine at Teulada according to week. raring to go, And she’s now Shirley Young. to get her neighbour Thrilled to bits she told the “She is amazing! I’m feeling great!” the jab and “Lockdown permitting her Olive Press. the Mayor to visit for two hoping to get Her second jab is in be celebratnext birthday.” and Peggy will weeks’ time birthday in April. nurse ing her 101st (far right) shows of Our photograph the first doseshe right Juanjo administering to Peggy, while a visit the vaccine as she received was all smiles champagne and cake when she with balloons, Press reporters her from Olive last year. Peggy receives100th birthday hit the big 100 ALL ROUND: recent to get the following her expat in Spain older, con- CELEBRATIONS (inset right) Is she the oldest COVID jab you know anyone COVID jab? If tact us at newsdesk@theolivepress.es
soon Island could be back in business ban to as UK travelin May be lifted
are only permitted moment Brits abroad. At the work purposes. South Affrom to travel for essential to enter Spain until 6pm on No one is allowed By Kirsty McKenzie UK via air or sea up for an avarica, Brazil or the restrictions. could be gearing in May. take them March 2 under the current MALLORCA in December to its shores and family or numlanche of tourists agents have seen the this to reconnect friendsholiday to remember,” he The ban was first introduced more-transmisfirst detected a UK. Airlines and travel holidays abroad soar out on a long-awaited when scientists the to to its web- sible variant of the virus in its roadmap ber of Brits booking added. originally supposed UK announced Cook said traffic week after the restrictions were the Prime Minishas now been Travel firm Thomas to leave the site doubled in the day after confirmed there Tighton January 19 but the banrestrictions curof lockdown. finally be able end with Ryanair multiple times, 2. UK tourists should from May 17, the govern- ter’s statement, while in bookings. Hancock extended a ‘large surge’ place until March country for holidays on Monday. the had been Health Secretary Matt of rently in ment announcedBoris Johnson revealed 6 However, that the effectiveness travOpinion Page plan for gradu- urged caution, warning Prime Minister whether international of his four-step all somove as part in England, with21. vaccines will dictate June ally lifting restrictions can go ahead. to protect against these new finally lifted by bookings el have cial contact rules easyJet, said than four He said: “We that is a Airlines, including variants, and season were more the same period big challenge.” for the summer compared with that times higher Hancock addedmuch last week. ‘we can be about more relaxed travel’ Confidence destina- international well of the most popular giant if vaccines workSouth Palma was one to the budget holiday against the Brazil month. tions, according August its busiest by chief ex- Africa and easyJet, with was described a ‘much-needed strains.the vaccine The announcement “If Lundgren, as against ecutive, Johan doesn’t work boost in confidence’. seen a pent-up demand then that will more bookings shows them, “We have consistently be much, much this surge in for travel and has been what UK consumers difficult,” he said.govthat this signal for,” he said. and It comes as the have been waiting were up by 630% ernment confirmed at the Holiday bookings while off, it was looking passflights by 337%. may be a little en- idea of vaccine travel “While the summer around the clock to to allow up our flights ports we will be working ready to ramp sure we will be
r * O f f e
v a l i d
TheOlivePress-256x170-HOME02.indd
f o r
n e w
m e r s c u s t o
o n l y .
c t S u b j e
t o
834 Tel: 952 147 See page 16 TM
. t i o n s c o n d i
E n d s
/ 1 9 . 3 1 / 1 2
21/6/19 13:30
1
Quick Crossword
9 Date, 10 Stalk, Across: 1 Fuse, 4 Pipeline, 8 Etchings, Ma’am, 16 High-ups, 18 11 Broncos, 13 Hers, 14 Yam, 15 23 Test. Braid, 20 Fuzz, 21 This is it, 22 Deployed,
4 Pant, 5 Pastrami, 6 Down: 2 Up to the minute, 3 Exhales, 15 Marxist, 17 Hazel, Led in, 7 Nationalities, 12 Sympathy, 19 Kind.
SUDOKU
against the The Complainant has filed a complaint Board with a deDefendant with Oslo Conciliation with the addimand for payment of NOK 69751,18 and legal costs. tion of interest at the legal rate
Telling it like it is
The
As Complainant: Modhi Finance , Tempo Defendant: Per Einar Tinmsnndvik Banus 45, ES-29600 Marbella
trip Kindle and love nothing more than a T’S great that any newspaper is still to Waterstones (when in the UK) to select being printed in our age of the internet try a new book, preferably hard backed. and it’s something we should always A lot of things have changed since I startto support and maintain. ed my career as a journalist in my early internet Before the birth of the internet, Sunday of twenties. Back then there was no mornings for many people consistedbuy so we used books for factual research, to used when reading the papers. I always I a dictionary or thesaurus, as andwith us a News of the World, not only because required, and we carried pagers worked for the paper, but also, like many instead of mobile phones. in the age people, to catch up on the latest scandal tab- Writing this I feel like I was born because or expose, which the biggest selling of the dinosaur loid in Britain was famous since the internet became for. a global network in the OLIVE poshas PRESS Alongside the News of the technology 1990s, Screws (as it was known) I’d sessed everything. More buy the Sunday Telegraph and more people commufor international news and a nicate solely online, how more high-brow read. teenagers actually SKY HIGH many There’s still something nice use their phone as a teleES newspaper a HOP about reading phone? More people shop with a morning coffee, which online, especially since the was often a prelude to your pandemic, and nearly evworking day or whilst travelery business has migrated ling on the train or tube. But to an online presence. then I’m still one of the die-147 834 So after 20 years in the hards who refused to own952a
100th Edition
being dealt with Extract from complaint currently by Oslo Conciliation Board – Dept. 3 Case No. F2020-012277
to media industry I’m prouder than everthe go full circle and be able to write forvast Olive Press. The newspaper serves communities in Spain and the islands may providing real news, which again left become something from the past if and solely in the hands of unscrupulous self-serving organisations or individuals. the Newspapers should always remain the beacon of truth and shine a light intoI am deepest, darkest corners of the web. proud as a journalist to do my job because I feel it’s crucial to have an independent who and objective group of professionals the share the same goal, which is to hold powers that be to account. still Love him, or loathe him, Piers Morgan I’m champions old school journalism and glad he doesn’t let politicians off lightly because they should be held accountable - although it must be said he has managed to get himself into a little hot water now over Meghan! person’s The media always had the little to rely interest at heart, despite the needsurvive. on advertising to Which is why businesses should support their local, regional and national press, because without the integrity and guardians of the truth being able to continue commercially we may have nothing left but controlled, fake news.
YOU CAN FOLLOW ME @tereniataras
Gastronomy Gastronomía
DIG: Alfredo Gonzalez-Ruibal, archaeologist and (right) Silvia Navarro beside a memorial to the fallen day camp, Gonzalez-Ruibal explains. “It is true that many of the prisoners considered their time in the Valley of the Fallen as a good period in their lives,” he says. “But these were people who had lived through a civil war and spent time in concentration camps where they were on the verge of dying from hunger. It would have been like going from hell to purgatory.” It has taken Spain a long time to dismantle Europe’s last monument to fascism, which was at one time receiving 500,000 visitors a year, and Franco still casts a shadow. “The Valley of the Fallen and the general integration of Francoism into Spanish society has contributed to the fact that extreme right-wing views are now presented to the public as a reasonable option,” says Gonzalez-Ruibal. As if to illustrate his point, far-right Vox politician Alejandro Velez has just stood up in Extremad-
J
osE Antonio Marco (pictured), a forward-thinking Republican and mason shot for his beliefs at the age of 30, is among those whose bodies are to be exhumed this month. His execution took place against the cemetery wall in Calatayud, Aragon, in 1936. Afterwards he was buried in an unmarked mass grave nearby before being stealthily trucked to the Valley of the Fallen in April 1959. “On social media, someone said he was probably a thief and a murderer,” his great-niece, Silvia Navarro, 50, tells the Olive Press. “But he was a pacifist; a good man,” insists the president of the Association of Families for the Exhumation of Republicans Buried in the Valley of the Fallen. “He intro duced the eight-hour day to his factory and healthcare for his workers.” What was left of his corpse more than 23 years later would have been ‘dug up carelessly as if it were a field of potatoes’ , says Gonzalez-Ruibal. Franco urgently need ed
ura’s regional parliament to ask for a new statue of Franco to be erected on a roundabout in Badajoz! But at least it looks as though his monstrous mausoleum is to be stripped of its original purpose, as the dig extends to the exhumation of Falangist leader Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera and the remains of Franco’s victims. The 150-metre cross topping the basilica which Franco claimed to have built as a ‘national act of atonement’ crowns a graveyard of 33,838 corpses, 12,410 of which were carted there from 1959 until as late as 1983, many without the permission of the families. Packed into wooden boxes according to their region of origin, they were stored within the hollow walls of the Basilica where Franco lay across from Primo de Rivera until his controversial exhumation in 2019. “Imagine an archive, but instead of books, its boxes of human remains,” says Gonzalez-Ruibal.
Back from the grave
Republican corpses to fulfil his revis ed vision for his magnum opus as a plac e of reconciliation between the two sides of the Spanish Civil War. The long and bitter battle to get Marco and other Republicans out of the Valley started in 2009, taking 60 families through the entire Spanish judicial system and right up to the Human Rights Court in Strasbourg. Of these 60, the Lapeña family was the first to win the right to have the remains of brothers Manuel and Antonio Lapeña returned to them. Five years later, they are still waiting… as are the rest of the fami lies who finally achieved a breakthro ugh three months ago. “It’s a basic human right, no? To hono your dead?” says Navarro, who expla ur ins that there are still six of the victims’ child ren living – now in their late 80s and 90s and losing their memories.
952 85 50 25 www.benahavis.es
AYUNTAMIENTO DE BENAHAVÍS
ai161364213524_UniGib- half page
Olive press1.2.pdf 1 18/02/2021 10:55:36
History, adventure and romance. That’s just the setting.
tion of history, Join us for a celebra try in a art, heritage and pagean unique part of the world.
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
CMY
K
A BRITISH UNIVERSITY RIGHT ON YOUR DOORSTEP The University of Gibraltar establishing itself as a destination for UK-aligned is quality standards, a focus on employability and a personal learning experience. Its students benefit from living in a safe, sunny environment within a vibrant why more people are opting business hub. Discover to study closer to home.
Undergraduate - Bachelor of Business
Administration (Hons) - BSc (Hons) Maritime Science –Nautical or Engineering - BSc (Hons) Adult Nursing
Postgraduate - Postgraduate Certificate in Education – PGCE - MA Leadership and Management - Masters of Business Administration - MBA - MSc Marine Science and Climate Change - PhD Research Europa Point Language Centre - English and Spanish language classes - General or specific classes
Visit unigib.edu.gi today
120,000 years heritage site offering With a UNESCO world the Costa del Sol, only short drive from of human history and splash out British Gibraltarians and enjoy the warmth of the VAT-free in Sterling. Gibraltar. Sun, sea and
served with a very British
history twist. PROUD
BRITISH
Heritage STREET PARTIES HISTORY MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE MUSIC
For further information Gibraltar Tourist Board +350 200 74950
Or to download a brochure go to: www.visitgibraltar.gi
www.visitgibraltar.gi
Phoenician Empire Calentita
Jazz
INTERNATIONAL
LITERARY FESTIVAL
Castle
Festivals THE ROCK The MoorishMusic Food Festival
call:
Pillars of Hercules 100000 YEARS Neanderthal Settlements Snooker, National Week, Chess, Darts, Backgammon Championships
ibraltar
#VISITGIBRALTAR
A year of Culture
Bring hearts, minds and
The top five most read stories on www.theolivepress.es in the past two weeks are:
Spain at the moment and 1- Who is allowedareinhotels open? What we know about Spain’s plans to wel2-come tourists with vaccine passports in June fire guts famous Costa del Sol res3- Mystery taurant of UK TV star Elliot Wright restrictions update: Andalucia 4- Coronavirus to allow travel between provinces Spain set to win back British and internatio5- nal tourists in June by implementing digital certificate
Get in touch today at sales@theolivepress.es or call us at 00 34 951273575 for a special quote
souls
8
GREEN
www.theolivepress.es
Martin Tye asks are you aware that Spain is the Dirty Man of Europe?
Green Matters By Martin Tye
IT’S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD
M
ANY of you will remember this 1964 farce starring Mickey Rooney and Spencer Tracey. A farce is a comedy in which everything is absurd. Absurdism is even more extreme than a farce. In a farce, everything goes off the rails, but in absurdism, there aren’t any rails to begin with. A living example of this has to be the leaf blower, a device on the list of the top ten most ridiculous inventions of the last century. Brought to market as a hand held version in 1978, this mostly petrol powered contraption, in the hands of the ‘DIY MACHOMAN’ sets the scene to play out this tragic
farce. ‘I blow my rubbish and dirt (not just leaves) off my property onto yours. You then return the favour and blow them back!!!” It doesn’t get more absurd than this does it? These devices plague us all – in urbanisations, on the street, in public places. Nowhere is spared these noisy, polluting, and futile machines. Let me expand: ●● Leaf blowers blast air at 185 mph. They kick up allergens, dust, animal faeces, and other detrimental particulates. ●● They are noisy, obtrusive, and can cause hearing loss (sound emissions are 115 decibels). ●● The overall ecosystem is negatively affected. ●● They create 300 times the amount of pollutants as a street cleaning truck No one picks up the relocated debris they create. The original concept of blowing leaves in autumn is completely flawed. Leave the leaves in situ if possible. They are one ofvaluable things you can do to support pollinators and other invertebrates who need winter cover. Or, use as free mulch. Leaves are a great addition to compost. Whatever happened to the garden rake, the brush, and the pan? Maybe, to add to this farce we should form a movement to throw a cream pie in the face of all those who use them? 100% Certified Green Energy You decide…
Martin Tye is the owner of energy switch company Mariposa Energy. Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es
CHEAPER ELECTRICITY
May 7th - May 20th 2021
Skybrator! By Fiona Govan
A PIONEERING turbine design promises to reinvent how we harness wind power without the need for giant windmills and blades that harm wildlife. The bladeless curve-topped cylinder can generate energy from vibrations alone and is the brainchild of Madrid based start-up Vortex Bladeless. “We have developed a new wind energy technology specially designed for on-site generation in residential areas, being able to work ongrid, off- grid, or along with regular solar panels or other
‘Phallic’ wind turbine could be future of green energy
generators,” explained David Yañez, the inventor behind the project.
Sustainable crossing SPAIN now has what is claimed to be the world’s first sustainable ‘fast ferry’. The service connects Palma de Mallorca to Denia with a stopover in Ibiza. Costing €90 million, Balearia’s Eleanor Roosevelt is the first ferry of its type in the world, operating with innovative natural gas engines, says the company. Taking just under three years to construct, the ferry is also longer than any other fast ferry in the world and has a capacity for 1,200 passengers and 450 cars. Balearia’s president, Adolfo Utor, explained that ‘sustainability and technology are the differentiating aspects’ of the vessel. Scientific analysis has shown that the ferry will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 85% which is equivalent to the consumption of 8,900 cars each year or some 27,000 trees. The ferry pays tribute to Eleanor Roosevelt, the longest serving First Lady in US history and a gender equality activist and advocate for civil rights, who was also the first president of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights.
BARCELONA mayor Ada Colau has s1et out the city’s vision for a green future by creating 503 superblocks to cut pollution and prevent hundreds of premature deaths. The blocks are groups of streets where traffic is reduced to close to zero,
Going green with the space given over to pedestrians and play areas. The plan could save hundreds of lives every year and cut air pollution by a quarter if it fully implements the radical superblocks scheme,
Described as an ‘environmentally friendly aerogenerator without blades designed for on-site wind energy generation’ it won the moniker Skybrator on Reddit because of its phallic appearance. The device could be effective from as small as three metres high which could be used on an off grid home to power a fridge, some lights and charge mobile phones harnessing wind power on a small scale in the same way as a home solar panel.
Size matters “Power grows exponentially with the size of the device,” explained Jorge Piñero, another member of the Vortex team. The design has won the approval of Norway’s state energy company, Equinor, which named Vortex on a list of the 10 most exciting startups in the energy sector. The new designs could provide an alternative way of harnessing green energy in place of traditional wind farms with their giant blades that are known to decimate bird and bat species. according to a report by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health. “Citizens want us to move ahead with this transformation from the demonstrations and the surveys which we have conducted,” Colau told journalists.
SAVE UP TO 35% ON YOUR ENERGY BILL
100% Certified Green Energy
SOLAR PV PANELS
GENERATE YOUR OWN ELECTRICITY Make huge savings Get paid for any surplus
Switching energy supplier with Mariposa Energía is easier than flicking a switch CONTACT US FOR A QUOTE TODAY +34 951 120 830 INFO@MARIPOSAENERGIA.ES WWW.MARIPOSAENERGIA.ES
Make free use of the sun!
Mariposa Energía, Calle Soria, Edificio Alcantamar 16, Local Bajo 4, San Pedro de Alcántara, 29670, Marbella
FULL INSTALLATION & REGISTRATION - MAINTENANCE - 20-YEAR GUARANTEE - LOW-COST FINANCING
GET A FREE NO OBLIGATION QUOTE TODAY! +34 951 120 830 | INFO@MARIPOSAENERGIA.ES | WWW.MARIPOSAENERGIA.ES
LA CULTURA
May 7th - May 20th 2021
Crap shop
Splash the cash
A caganer is not just for Christmas THEY are as much a part of Christmas in Catalunya as the pessebre, or nativity scene. Now these curious figures known as caganers - which depict everyone from Boris Johnson, Leo Messi, Joe Biden and even Queen Elizabeth II baring their bottoms to squat down and do their business, will be celebrated the year round
By Graham Keeley
at the world’s first caganers shop in Barcelona. Some 530 defecating figures will be on display for sale, to show off their remarkable history and to demonstrate how they are made. “To open a shop is the culmination of nearly 30 years of our career and as a recognition to our parents,” said Marc and Sergi Alos, respectively the sculptor and sales director of Caganer. com, the family-run company which has produced the figures for the past 29 years.
SPAIN’S famous Pamplona bull runs have been scrapped for a second successive year due to the COVID pandemic. The bull runs form the cornerstone of San Fermin festival in July, which draws tourists from around the world. The festival gained international fame from Ernest Hemingway’s 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises. Prior to last year, the last time it was cancelled was during the Civil War between 1936 and 1939. As well as the morning bull runs and afternoon bullfights, the festival features roundthe-clock singing, dancing and drinking by revellers dressed in white clothes and red neck scarves. There are also religious events in honour of San Fermin. Last year’s cancel-
BROTHERS: Marc and Sergi Alos have set up shop
“We realised that it was necessary to have an establishment like this because until now you could only find the caganers in little stands or at fair at Christmas or in our
Honestly, no bull! lation was also a big financial blow to Pamplona’s bars, restaurants and hotels. Pamplona mayor, Enrique Maya said that staging the event would be ‘very risky due to the low number of vaccinated people and the Navarra region’s high COVID infection rate. Money that was going to be spent on the festival will be diverted to other summer attractions. In February, Navarra’s president, Maria Chivete, said that the event would be called off again, only for Maya to hold out longer before coming to terms with a second-successive cancellation.
OP QUICK Crossword Across 7 Sheer delight (8) 8 "Casablanca" club owner (4) 9 "Unlock this door!" (4,2) 10 Hoofing it (2,4) 11 Flags (5) 12 Chess champion --Karpov (7) 14 Least prepossessing (7) 16 Sales pitch (5) 19 Small things (6) 20 Roman ode-smith (6) 21 Clammy (4) 22 As do the days in Spring (8)
Down
OP Sudoku
9
1 Wimp, preaching revolution in the kitchen (8,5) 2 Scrounger (6) 3 Nutty as a fruitcake (5) 4 Magnates (7) 5 Advantage (6) 6 Dominie, in Scotland (6,7) 13 As a rule (7) 15 Conjure up (6) 17 Spotlessness (6) 18 Directed a light (5)
All solutions are on page 15
factory.” They added: “It will be an oasis for the caganer where all year round there will be figures that we have created. “The caganer is not just something for Christmas. Little by little, we are converting it into a typical souvenir that a tourist can take as a memory of Catalonia,” added the Alos brothers. The new shop is in Calle Banys Nous in Barcelona’s Barrio Gotico, an area which is normally full of tourists. The roots of the caganer tradition are vague but believed to date from around the late 17th century or early 18th century when the fashion at the time in Catalonia was for realism in art, sculpture and literature.
ONE million Euros is to be spent on the historic Castillo de Sagunto. Spain’s Minister of Culture, Jose Manuel Rodriguez Uribes, announced that the cash will be used to install informative signs and to restore parts of the wall and the Almenara gate, as well as the creation of footpaths. But a €1.1 million visitor centre at the national monument that was ‘completed’ in 2010 remains unused because the electricity has never been connected. While work will be done to smarten up the ancient site, the visitor
centre remains empty and surrounded by rubble and rubbish, When asked about the state of neglect that pressure groups have been denouncing for over a decade, the minister said it is his intention to allocate cash to the centre and to agree on the drafting of a comprehensive plan for the site with the the Generalitat and the town council, in addition to strengthening the relationship of the Roman Theatre with the National Institute of Performing Arts and Music (Inaem) to schedule more shows, among other actions.
10
LA CULTURA
May 7th - May 20th 2021
Tales of the surreal
T
EXCLUSIVE: A meeting with the maestro Salvador Dali was simply unforgettable, recalls David Baird
HEY’RE making a new film about one of the 20th cen- whelmed by his extrovert host. tury’s most famous artists, the outrageous Surrealist Dalí was in euphoric mood, leaning back in a cane chair as Salvador Dalí. Like anything associated with Dalí, it celestial music filled the patio. Then, abruptly, the maestro has bizarre aspects. Example: some scenes are being was off, bounding away in his rope-soled sandals. He gestured filmed in Wales, where the painter never set foot. at a phallic-shaped swimming pool, bordered oddly enough by Titled Dalí Land, it stars veteran actor Ben Kingsley (he was adverts for Pirelli tyres. brilliant as Gandhi, so he must be right for the part, right?). “Dalí is going to cover the bottom with sea-urchins,” he inIt relates how a young gallery assistant, played by Ezra Miller, formed us. “Yes, the stinging things, all over the bottom.” helps the ageing Dalí prepare for a big New York show. The Before I could ask why, he was off again and holding up a giartist’s wife, Gala, who was Russian, is portrayed by a German, gantic stuffed serpent. Barbara Sukowa. “Brigitte Bardot gave Dalí this. You like it?” Meanwhile, the Teatro-Museo Dalí in Figueras, up near the Somehow questions did not seem too important any more. French border, attracts more than a million visitors a year, How do you pin down an illusion, an eruption of fireworks, a making it one of the most visited in the world. Dalí is buried in bout of hysteria? Dalí claimed to have had his first hallucinaa crypt beneath the museum’s stage. And one of his creations, tion at the age of three and it was easy to believe. Portrait de Paul Eluard (pictured below) recently He was on the move again, elegant in black-andsold for $22 million, the highest figure ever paid white striped blazer and white trousers, keepfor a Surrealist work. ing up a commentary in a bewildering Dali was Have you got the picture? mix of English, Spanish, Catalan and Years after his death, in 1989, the legend of Sal- convinced I had French. vador Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech lives on. EsHe showed us the spherical Egg Room come all the pecially in my mind. Because I can never forget and pranced on, wagging his cane at the time when I met the man himself. a painting showing a naked woman’s way from China It was way back in the 1970s. I had spent the night back. “You have had the privilege of to see him in my camper van on a beach at Port Lligat on the seeing my wife in the nude. She has a Catalan coast. Just after dawn a Civil Guard patrol perfect back as you can see.” turned up and checked my credentials. When I Dalí and Gala began their relationship asked if they knew where the painter lived, they pointed out a while she was still married to his friend, the Surrealwhitewashed jumble of fishermen’s cottages close by. ist poet Paul Eluard. She left Eluard for Dali and the As a journalist, I had no option: I had to knock on the door. In pair married in 1934. Because of this affair Dali was the entrance hall a massive stuffed bear loomed menacingly. for years shunned by his father and their entire home Next thing I was ushered into the Dalí presence. Dalí looked town in Catalonia. Gala exerted an almost hypnotic his age. He gazed at me wearily, his moustache drooping. No power over Dalí. She persuaded him to buy her a caspyrotechnics, just a tired old man, slumped in his chair. I pre- tle in the village of Púbol, which the painter could not sented my card. enter without her permission. It has now become the “Come back in an hour,” said Dalí. Gala-Dalí Castle House Museum. When I returned, Dalí was sitting on a sunlit patio. And he was Later in the day Gala herself showed up, briefly. She a man transformed! Rejuvenated, effervescent. Even the fa- was elegance itself, but also cold and haughty. She mous moustache had acquired new life. eyed myself and my wife with distaste, asking: “Who “Ah!” he exclaimed. “The man from Shanghai!” are these people?” I realised later that the card was the clincher. It was one I had Dalí claimed that Gala recognised his hysterical used while working in Hong Kong. Dalí was convinced I had laugh for what it was, an indication of inner torment come all the way from China to see him. And soon a butler was and terror. She certainly knew how to convert his art pressing pink champagne on my wife, myself and three other into a money machine. Her mercenary ways became visitors. One of these was Dr. Schiller, a former minister in the notorious, as well as her taste for young lovers, to German government. A mild-mannered fellow, he seemed over- which Dalí turned a blind eye. The urge to cash in led to a huge scandal when it was learned that Dalí had signed hundreds of blank sheets of paper to which fake lithographs were later added. One yarn claims that John Lennon’s partner, Yoko Ono, bought what she thought was a strand of his moustache for $10,000, unaware it was a dry blade of grass from his garden. As we toured the bizarre Dalí hideaway, Dr. Schiller asked the painter to autograph a book of his works. No problem. He quickly penned a sketch on the flyleaf. “Fantastic!” said Dr. Schiller. I could only echo his words, recalling that at 1970s market prices that swift doodle would be worth at least $2,000. And today it could be sold for...who knows how much? For 60 seconds’ work. In his studio we viewed his latest creations. One was a clever arrangement of two patterns which merged when examined from a certain angle. All done with mirrors. “It’s wonderful, stereoscopic,” said Dalí. Asked its title, he paused – but only for a moment – then announced grandly: “Mineral Molecules in the Moment of Becoming One Angel!” Of course. Why hadn’t we thought of that? Later, intruders from the real world turned up, two executives from Playboy just arrived from New York. We met in Dalí’s library, presided over by stuffed swans and an eagle. They clutched a dozen or so colour photos, taken according to the maestro’s directions and due to appear in a special issue of the magazine. “You know the more I think about this project
the more excited I get,” declared the man from Playboy. I saw what he meant when I saw the pictures. Five spectacular models had somehow got entwined, in the nude, with the Bardot serpent and a huge egg in Dalí’s garden. While chatting with the Playboy reps, Dalí suddenly leaped on to a table and adopted an imperious pose. His eyes rolled wildly while his moustache and eyebrows performed a crazy accompaniment.“A photograph! A photograph!” he commanded.
LA CULTURA
May 7th - May 20th 2021
STRANGE: Dali at home with bear, striking a pose on the table, grooming his moustache and with Playboy photographer Pompeo Posar setting up a shot using his original sketch (bottom).
He was not to be denied. Clearly Dalí had never given up on his early ambition, announced at the age of seven, to be Napoleon. Surrealism has been described as an attempt to rebel against the orderly power of reason, to escape from the life sentence of daily routine. I was going to ask Dalí’s view about this. But the
next time I turned to speak to him he had morphed into somebody in a Chinese mandarin’s mask and a crown. Sheer exhibitionism, right? Or a crazy joke? Or Dalí’s way of retreating from the insane world we imagine is the real one?
11
BUSINESS Alright for some 12
Tills keep ringing at Mercadona
Record
THE firm behind Zara has set up a subsidiary company in its home area of Galicia to produce power through plants that use renewable energy sources. The new company will be called Inditex Renovables. It will not sell its power but use it for itself to reduce the reliance on buying in supplies. Inditex has filed an
Zara power application to install three wind turbines at La Coruña’s outer harbour. Reports say that the turbines would produce enough electricity to support the needs of the Inditex group in Spain, as well as powering the port’s facilities.
Jobs slashed
SUPERMARKET chain Mercadona has had a good pandemic. It closed 2020 with a record net turnover of €24.68 BILLION. This was an increase of 5.5% over the €26.932 billion of 2019, with the vast majority of the cash coming from its Spanish operation. The company’s 20 Portuguese stores contributed €186 million. Despite the record turnover, company boss Juan Roig described the year as ‘hard and complicated’ and pointed out that the company had actually lost market share – half a point to 26.4%. Mercadona also saw a significant increase in costs as it brought in anti-COVID measures. This did not stop the retailer from recording a significant rise in profits which grew
May 7th - May 20th 2021
SUPERMARKET SWEEP: Mercadona profits soared 16.75% year-on-year to a new high of €727 million. And the workforce shared in the good news, with €409 million handed out in bonuses – 20% more than in 2019. Mercadona ended the year with 1,641 supermarkets, after opening 70, 10 of them in Portugal, and closing 65 stores. The company also continued to invest in its online
E
arlier in the year, the UK Treasury published a number of reviews and proposals relating to tax policy, dubbed Tax Day”, aimed at creating a more modern and open tax system in the UK. One such review likely to concern landlords and property owners, was around the tax and allowances of Furnished Holiday Lets (FHLs). These policy changes are a reaction to the increasing number of homeowners using sites like Airbnb to make additional income on their homes. Owners of FHLs receive a number of tax reliefs and allowances, providing that they meet the criteria set by the government. For example, properties that qualify as a FHL are subject to business rates instead of council tax. Business rates are cheaper, as they are deemed to be commercial premises, and the majority of FHLs are also viable for small business rates relief. This means that you could end up paying no rates at all. While this is great for FHL owners, it does, unfortunately, mean that many homeowners try to claim their property as a FHL, even if they don’t meet the criteria to benefit from the relief. Up until now, FHL owners have not been required to prove that they meet these requirements. However, with the number of homeowners claiming FHL tax benefits increasing, HMRC will be asking owners to prove that their property qualifies as a FHL. To qualify as a FHL, your property must be: ●● Based in the UK or in the European Economic Area (EEA) – including Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway. All FHL properties in the UK will be treated as one business and all FHL properties in the EEA will be treated as another. ●● Furnished – your property must include sufficient furniture for normal occupation, such as beds, sofas and white goods. ●● Commercially let, i.e. you must intend to make a profit from the rental. Letting a property out of season to cover costs still counts as a commercial let, even if you did not make a profit. As well as the property conditions, there are also 3 key occupancy conditions that must all be met in order to qualify as a FHL. 1. Availability - Your property must be available as a FHL for at least 210 days in a year. You cannot count any days that you live in the property.
business, which it started in 2018, with the opening of its new €12 million distribution hub in Madrid, joining its already existing Barcelona and Valencia centres. Online sales totaled €176 million, double the figure of 2019, although still a tiny fraction of turnover. Roig said: “It is in exceptional moments that exceptional people like our staff emerge.”
CAIXABANK has announced it will cut nearly 20% of its workforce across Spain as part of a nation-wide shake up following their merger with Bankia. The Spanish lender is to cut 5,742 jobs and close 1,534 of their 7000 branches across the country. The Madrid branch is set to be hit hardest by the restructuring plan, with union bosses expecting some 1,500 job losses. Valencia is also set to lose around 500 workers while the closure of the Murcia
branches mean some 400 people will be with out work. In total, 18% of the workforce is set to be cut as central services drops 1,611 employees and some 250 jobs across the regional headquarters are cut. Government spokesperson María Jesús Montero defended the shock move and claimed that had it not been for the merger ‘we would be talking about a higher volume of workers’. The state has retained a 16% share in the new megabank.
Tax bombshell 2. Letting - You must let out the property as a FHL for at least 105 days in the year. You cannot count any days that friends or relatives stay in the property for free or for a reduced rate. 3. You also cannot count any lets of more than 31 continuous days. The exception to this would be if something unforeseen happens, such as the holidaymaker either falling ill or having an accident that delays their departure, or they have to extend their holiday due to a delayed flight.
evidence to prove that this is the case. It seems likely that, with the introduction of MTD, you will be required to upload evidence to a digital platform in the near future.
Pattern of occupation
As well as paying business tax rates rather than council tax, FHL owners benefit from being able to:
There is a bit more wiggle room on the 31 day limit. If the total FHL bookings exceeding 31 continuous days is less than 155 days during the year, your property still qualifies as a FHL. If you don’t end up letting your property for at least 105 days, you have two options (known as elections) that can help you reach the occupancy threshold: ●● Averaging election – if you have more than one property and, between them, they average out to over 105 days of commercial let. You get a bit of time to make your averaging election one year from the 31st of January following the tax year. It sounds complicated but, essentially, you can make an averaging election for your 2017/18 tax year up until January 31, 2020. ●● Period of grace election – if you intended to let out your property as a FHL but did not reach 105 days occupancy, HMRC will accept proof that there had been a pattern of FHL activity by looking at previous years, for example. Broadly speaking, if your property is furnished, vacant and advertised as a holiday let for seven months of the year and you let it out for at least three months, it should qualify as a FHL and be eligible for certain tax reductions and allowances. While it’s currently unclear how HMRC will be checking that eligibility requirements have been met, it is important to check whether your property qualifies as a FHL and to collect any and all
Guaranteed for three years! WARRANTY periods for all new electrical and digital goods bought in Spain will be extended to three years. The extra year has been approved by the Council of Ministers as part of an update to the General Law for the Defence of Consumers and Users.
Doubled
There are also new regulations on keeping spare parts for products, with the maximum five years now doubled to 10 years. The new laws are expected to take effect in a few weeks.
Tax changes for Furnished Holiday Lets (FHLs) - what you need to know
What are the tax benefits of FHLs?
●● Claim capital allowances on your property, meaning you can furnish it and deduct the cost from your pre-tax profits. ●● Classify income generated from a FHL property as -relevant earnings- for pension purposes. ●● Split FHL profits equally between yourself and your spouse flexibly for tax purposes – unlike with long-term rental properties where profits are divided based on the official ownership split. ●● Claim certain Capital Gains Tax reliefs when you sell the property, e.g. Business Asset Rollover Relief. What UK FHL owners, living in Spain should do now Firstly be aware of the country that you are a resident in - the UK and Spain have a double taxation agreement, meaning that you shouldn’t pay both UK and Spanish tax on UK property income - however if you are a Spanish resident, you will need to declare your global income to the Spanish authorities. Register for self assessment as a non resident Landlord with HMRC - this means that your tax will not be stopped at source by your letting agent,
and you will be entitled to the £12570 tax free allowance on any UK rental income. You will also be able to claim expenses such as management fees as a tax deductible allowance If you are thinking of buying a property or using a property as a FHL, you should make a clear distinction between your residential or commercial lettings and begin gathering evidence as you go. As well as gathering evidence that your property qualifies as a FHL, you should keep good records relating to your FHL property and the income received. By using a platform like APARI that is tailored to the needs of landlords, you can keep upto-date digital records of your income, expenses and relevant documents preparing you for both the coming evidence requirements as well as MTD. For all the latest information and advice visit
www.apari-digital.com
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL Welcome Bargain back meal 14
THE·Spanish government has announced it will be ready to welcome back British and International holidaymakers this June with a ‘COVID passport’ According to the Secretary of State for Tourism, Fernando Valdes, the digital certificate, which is being set up by the European Union (EU) and which ‘will be fundamental in providing certainty to travellers’, will be operational at the start of this summer.
Virus
Valdes explained that it will be accepted as proof a person had a COVID-19 jab, received a negative test result or recovered from the virus. With a digital vaccination certificate in place, to be pilot tested in May at all of Spain’s 46 airports, the country expects to kick start the recovery of the tourism trade in June. Additionally, Valdes said that Spain was pushing for the UK’s digital vaccine passport to be ‘mutually recognised’ and said he welcomed Boris Johnson’s plans to restart international travel from May 17.
May 7th - May 20th 2021
Kick off hope
Tuck in to a Michelin-starred menu for just €25 SPAIN is home to one of the cheapest places in the world to enjoy a Michelin-starred meal. For a bargain basement price of just €25 diners can tuck into a three course set menu at Silbario in Vigo (Galicia). For that price you get an aperitif of Puchero de verdinas y setas silvestres (stew of green vegetables and wild mushrooms) then a choice of start-
ers like warm pea and mussel soup or roasted white asparagus with egg and ham. This is followed by Galician veal shank, chanterelles and Robuchon’s style puree or pan-seared palometa and roasted spring onion. To finish off there is a choice of Leche frita, with lemon cream and cinnamon ice cream or crema montada de tetilla with peach and fried sesame seeds.
The restaurant also offers more ambitious menus costing up to €80 - still a bit of a bargain in the rarefied world of Michelin-class dining, with
On the rocks THE home of the founder of the Bacardi drinks empire is to close, another victim of the COVID-19 pandemic. Casa Bacardi in Sitges was the original home of Facundo Bacardi Masso, who left the Catalan city in 1830 to set up the drinks company in Cuba. The website for Casa Bacar-
di, which closed on March 28, states that the property will remain shut ‘until further notice’. Since its opening almost ten years ago, Casa Bacardi has been a popular local attraction, but reduced capacity due to COVID-19 makes it untenable to continue as a museum.
chef Alberto Gonzalez (pictured) also serving up media raciones for as little as €14. For the cheapest Michelin restaurant in the world you will have to head up to Northern France. The Hostellerie la Montagne in Colombey-les-Deux-Églises has a set menu at €20, according to Top Dollar website. On the other side of the coin, there are Michelin-starred restaurants in 34 countries, and in five of those nations, you cannot find meals for less than $100 (€84). Other ‘cheap’ restaurants are Edvard’s (Vienna, Austria) and Borkonyha (Budapest, Hungary) also offering a menu under €25.
FOOTBALL fans may be allowed back in to watch the last four matches of the La Liga season. National COVID-19 restrictions are on the verge of being relaxed under plans being considered by the government and the sport’s organising body. A maximum of 5,000 fans would be allowed to watch the games inside the stadiums from this weekend, just before Spain’s state of emergency ends on May 9. If the move is approved by Spain’s government, supporters could return to the stadiums in time for the match between Barcelona and Atletico Madrid, which could be a title decider. In contrast to countries like England, Germany and France, where fans have been allowed back into the stadiums in limited numbers at times, Spain has refused to let supporters back in since the start of the pandemic in March 2020. Fans will be allowed to attend Euro 2020 games in Sevilla in June after the city was given permission to host these matches.
HEALTH Minimal Risk A Barcelona 'test' concert did not lead to increased COVID cases among the 5,000 attendees. Rock band Love of Lesbian performed at the March 27 show at the city's 17,000 capacity Palau Sant Jordi Arena. The crowd all tested negative for COVID-19 earlier in the day. While a mask had to be worn during the show, there was no social distancing. Just six people tested positive for the coronavirus within two weeks of the concert. All of those cases were mild or asymptotic with no secondary infections. Scientists went further and said that four of the cases probably had nothing to do with the concert. The rate of infection among attendees was half the rate of people of the same age in Barcelona. Infectious disease specialist, Josep Maria Llibre, said: “There is absolutely no sign that transmission took place during the event.” The Barcelona findings mirror those seen following events in Germany and the Netherlands.
SPAIN’S government has extended a ban on all non-essential travel to Spain from outside the EU and Schengen area for another month. Confirmation of the extension due to the continued coronavirus pandemic was published on Friday in the Official State Gazette (BOE). The extension continues the recommendations by the EU that have been in place since June 30 last year. In addition, the notice confirms a ban on all travellers from those places where dangerous new variants of COVID-19 have been detected. These include India, Brazil, South Africa, Botswana, Comoros, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Peru and Colombia. Under this rule only Spanish citizens or those with residency in Spain are allowed to enter and must quarantine for 10 days on arrival. Because of Brexit, citizens
Travel ban Spain extends coronavirus ban on non-essential travel for those outside EU - including Brits - until May 31 By Fiona Govan
from the United Kingdom are now considered third country nationals and must follow the same rules as other non-EU member states. This means that only those arriving from the UK who are residents in Spain or have a reason to travel that falls under the exceptions of the ban, such as for work or study, will be allowed to enter. Travellers are advised to check the latest travel advice for Spain on the UK Gov website before making any plans. The extension of the travel ban on Brits by Spain comes
CONSUM supermarkets are putting a special coating on trolley and shopping basket handles to virtually eliminate COVID-19 risks for customers. The Valencian-based cooperative says that 47,000 units will get the protection over the next few months along with brand-new handles. Some 90% of baskets and trolleys will have been changed across 670 stores by July. Umbrella Zero is a nanotechnological
EMPTY: Flights have been haulted
as the UK is preparing to loosen restrictions to allow foreign travel. The British government is currently saying it will lift the ban on foreign holidays for people in England from May 17 as part of the next easing of coronavirus restrictions.
Getting a handle coating with anti-viral properties. Tests have shown it to be 99.99% effective and it only needs to be applied once to the handles to give permanent protection. All of the test results have been independently verified by the Carlos III Health Institute in Madrid. Consum is spending €816,500 on the handle changes and adding the protective layer.
COLUMNISTS
AM never going to leave the island again! For anyone who has attempted to get off the island for any reason and get back, you will share my pain. I am in a hotel airport in Manchester as I write this, having not been able to get on my flight because my PCR test result didn’t arrive in time before my flight. My partner got his the day before and I just kept waiting and hoping mine would appear. But it wasn’t until I was finally able to speak to someone at Boots, where I’d had the test, that they
Although there are moves by the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on coronavirus to ‘maintain curbs on international leisure travel’ beyond that date. Britain is likely to introduce a traffic light system that will distinguish between low risk countries and high risk countries with no quarantine requirements imposed on those returning from ‘green light’ countries. Spain has said it will be ready to welcome international travellers under a vaccine passport type scheme from June, if a deal can be made with the EU and is involved in discussions with the British authorities to make a bilateral agreement.
Terenia Taras
Telling it like it is
Never again!
Travel woes as Terenia tries to get back to Mallorca managed to send it on to me, two hours too late for my flight! So here we are after being refused boarding without the necessary fit to fly certificate having to get two more tests done, one for me and my partner, book two more flights and spend the night in a hotel at the extra cost of £640! And that’s on top of the £750 we’d already paid for PCR tests to return to the UK, excluding flights. It is an absolute joke and the UK Government is making it very difficult and costly for anyone to travel anywhere. I get the fear of people bringing back COVID with them, but there are many of us who are travelling for reasons other than a holiday. We live in Mallorca but will always have ties in the UK with family and I feel that we’re being forced to pick a country and stay there and forgo seeing loved ones as a forfeit!
OP Puzzle solutions Quick Crossword Across: 7 Rhapsody, 8 Rick, 9 Open up!, 10 On foot, 11 Tires, 12 Anatoly, 14 Ugliest, 16 Spiel, 19 Trivia, 20 Horace, 21 Dank, 22 Lengthen. Down: 1 Whipping cream, 2 Sponge, 3 Loopy, 4 Tycoons, 5 Profit, 6 School teacher, 13 Usually, 15 Invoke, 17 Purity, 18 Shone.
SUDOKU
I
May 7th - May 20th 2021
I went back to the UK for several reasons, one being to see my son who isn’t able to come to Mallorca because he’s not a resident. I also had to get my belongings out DESERTED: Airport check-in and Terenia of storage and organise them to be brought to Mallorca, again at another inflated cost due to Brexit and new customs charges. My partner works for Jet2, well I should say worked, because he’s not done a single flight in 14 months. He has no idea when he will be recalled to do training to get him back to currency in his job as a pilot. There has been very little communication and as far as everyone can see the travel situation just gets kicked further along every month. That and the fact it’s so costly or until we’re allowed out, because to travel when you’re it’s currently illegal to go on holiday forced to pay for from the UK? exorbitant PCR test. Who knows what will happen from It’s starting to appear May 17, but what is more of a conas though the Gover- cern is how accepting and passive we nment is deliberately all are when our civil rights have been making it as difficult withheld and eroded one after anoas possible for peo- ther for so long! ple to travel. Do we want to have YOU CAN FOLLOW ME to stay in our own @tereniataras countries indefinitely,
15
COVID pill could soon be on the market AN oral drug to treat coronavirus at the first sign of illness could soon be available , said Pfizer's CEO. Albert Bourla told CNBC that if clinical trials go well the drug could be distributed across the U.S. later this year. The company, which developed the first authorised COVID-19 vaccine in the US with German drugmaker BioNTech, began oral drug trials in March. The drug is being developed simultaneously in the laboratories of the pharmaceutical giant in the United States and Belgium, and uses a mechanism similar to those currently used to treat HIV.
Drug
Various company officials have said the drug, known as PF-07321332, would be given as a treatment, and not as a prevention, against the coronavirus. It would be a tablet that people would take in the early stages of infection to prevent them from developing more serious symptoms. Pfizer's chief scientific officer and president of research Mikael Dolsten said: “We designed PF07321332 as a potential oral therapy that could be prescribed at the first sign of infection.”
Virus
Health experts say the drug, taken by mouth, could be a game changer because people newly infected with the virus could use it outside of hospitals. Researchers hope the medication will keep the disease from progressing and prevent hospital trips. "We expect to see continued outbreaks of Covid-19 for the foreseeable future," added Charlotte Allerton, Pfizer's chief drug designer, “and therefore, as with all viral pandemics, it is important that we have a complete tool kit to address it.”
We use recycled paper
Swipe right
FINAL WORDS
AIs can easily manipulate matters of the heart, say researchers in Spain who were able to trick daters into picking the wrong match with a fake algorithm.
Moneybags THE most expensive mansion in Europe has been sold on the Costa del Sol for a cool €32million. The La Zagaleta luxury residential estate boasts 10 bedrooms and 14 bathrooms.
¿Que? A GUARDIA Civil officer in Castellon’s Vinaros has been reported for refusing to speak the Valencian language to a driver, insisting on using Spanish. The officer has been accused of linguistic discrimination.
OLIVE PRESS
The
Reuse Reduce Recycle
FREE
MALLORCA
Vol. 4 Issue 105
Dick move A MAN defending his girlfriend’s honour ended up needing three stitches after he was bitten on the penis. The 24-year-old victim was attacked when he told off a passerby who had ‘complimented’ his companion. The couple had been walking through the La Puñala district of Elche (Alicante) when they were accosted by a 28-year-old man who was worse for wear. The boyfriend told him off for his comments to his girlfriend, only to become the target for an assault in which the assailant sank his teeth into the victim’s manhood.
www.theolivepress.es
Your expat
voice in Spain May 7th - May 20th 2021
My precious!
Expat’s prized ring returned after it was buried under 350,000 tonnes of rubbish
FOUND: From trash to treasure
By Cristina Hodgson
IT makes the task of finding a needle in a haystack sound simple. When Helen Miles (pictured) accidentally threw her prized ring in the bin, it ended up as part of a 350,000 tonne
Freak death
A 59-year-old cyclist died after swallowing a bee when out riding with friends. The man was travelling in the Polinya del Xuquer area of Valencia
Tug of love
when the bee flew into his mouth. The cyclist was stung in his throat and lost consciousness. Paramedics were unable to resuscitate him. It’s believed that he suffered a fatal allergic reaction to the sting.
A COURT is to rule over the custody of a pet dog. When the owners of a white Maltese called Bimba separated they agreed to an ‘out of court’ joint custody arrangement for their daughter. Bimba would go along with the girl to stay with her father on his access days and everything seemed to work well at first. But the relationship between the grown-ups deteriorated with the man being refused access to Bimba in February.
Custody
mound of rubbish. Helen was left devastated when she realised what had happened to the three-colour gold ring she had bought 30 years previously with her first pay packet. That was in 2018, and her initial thoughts were she had lost the jewellery for ever. But hope rekindled for the woman from Casares (Malaga) when the massive Costa del Sol Environmental Complex opened a lost property office the following year. Barely thinking she had a chance that such a tiny item could be found amongst the vast amounts of rubbish that
the waste treatment plant deals with, she nonetheless decided to give it a go. She went online to fill in a form and upload photos of the ring back in March 2019. Now, two years later she has struck gold - and had ‘her precious’ returned. The sparkler now sits once more on Helen’s little finger. “It is a ring that I bought 30 years ago with my first pay packet and it has a lot of sentimental value for me,” she said. “It’s just incredible that such a small piece could have been located amongst the waste from the entire Costa del Sol.”
He was told that the dog actually belonged to his ex-partner’s other daughter and that he could never take her again. The man has now gone to court to get access to the family pet. He says that he paid for all of the dog’s expenses when he lived with his ex-partner. Bimba, though, is officially registered in the woman’s name on its microchip. The man says that is a technicality as she was the one that took the dog to the vet for the procedure. His lawyer claims that his client is suffering ‘serious non-financial damage such is his love for Bimba’.