Olive Press Valencia - Issue41

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VALENCIA / COSTA AZAHAR FREE Vol. 1 Issue 14 www.theolivepress.es

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ONE WAY OUT

Expats must stay in Spain in limbo for two years while alleged residency scam is probed by police EXCLUSIVE By Simon Wade

How one organised community of expats is putting El Raso on the map

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EXPATS caught up in a fraudulent residency scam run by a gestor on the Costa Blanca have been told by police that they can’t leave the country while the case is investigated. Dozens of people are facing a life in legal limbo for up to two years while police investigate the alleged fraud before it is decided if they face deportation or can legally stay. It comes after the Olive Press reported on a group of expats who had been detained by police over padron certificates that appear to 952 147 834 have been doctored by one particular gestor they hired to process their TIE applications.

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Prime suspect

Tragic mystery

Bear in the frame for series of grizzly livestock killings in the Pyrenees

The Olive Press helps TV investigation into the death of Kirsty Maxwell

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Girl power The female warriors who took on Drake’s army - and won! See page 10

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Grilled

They included 71-year-old widow Lily Higgins and friend Jay Elliott, who were grilled over their town hall registration forms, which were handled by One Way Services. Several more have since come forward to complain about the British gestor, in Ciudad Quesada, which is at the centre of the investigation. These include Jane Long of Torrevieja who was taken to Alicante Police Station and questioned over her part in ‘an alleged fraud’. The 53-year-old said she and her husband Nigel had confronted Matt Smith, owner of One Way Services, about why a doctored certificate had been submitted on their behalf. “Smith said he was only trying to help people,” she told the Olive Press. “He said he’d already admitted his guilt to the police, before shredding my fake padron in front of my eyes”

A GROUP of British expats have been detained by police EXCLUSIVE By Simon Wade after their padron certificates proving they lived in Spain appear to have been doc- derly expats described the situation as ‘humiliating’ and tored. At least eight people have ‘hellish’, after they were held been grilled over the town for questioning under cauhall registration forms, which tion. were all handled by the same They told the Olive Press how gestor company on the Costa they were carted to Alicante police station and grilled Blanca. National Police confirmed to about falsifying documents the Olive Press that detec- submitted with their TIE tives are working alongside card applications. the Guardia Civil to now in- “We were wrongly arrested vestigate all residencia appli- for submitting fake padrons, cations in Alicante made in even though we put the correct ones in with our paper2021. work for residencia,” said Jay Elliott, 66, of Orihuela Costa, Fraud who has lived in Spain for It comes after ‘widespread over five years. fraud’ was allegedly detected She and her friend Lily Higin over 22 Britons attempting gins, 71, had planned for a peaceful retirement in the to become resident here. This week a number of el- sun but are now living with the threat of a court case or

HUMILIATED: Lily and Jay were questioned even deportation. “I’ve never been in trouble before but here I am, being treated like a common criminal,” said Higgins. “It’s humiliating.” They added that the same gestor is being investigated for changing the date on at least 22 more British applicants. Another couple, who asked not to be named, told the Olive Press how they had been questioned when they went to collect their TIE cards. “We were taken into a room, read our rights and told to explain why our 2021 padron had been doctored to show a 2020 date - it was hell.” All those detained had used One Way Services, a gestor based in Quesada, near Torrevieja, to process their applications - including the padron. Owner Matt Smith insisted

that his is anything but the only gestor business to be dragged into the investigation “Nobody has been arrested, that is a fact,” he insisted, adding: “Other gestors are also being brought in as part of an ongoing investigation into TIE applications.” A police spokesman told the Olive Press: “All residencia

SCOOP: How the Olive Press broke the story last edition

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she added. He added that she should ‘expect a phone call from the police merely to answer a few questions’. However, after being taken away in a police car, held for two hours, fingerprinted and photographed, she was told by detectives at the Policia Nacional that she will be considered ‘guilty, until proven innocent’. Mrs Long despaired: “I was told I couldn’t even travel back to the UK because I’m a criminal!” Williams, 63, told us he also had to give a statement at Alicante police station last week. It involved the property owner, who has lived in Spain for seven years, having his fingerprints taken, as well as getting photographed. “It was astonishing,” he told the Olive Press. “I’m now told the court case could take 18 months to two years, possibly more.” He continued: “I started all this on September 1, but it became ap-

STUCK: Jane Long (above) has been told by police that she can’t travel while Lily Higgins and Jay Elliott were ‘treated like criminals’ after using One Way Services parent as time went on there was something amiss. “I feel this can go two ways: I'm found guilty and deported or after possibly two years I'm granted residencia. “I put all my faith into One Way Services and have been so let down, a very stressful time for me and countless others,” he added.

Cleared

When the Olive Press called Matt Smith for an explanation he refused to answer questions. “Speak to my lawyer,” he said before hanging up. National Police confirmed to the Olive Press that detectives are

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working alongside the Guardia Civil to now investigate all residencia applications in Alicante made in 2021. The lawyer later confirmed to the Olive Press that Smith had made a statement to police clearing his clients of any knowledge of the alleged fraud. “My client explained [to the police] that none of the clients had produced the applications themselves [but] only paid my client to apply for the TIE on their behalf,” David Guijarro Mayor from ABC solicitors told the Olive Press in response to written

Calle Perez Pujol 3, Valencia center

questions. He sought to reassure One Way clients that they would not be held criminally responsible. “So it is totally clear now that the criminal investigation is being focused only against my client so for sure the fiscal will not start criminal actions against his clients sadly affected,” he said. If it emerges that any other of One Way clients were to be detained over the matter, the lawyer said: “Mr Smith will proceed immediately to clarify in front of police or/and the court that these clients have no relation at all with any criminal activity.” Have you been affected? Please contact us on newsdesk@theolivepress.es Opinion Page 6

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CRIME

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NEWS IN BRIEF

Fraudsters nicked THREE men have been arrested in Lliria on suspicion of swindling half a million euros from several companies using a method known as ‘man in the middle’ – intercepting documents and changing bank account numbers.

Body found THE body of a 62-yearold homeless man was discovered in an abandoned building in Daimus after apparently lying there for several months.

Toke toy POLICE discovered several bales containing 60 kilos of hashish hidden inside an inflatable crocodile on Cullera beach.

Gas hike GAS prices have shot up by 400% over the last year, which has had a severe effect on the Castellon ceramic tile trade and made it less competitive on the international market.

THREE alleged sex slave traffickers operating in Gandia are facing up to 30 years each in prison. In a trial at Valencia Provincial Court, the prosecution accused the defendants of conning Nigerian women into travelling to Spain with fake offers to study and find stable work. Once here, the accused - two women and one man - allegedly subjected

Couple accused of battering own children to death THE trial of a couple who allegedly bludgeoned their children aged six months and three years to death with accusations it could have been a ‘ritual sacrifice’ has begun. Maria and Gabriel, a couple from Godella (Valencia), are in the dock accused of the killings and burying the bodies in the

Sex slaves their victims to voodoo rituals and threatened them and their families with violence. They were forced to sell their bodies on the streets of Gandia to repay a ‘debt’ of €50,000 for their journey and accommodation. According to the prosecution, the

June 3rd - June 16th 2021 defendants gradually increased the amount supposedly owed by the women in order to keep them enslaved indefinitely. They are facing accusations of people trafficking for purposes of sexual exploitation, enforced prostitution, criminal organisation, money laundering, offences against the labour rights of foreign workers, and promotion of illegal immigration.

Ritual killers back garden. The crime took place in a country home that the couple had occupied illegally on the outskirts of town in 2017. Two year later the property became the scene of the killings of Amiel, aged three, and Ixchel, six months old, a crime that shook Spain. Police found Maria naked

TWO men are facing long sentences for two separate brutal attacks on elderly people in Valencia Province. The first involves a 27-year-old man who attacked his own grandfather with a knife in the family home in Oliva (La Safor) in February 2019. The defendant admitted to stabbing his grandfather several times in the face and neck with an 11-centimetre blade that his grandmother was using to chop potatoes. The court heard that the attacker suffers from paranoid schizophrenia. Meanwhile, another man in Valencia city is

and hiding inside a barrel the day after the killings. Maria claims that she buried the bodies after finding them already dead, while Gabriel counters that he was asleep while his partner committed the murders and did not know anything about it until the next day. However, prosecutors be-

Brutal attacks

facing a possible life sentence for allegedly murdering an 82-year-old woman during a burglary in August 2018. The defendant is accused of suffocating his victim with a pillow after she opened the door to him, before escaping with jewels and valuables which he later sold in a pawn shop for €2,300. The prosecution is demanding a life sentence for a series of aggravating circumstances, also including assault on a vulnerable person.

lieve that the father could have organised a ‘ritual sacrifice’ involving the children. Maria, a diagnosed schizophrenic, claims that her partner had been trying to convince her for some time that a paedophile sect was after their children and planned to kill the parents because ‘they knew too much’.

Messia

Psychological profiles revealed that Maria was enthralled by Gabriel and believed him to be a messianic, Jesus-like figure, while the father was ‘a strong and domineering personality’. Gabriel is facing 50 years in prison – 25 for the alleged killing of each child. The prosecution is asking for 25 years’ internment in a psychiatric hospital for Maria.

CORDON: Police rushed to the scene

Squatter shot

A 43-YEAR-OLD man was shot dead in a squat in Manises (Valencia) on Monday (May 31). Identified only as Eduardo, the victim sustained one fatal shotgun wound to the chest at around 9.30 pm, killing him on the spot.

Attack

The National Police have launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the attack, which took place inside an illegally occupied two-storey building on Calle Torrent. Eduardo had reportedly been taken in by an elderly man called Ramon and two children in his care. All three were taken in for questioning as witnesses of the shooting, although none of them claimed to know the killer or the reason for the attack. It seems the victim and his murderer knew each other and had some kind of argument before shots were fired.


NEWS

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Chinchon cheer HOLLYWOOD director Wes Anderson is heading for Madrid this year as work begins on his newest project Elaborate sets have been spotted under construction in the outskirts of the Chinchon region of Madrid, 46 kilometres south of the

capital. Although very few details of Anderson’s latest masterpiece are known, the sets appear to resemble western style backdrops, complete with a train station. With a budget of €35 million, it is expected that Anderson regulars such as Owen Wil-

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

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son, Willem Dafoe, Bill Murray and Tilda Swinton could be involved in the yet unnamed project. Mayor of Chinchon, Francisco Martinez has welcomed the director and his crew to his town, however remains tight-lipped on details of the new project. “We have all been sworn to secrecy, but the project is really exciting,” said Martinez.

Hungry like the wolf

THE wolf has divided society for centuries but now it will be protected in Spain after a ban on hunting comes into action from September. The Spanish government will declare the wolf a ‘wild animal under special protection’ which means hunting it is illegal. It will bring to end decades of hunting which almost drove the wolf to extinction on the Iberian peninsula. Traditionally, the wolf has been portrayed as a figure of evil in popular culture, preying on characters from Little Red Riding Hood to the Three Little Pigs. After progressive measures to preserve the animal in some northern Spanish regions, the wolf has gone from being seen as an enemy to an asset – of the tourism industry. Until now, hunting was allowed in some regions on a strictly controlled basis. Spain and Portugal are thought to be home to about 3,000 wolves, the largest lupine population in Europe, according to data from Ecologists in Action, a conservation group. Yet opposition to the move persists and not just among hunters who believe the wolf must THE King of Spain has received his first COVID-19 vaccination, joining more than 5 million people who have been given the jab across the country. King Felipe was given his injection in the Wizink Centre in Madrid,

HAPPY COUPLE: Carlos and Belen

Walking on heir

LEFT IN PEACE: Wolves will be protected from hunters come September By Graham Keeley

be stamped out. Wolves kill some 15,000 farm animals across the country every year, according to the Spanish agricultural association COAG.

Royal jab

according to official palace sources. It is understood the King went to the hospital for the vaccine after marking National Armed Forces Day alongside the Queen.

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Ban on hunting creatures that devour livestock Lobo Marley, a pressure group which campaigns to protect wolves, estimates that about 300 are killed by hunters every year. King Felipe turned 53 years old in January, making him eligible to get his vaccination alongside the rest of the Spanish population his age. Meanwhile Queen Letizia, who is five years his junior, has not yet been called to receive her jab.

Peru Carlos de Munain, a livestock veterinarian in the Basque town of Errigoiti in northern Spain, said prohibiting hunting will not solve the conflict between farmers and the wolf.

Effective

“There are many other ways to deal with wolves which will be more effective. Creating pens for the sheep at night, or places for shepherds to stay at night, or using GPS trackers to give some warning of wolf attacks might be better ways,” he said.

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ONE of Spain’s richest and most aristocratic couples tied the knot in Madrid. The wedding of Carlos Fitz-James Stuart y Solis and Belen Corsini marked the union of two of Spain’s wealthiest families. Carlos is the youngest grandson and one of the heirs to the late Duchess of Alba, who was known as Spain’s richest woman. Meanwhile Belen is the great-granddaughter of Carlos Corsini Senespleda, the engineer and founder of construction and public works company Corsan, which was sold for €325million in 2004. Their spectacular wedding took place in private at Liria Palace. THE last known survivor of the International Brigades who fought against General Franco and the fascists in the Spanish Civil War has died, aged 101. Jose Almudever Mateu was a dual Spanish-French national born in July 1919 to Spanish parents in Marseilles. Jose lived in Valencia, when aged 17, he joined the republican force, liening about his age to enlist. After being wounded, his deception was discovered, and he returned to Marseilles to sign up for the International Brigades using his French nationality.

End of an era


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NEWS

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THE UK ambassador to Madrid has said that it is unlikely that parts of mainland Spain will be allowed on the UK’s travel green list and not others, even if the local infection levels meet required thresholds. Hugh Elliott made the comment during a visit to Benidorm yesterday (June 2) for talks with mayor, Toni Perez, and representatives from tourist groups and hotel associations. Elliott ruled out any ‘preferential’ treatment for the Costa Blanca and the Valencian Community despite the area having some of the lowest COVID-19 infection rates in mainland Europe. “Doing it by cities or regions is not logically feasible,” said Elliott. “We will need a bit more patience.” He praised all of the ‘effort and work’ that

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Green list hitch has been done to counter the coronavirus on the Costa Blanca but offered little immediate joy to the area’s tourist industry. Spain’s average infection figures are at 120 cases per 100,000, but the rate comes in at around 40 across the Valencian region and below 30 for the Costa Blanca. The country is on an ‘amber’ travel list which means people returning to the UK have to go into home quarantine and take a series of expensive PCR tests to prove they are COVID-19 free. Last week, the Valencian president, Ximo Puig, met Hugh Elliott for talks in Madrid and put the case for the region to be considered for an exemption based on its low

About time!

Long-term expats win right to votes for life in UK elections BRITISH citizens who have moved abroad will be given 'votes for life' as the UK Government scraps the arbitrary 15-year limit on their voting rights. The new measures which

Rigor, Confidentiality and Independence

VISIT: Elliott and Perez infection rates in the same way the Balearic or Canary Islands might. The list of quarantine-free countries will be reviewed today (June 3) with amendments coming into effect a week later.

Refugees welcome

WINNER: Shindler has won the day

By Fiona Govan

will make it easier for expats to participate in British democracy were announced in the Queen’s Speech in March and have now been confirmed by the Cabinet Office. The news follows a long campaign led by Harry Shindler, MBE, who has been championing the fight for his right to vote in British elections. Shindler, who has lived in Italy for 40 years and will turn 100 in July, has been campaigning for the move for 25 years. Over 5 million UK nationals in Spain and around the world have been denied their right to vote, some for years, if not decades. These changes will come into effect in time for the next scheduled General Election in 2024.

Hugh Elliott, the British Ambassador in Madrid said: “In an increasingly connected world, most British citizens living in Spain retain deep ties to the United Kingdom. Many still have family there, worked there for many years, and some have even fought for our country. “They deserve to have their voices heard in Parliament, no matter where they live, and I am delighted that UK Nationals living in Spain will now be able to participate in our democracy.”

Rules

In addition, new rules will mean overseas electors can stay registered for longer, including with an absent voting arrangement in place, requiring them to renew their registration details once every three years, rather than annually.

Easy, tiger

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LOCALS could be in for a relatively bite-free few weeks. Pest control experts in Valencia city believe that the lack of torrential rain over recent months means there are no flooded areas in which the aggressive tiger mosquito can breed. In fact, Valencia city is said to be relatively free of all plagues, including rats and cockroaches, which are controlled all year round. According to council technicians, the tiger mosquito breeds in small areas of stagnant water, such as flower pots or other containers where water collects.

Detected

It is rarely detected in large, open surfaces such as the Albufera lake, where the common mosquito is usually found and kept in check by manual and helicopter fumigation. As most of the rainfall registered lately in the area has been gradual, not torrential, most public spaces are safe – but the worry now is private property. Homeowners are advised to empty out any containers that have filled with stagnant water, turning pots upside down when it rains and keeping a check on any pools or small ponds.

A DIPLOMATIC clash between Spain and Morocco led to a surge of more than 8,000 people swimming or boating into El Tarajal beach in the Spanish enclave of Ceuta last month. As the central government struggled to find a solution to the crisis, the Valencia regional executive stepped up to the challenge and offered to take in as many underage and unaccompanied young men and women as necessary.

Hand

Generalitat vice-president Monica Oltra announced that Valencia will ‘lend a hand’ wherever necessary without ‘arguing over numbers’. Oltra urged the central government to abide by the United Nations human rights’ charters with regards to children to prevent their on-the-spot repatriation – known in Spanish as devoluciones en caliente.

Safer summer YOUNG people will help keep Costa Blanca beaches safe again in a repeat of last year's 'Safe Summer' programme. A thousand unemployed people aged between 18 and 30 were contracted by the Valencian government in 2020 to offer COVID safety advice across all of the region's beaches. The programme was regarded as a great success and is returning this summer. One change from last year will be that each of the Valencia region's 71 coastal municipalities will directly hire the beach assistants through to September 30 via the €4.5 million scheme. The assistants will also have additional duties like providing tourist information and assisting lifeguards to monitor safety in the sea. Valencian president, Ximo Puig, said: “The scheme’s return will once again help in all aspects of beach safety and reinforce the area as a safe tourist destination.” Everybody that’s hired will go through an intensive crash course before starting work later this month or July.


NEWS

www.theolivepress.es AN expat is facing prison for failing to demolish his home after he fell foul of a town hall’s ‘laissez faire’ planning rules. Gurney Davey, aged 67, only found out about the six-month sentence when a court document was delivered to a neighbour’s house. “I went straight to Tolox town hall with it. They told me I shouldn’t have received it yet,” he told the Olive Press.

Legalise

“They said they were going to be sending the notification to me once they had stamped it.” The news came as a massive bolt from the blue for Davey, whose wife has just died of cancer, which he believes worsened from the stress of the case. He had never been told about the court case that followed on from a Guardia Civil denuncia for an ‘illegal build’. Davey’s two-bed home - built in 2004 - should never have been built according to the Malaga court. In 2016, and then again in 2017, Davey was ordered to knock down his house, but, in common with a neighbour, he waited for more details. While his Spanish neighbour,

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Not again

British expat faces demolition of his 17 year home - and a spell in prison EXCLUSIVE By Dilip Kuner

Irene Millan, 29, did eventually hear from the court again, she was given six months to ‘legalise’ her property - an option Davey was never given. However, his neighbour’s apparent good luck turned into a poisoned chalice. Having spent €20,000 with the town hall to legalise the dwelling, the court finally refused to accept the new paperwork provided by the council. Instead, demolition was ordered - which went ahead last week. To add insult to injury Irene’s 54-year-old father, Manuel Millan, whose name was on the

THE successful rollout of the COVID vaccination campaign in Castellon Province has cut the number of deaths from the virus by more than 96%. Official figures show that nine people died from acute COVID-19 infection in May, compared to the 219 deaths registered in February. During the month an estimated 300,000 doses of the jab were administered in the

deeds, was also sentenced to six months jail and handed a fine of €6 a day for a year. Now Davey is terrified he is set to lose his home at any moment. It comes just two months since his wife Diana died from bowel cancer, at the age of 71, in April. “We thought we had done everything right at the time. We got legal advice and went through a lawyer in order to get permission to build the home. “Diana fought breast cancer for six years before bowel cancer I from legal firm Manzanares, told them that planning permission would be applied for as an almacen - or ‘warehouse’. This way it would come under the remit of Tolox town hall,

Vaccine success province. By prioritising over-80s and residents of caring homes, plus their carers, all nursing homes in the province were declared to be totally COVID-free in March while fatality figures fell sharply across the province.

Free at last THE Valencian curfew will finally end on Monday. Despite a slight rise in new COVID-19 cases, Valencian president, Ximo Puig, confirmed on Tuesday that the restriction will expire at 11.59pm on June 7. The region and the Balearic Islands have been the only parts of Spain to keep a curfew going since the State of Alarm ended on May 9. Puig said: “The decision to end the curfew has been influenced by the fact that the Valencian Community has had 11 consecutive weeks of COVID infections being below the 50 cases per 100,000 people threshold.”

Limited

DEMOLITION: Expat Gurney Davey is being forced to knock down his own house and faces six months jail which would give permission and later they could ‘legalise’ the property. The language of one legal letter, seen by the Olive Press, suggests this would be a mere formality. But the property never got legalised. In fact, the Tolox mayor of the time, Juan Vera, has since been jailed and fined for his part in a scheme to allow up to 350 properties to be built on land classified as ‘rural’. In most cases he had used the very same ‘lax’ procedure of applying to build an ‘almacen’ to try to keep the prying eyes of the Junta authorities away. “We thought that was the way

things worked in Spain,” said Davey, a retired builder. “We went to see a lawyer and got advice. It turns out that was not the smart thing to do. “Why would we deliberately try to build illegally? It makes no sense that we would sell up everything and risk it all.” Now Davey’s first thoughts are to avoid serving the jail sentence. He said: “My lawyer is trying to get the sentence suspended.” In the meantime he has been forced to ask the town hall for permission to knock his own property down. “I will do it myself. I will borrow a JCB from someone and flatten my home.”

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Numbers though have gone up in the last fortnight from just below 30 cases to 34.7, due to increased mobility. The Valencian government’s COVID committee will meet today(June 3) to discuss what changes, if any, they will make to non-curfew measures. They have powers over all business opening hours, including hospitality, in addition to how many people can meet in a group. Ximo Puig has also suggested that a limited reopening of nightlife businesses that were forced to close last August might be discussed today. Nightlife operators have been allowed to trade on the same licences as bars and restaurants, which means they have to close at 12.30am under current rules.


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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 Legal limbo AS if it wasn’t hard enough for Brits to navigate their way through Spain’s bureaucratic requirements – and during a global pandemic to boot – we are hearing of more and more hurdles placed in their way. Hundreds, if not thousands, of Brits living in Spain have yet to get their residency papers in order. Some of these people just didn’t heed the multiple warnings issued by Spanish and British Embassy authorities – and reported repeatedly by the Olive Press - to register in plenty of time before the Brexit deadline hit. Many of those who left it until the last minute were thwarted by the lockdown as they found themselves banned from travelling between the UK and Spain when the pandemic hit. Others were unable to secure appointments at the relevant offices because they were closed under COVID-19 restrictions or because the backlog of applications made appointments impossible to get. So it is understandable that there are those who sought the help of experts to ease the process, often paying gestors over the odds to get the job done. Which is why it is particularly galling for them to now find themselves in a legal limbo, because unbeknownst to them, allegedly fraudulent applications were lodged on their behalf. The Olive Press has spoken to at least a dozen people who now face months of uncertainty while they wait for the slow cogs of Spain’s judicial system to turn and determine their fate. In the meantime, they are unable to travel abroad, unable to make plans for the future, unsure whether they will or will not be granted residency in Spain. These people need answers. Rest assured, the team at the Olive Press will be working hard to get them. Publisher / Editor

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o t e m o c l We NEWS FEATURE

How the Costa del Sol’s glitziest resort became a global HQ of organised crime, writes Fiona Govan

M

ARBELLA has been fingered as the ‘global capital of organised crime’. At least 113 gangs of 59 different nationalities have sent the crime rate in the celebrity holiday hangout spiralling out of control, according to a

DEADLY: Gangster executed

Mob-ella damning report. And the most dangerous of them all are the British. “The Costa del Sol is a kind of hub, a sort of coworking centre where almost all organised criminal groups in the world have a presence,” a senior member of Spain’s Policia Nacional told national newspaper El Pais in an in-depth report. Describing Marbella as a ‘UN of gangsters in a globalised world,’ the police chief said the Ritzy resort has become synonymous not only with tourism but also with crime. A network of gangs bring in drugs from South America and Africa via the Strait of Gibraltar, for distribution across Europe, he explained. A collaboration of powerful mafia structures and

crime rings involved in house burglaries or armed robberies, each provides different elements in the complex supply chain: such as distribution, protection and money laundering. But, he added, alliances are quick to change and break down, leading to inevitable rivalries, turf wars and revenge violence. “Whoever thinks that criminal organisations are like before, pyramidal and with all the sections covered, is wrong,” a public prosecutor told the newspaper. “They are not cartels, they provide services: we have reached the Uberisation of organised crime.” Each group has an area of expertise, he continued: from the French who bring in hashish from Morocco to the Irish clans controlling cocaine and weapons imports. An enduring feud between two rival Irish cartels – Kinahan and Hutch – is already thought to have led to 20 executions. There are also rival gangs from Serbia and other Balkan countries, as well

Expat in Spain or immigrant: Is there a difference? The term ‘expat’ is loaded. It’s time we moved on, argues Carrie Frais

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N a quick Google search asking the question: ‘What is the difference between an expat and an immigrant?’ Google tells us that ‘..it usually comes down to socio-economic factors, so skilled professionals working in another country are described as expatriates, whereas a manual labourer who has moved to another country to earn more money might be labelled an immigrant'. The Oxford English Dictionary tells us that an immigrant is ‘a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country'. The original expatriate, around the 19thCentury, tended to be a middle-class, usually white, who moved abroad on a corporate assignment and (generally) chose not to integrate into their local community. If a better economic opportunity came up they would probably move again. Two centuries on, we have moved way beyond that, however. Today’s expats are from diverse backgrounds, from all over the world with different skin colours, and the vast majority of them have a desire to integrate and live in their adopted country for extended periods of time, or indeed permanently. If we adhered to the OED definition then

this demographic should in fact be ter- cioeconomic realities - but maybe that med immigrants, right? should not matter? But it is not just a question of definition. It There are other terms to describe those is also about connotation. who have chosen to move to another The term ‘expat’ carries with it a myriad country through choice, such as ‘memof preconceptions about class, educa- bers of the international community’, tion, privilege and entitlement - just as ‘global citizens’ and ‘global nomads’. the terms immigrant, migrant and to a Some neologisms of the term ‘expat’ certain extent ‘foreign worker’ have a di- have also been put forward such as ‘disfferent set of assumptions. patriate’: an expat who distances themselves from their nation of When used as a noun, the origin; a ‘flexpatriate’: soword ‘expatriation’ can also meone who often travels mean the act of someone renouncing allegiance to The term ‘expat’ internationally; ‘inpatriate’: an employee sent from their native country, which is carries with a foreign subsidiary to not the case for most peoit a myriad of ple. work in the country where Some people also believe preconceptions a company has a presence that being labelled an exand ‘rex-pat’: a repeat exabout class pat sets them apart from pat, someone who chooses their adopted cultures when to return to a foreign country after completing a work in fact they are trying to do assignment. exactly the opposite. The majority of those who today are la- As our travel behaviours change, our belled ‘expats’ have chosen to live away working habits become more fluid and from their country of their birth as a li- the world becomes more globalised, it festyle choice, rather than due to political is becoming increasingly clear that the oppression or economic necessity. term ‘expat’ has probably run its course, So, calling everyone an ‘immigrant’ a sentiment echoed by many living away would not differentiate between so- from their native home.

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WHAT’S IN A NAME?: Are Spaniards in the UK ‘immigrants’ but Brits in Spain ‘expats’?


June 3rd - June 16th 2021

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Insta-success

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SEXY BEAST: Gang life in Marbella is even worse than the movie version

as dangerous groups from the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden and members of the Italian mafia, such as Do you call yourself an expat? Carrie Frais posed the question on the MumAbroad forum do see what other felt about the word. Here’s what they had to say: “I hate it. For me it says people who had the financial privilege to start a life in another country but who bear no interest in integrating with culture. I have never called myself an expat. Also because I moved when I was 22 with just a suitcase. Immigrant also has negative connotations. Non-native is what I'd naturally use.” Lucy Brown “I don't use the word expat ....I was one when I lived and worked in Malawi because our company sent us there on a contract. Now in Spain, we live and work here (was not sent here or moved here because of a job), we made this our choice of home and country of residence. This makes us immigrants until such time we become / naturalise as Spanish citizens.” Natalie du Plooy-Simoes “Can’t stand it. For me it definitely has connotations of privilege and wealth. And of cliquey groups of people that don’t mix with locals. I don’t use any term to describe myself in that way - it very rarely comes up that I have to define myself like that. I occasionally get asked where I’m from and I just say I’m Scottish living in Italy.” Nicola Mckay “I think I’d like to be called an immigrant. It would to help change the negative and incorrect connotation around the word. I migrated here and built a home here. My daughter is born here. I may pick up my bags and move on, but that’s more of a world citizen mindset and coming from a multicultural family, (so home is where we are at a given moment).” Magda Metwally Carrie Frais is the Barcelona-based writer behind MumAbroad.com and author of #LivingTheDream Expat Life Stripped Bare, which is now available on Amazon. Find out more on www. carriefrais.co.uk/books/

the Naples-based Camorra, continually by a Swedish gang. He refused to tesmuscling in. tify. However, according to one police source Ditto the Irishman who was shot in the quoted by El Pais, by far the most dan- face in Nueva Andalucia a few weeks gerous gangs operating on the Costa ago. Del Sol are British. “He refused to collaborate with the in“The gangs of Liverpool and Manches- vestigation,” said Marcos Frias, Organter have a special fame and are known ised Crime coordinator for the National for their violence and the nightly brawls Police. in and around Marbella,” read the re- “There are quite a lot of beatings and port. kidnappings, which occur in the urbanAdd hitmen for hire into the mix, along isations in the tourist zones, but they with armies of foot soldiers sent by don’t make the press because there is gang bosses to do the dirty work, and no denuncia and the police are hardly the place is ripe for violence. involved,” he added. According to the latest of“The year has only really ficial figures the situation just started and we are had been improving but Marbella police having incidents of guns has significantly worsened and shootings.” receives an since 2018, with 113 orAlarmingly, the violence is ganised groups of half as continuing despite a masaverage of 150 many different nationalsive clampdown on drug ities concentrated along trafficking by the Guardia crime reports the Costa del Sol alone, Civil in the area. daily according to data from the This year alone, there have Intelligence Center against been 536 police raids on Terrorism and Organised gangs between Huelva Crime (CITCO). and Malaga, primarily concentrated in ‘The diversity of criminal groups in such the Campo de Gibraltar. a small space is a unique phenome- Orchestrated by the crack OCON-SUR non,’ CITCO stated. regiment, they have seized 187 vehicles Police consistently claim they don’t and 98 boats alone since January, as have the resources to fight such crime. well as 55 tons of drugs and 19 million The Marbella national police station re- euros of laundered property. ceives an average of 150 crime reports Just last week, over 200 police arrested daily and 32,000 cases a year. 106 members of six different gangs in The figures for a relatively small town of the area. just 140,000 people equate to those of Since July 2018, an eye-watering 5,536 cities double or triple the size. gangsters have been rounded up beAlso soaring is the number of mur- tween Cadiz, Huelva and Malaga. ders and attacks due to ‘the settling Yet despite assurances from Guardia of scores’, although cases have fallen Civil boss Maria Gamez that they are recently during the pandemic. They go ‘attacking the very heart of these organlargely unreported due to ‘a weak press’ isations’, gang rivalry has not stopped in the area or because many of the vic- in nearby Marbella. tims don’t want to talk to the police. “Now the violence is rampant,” says Recently a Polish man was admitted to Antonio Rodríguez Puerta, head of the hospital with bullets in both legs, shot UDYCO Costa del Sol (Drugs and Organized Crime Unit of the National Police). “In times gone by, the criminal groups negotiated. They talked. A stash was lost and an agreement was reached. “Now we see that, if something like this happens, in most cases they go directly to ordering a hit.” RAID: Police search a luxury villa

HE Olive Press isn’t just Spain’s best English news website, we also have a thriving social media presence. And we want you to be a part of it. We have close to 28,000 likes on our main Facebook page and this week reached a landmark 2,000 followers on our Instagram account. At a time when so many people access news through social media platforms, recognising ‘fake news’ has become a growing struggle, which is why it’s more important than ever to make sure you follow trustworthy news sources. Our team of journalists at the Olive Press are dedicated to providing up to date, properly sourced, independent news that you can trust and rely on to inform you about the issues you need to know about in Spain. So by hitting ‘like’ and ‘follow’ on the Olive Press Facebook page, you will get our latest news stories as soon as they are published directly into your newsfeed. This means not only that you can share the most up to date trustworthy news from Spain easily with your friends but also join the conversation that we like to encourage amongst all our readers. We also want to celebrate Spain, and inspire our readers to share their experiences and explore it. For those who live in Spain, visit Spain often or just love Spain, our daily Instagram posts provide snapshots of the country, from bucolic scenes of Iberian pigs rooting for acorns in the dehesa, to dreamy sunsets over beautiful beaches or great shots of Spain’s iconic monuments. Plus we offer a glimpse into our readers’ experiences of Spain by inviting you to share photos taken on your travels around the country or to share those things you love about your corner of Spain. So join our growing Facebook and Instagram community. We hope to see you there! www.facebook.com/OlivePressNewspaper www.instagram.com/olivepressnews

The top five most read stories on www.theolivepress.es in the past two weeks are: expects to be included on UK 1 - Spain fully travel green list by June could apply 2 - Spain’s cartatodeBritinvitacion tourists Police in spain investigate mysterious 3 -death of man found trapped inside dinosaur statue - A Place in the Sun’s Laura Hamilton left 4gestion red-faced after house hunters snub sugthey should live in Spain’ss Manilva One last hurrah lightening storm’s Sa5 - haran dust and 35 degrees this weekend in Spain

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Coming clean SPAIN is to splash €1.55 billion on clean hydrogen production in a bid to become European leader in the new technology. It has earmarked EU cash to support a dash for hydrogen, seeing it as seed money for private investment. A government spokesman said: “Firm support for this technology will stimulate investors to mobilise up to €8.9 billion between now and 2030.” The government’s ambition is to have 4 GW of electrolysers in 10 years to produce green hydrogen. Producing the gas is an energy-intensive process, which at the moment usually uses natural gas. This defeats the point of using

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Spain making dash for hydrogen in bid to be European leader

By Dilip Kuner

hydrogen as an alternative to fossil fuels in the battle against climate change. But clean hydrogen is made by electrolysis of water using renewable sources of electricity such as wind turbines and solar panels. The only by-product when it is burned is more water. The Spanish government disclosure of its push towards hydrogen followed hot on the heels of an announcement by American company Cummins and Iberdrola of an initial investment of €50 million to build an electrolyser plant in Guadalajara in Castilla y Leon.

“Spain offers a strong and dynamic local environment for hydrogen production, and we are excited to invest here and significantly increase our manufacturing capacity in Europe,” said Tom Linebarger, Chairman and CEO

of Cummins. “Our partnership with Iberdrola will connect us with a major clean energy company and strategically positions us to be a European leader in green hydrogen production.”

THE Valencian regional government is hoping to relaunch its green agenda now that the COVID situation is stabilised. Valencia was one of the first areas in Spain to declare a state of climate emergency in September 2019, with the aim of making environmental concerns the chief reference point for all government policy introduced during the current executive’s term of office. However, the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic put all other considerations on hold – until now, with no major outbreaks reported and the vaccination campaign in full swing. Regional president Ximo Puig announced in the Va-

Going green

lencian Parliament last week that the Generalitat is now focussed on recovering the ecological road map approved two years ago, describing it as ‘our main duty this decade’. The new law calls for a 40% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by the year 2030 and the use of 100% green energy sources in 2050 – an even more ambitious plan than the one approved for Spain as a whole.

One reason why a third of Spain’s population is breathing in polluted air

T

HE WMO (World Meteorological Organisation) has just published its latest report on our climate. Before we get to it’s damning conclusions, let me explain a bit more about the WMO. The World Meteorological Organisation is the United Nations’ authoritative voice on weather, climate and water - a more educated nucleus of the world’s finest scientific minds you won’t find. Forget the much publicised irrational and idiotic Trump rhetoric about there being no global warming crisis. THERE IS. Boris Johnson said the same about COVID, it turns out. It does exist. He got it. But Trump’s motives are simply impure, bowing to the lobbying pressure of the damaging fossil fuel industries.

ACTION: against climate change needed now

Green Matters

By Martin Tye

(TOOOOO) HOT OFF THE PRESSES!

This report clearly states climate data predicts THE LIKELIHOOD OF REACHING 1.5 DEGREES IN THE NEXT FIVE YEARS. Wow! And these odds are increasing with time. “THERE IS A 90% CHANCE OF AT LEAST ONE YEAR BETWEEN NOW AND 2025 BECOMING THE WARMEST ON RECORD,” the report continues. So what does this mean? Simply put: • • • • • •

Increasing heat, drought and insect oubreaks Increased wildfires Declining water supplies Reduced agricultural yields Health impacts in cities due to heat Flooding and erosion in coastal areas.

In short, increasing death rates and misery. I think this is more than a much needed wake up call. Action is needed to slash greenhouse gas emissions, achieve carbon neutrality and embrace a greener , renewable and sustainable future. Last year, 2020, the global average temperature was 1.2C above the pre-industrial baseline. Around the world we saw this evidenced in rising sea levels, melting sea ice, extreme weather and as a consequence a

detrimental effect on socio-economic development. The Paris Agreement seeks to keep global temperature rise THIS CENTURY well below 2C above pre-industrial levels. There are 79 years of this century left - we are doing dismally. The G-7 Leaders Summit is being held in the UK from June 11. Climate Change is high on the agenda. Let’s hope we don’t get more regurgitated political waffle and have positive measurable actions instead. Finally, readers of this column know I often turn to music to help convey my message. Neil Young (pictured below) released in

2014 an album called Storytone. I love the track Who’s Gonna Stand Up. It’s a powerful, orchestral climate change song which hits right where it hurts.

Protect the wild, tomorrow’s child Protect the land from the greed of man Take out the dams, stand up to oil Protect the plants and renew the soil End fossil fuel, draw the line Before we build one more pipeline End fracking now, let’s save the water And build a life for our sons and daughters Damn the dams, save the rivers Starve the takers and feed the givers Let’s build the green and save the world We’re the people known as EARTH Who’s gonna stand up and save the Earth? Who’s gonna say that she’s had enough? Who’s gonna take on the big machine? Who’s gonna stand up and save the Earth? THIS ALL STARTS WITH YOU AND ME I simply couldn’t put it better. No one is immune to the effects of Global Warming. So who IS gonna stand up and save the World? Are you?

Martin Tye is the owner of energy switch company Mariposa Energy. +34 638145664 ( Spain Phone ) Email him at martin@mariposaenergia.es

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Retired to Spain? Still using your UK-based financial adviser? UK-based advisers generally do not have the deep understanding of the Spanish regime necessary to provide the most tax-efficient wealth management solutions. And UK banks, advisers and other financial providers may no longer be able to legally service EU residents now that Brexit has dissolved automatic ‘passporting’ rights for UK financial services in the EU.

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LETTERS

10

Dear Olive Press,

but I'm beginning I NORMALLY like your paper, n I've just read whe y ciall espe ly, late der won to ions in Spain. Benny Davis’s article on vaccinat, before insulting ners man e som n lear He should the Spanish! l for more than 40 I have been a Spanish Nationa two vaccines bemy get not years. I certainly did many. fore my British friends, who areon May 18, my husWhile I had my second vaccine vaccine about a band, who is British, had his last nation there. He rimi disc no so ly, ious prev month is 80. the Spanish NaEveryone I know cannot praise . ugh eno ice tional Health serv nised with hardly The vaccinations are so well orgaa wonderful job. g doin any waiting. The staff are s not like the way I suggest if Benny Davis doe back to his country goes he in Spa in run are gs thin of origin! ron, some people In reference to I beg your Padem for years and syst nish Spa the have cheated s. The Spanish and were under the radar for year more tax because pay to had official residents have en they want to of these cheats, now all of a sudd be residents! a hard time, I say Well if these people are having ! ning whi stop Just . luck h toug

Not so crazy The 90/180 day visitors’ rule is turning into one of the hottest Brexit topics... No exceptions

like Benny are Editor’s note: Columnists ne and certainnot meant to please everyo per se… but we ly don’t represent the paper letters page. do welcome all views on our

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June 2nd - June 15th 2021 Vol. 15 Issue 370 www.theolivepress.es

See page 14

AN expat is facing prison for failing to demolish his home after he fell foul of a town hall’s ‘laissez faire’ planning rules. Gurney Davey, aged 67, only found out about the six-month sentence when a court document was delivered to a neighbour’s house. “I went straight to Tolox town hall with it. They told me I shouldn’t have received it yet,” he told the Olive Press. “They said they were going to be sending the notification to me once they had stamped it.” The news came as a massive bolt from the blue for Davey, whose wife has just died of cancer, which he believes worsened from the stress of the case. He had never been told about the court case that followed on from a Guardia Civil denuncia for an ‘illegal build’. Davey’s two-bed home - built in 2004 - should never have been built according to the Malaga court.

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MAKING A SPLASH

Work

DEMOLITION: Expat Gurney

Davey is being forced to knock

down his own house and faces

cancer, at the age of 71, in April. “We thought we had done everything right at the time. We gota legal advice and went through lawyer in order to get permission to build the home. “Diana fought breast cancer forI six years before bowel cancer the am sure stress brought it on.” couple, The originally from Suffolk in the spent ALL AREAS COVERED UK, €150,000 building their 4G UNLIMITED property. “It came as a INTERNET package - a IDEAL FOR plot with a new STREAMING TV home on it.” Davey admits ALSO IPTV, he and his wife SATELLITE TV were perhaps naive to follow tel: (0034) 952 763 840 the advice of info@theskydoctor.com their lawyer. lawyer, www.theskydoctor.com The

X

lan, whose name was on the deeds, was also sentenced to six months jail and handed a fine of €6 a day for a year. Now Davey is terrified he is set to lose his home at any moment. It comes just two months since his wife Diana died from bowel

X

Development firm Harbour Development Limited has announced that it will begin work again now that the worst of the pandemic is over. It came as the firm confirmed it had been granted a €42 million government loan, in addition to the €230 million in private

SKY + + THE DOCTOR

six months jail

from legal firm Manzanares, told them that planning permission would be applied for as an almacen - or ‘warehouse’. This way it would come under the remit of Tolox town hall, which would give permission and later they could ‘legalise’ the property. The language of one legal letter, seen by the Olive Press, suggests this would be a mere formality. But the property never got legalised. In fact, the Tolox mayor of the time, Juan Vera, has since beena jailed and fined for his part in scheme to allow up to 350 properties to be built on land classified as ‘rural’. In most cases he had used the very same ‘lax’ procedure of applying to build an ‘almacen’ to try to keep the prying eyes of the Junta authorities away. “We thought that was the way things worked in Spain,” said Davey, a retired builder. “We went to see a lawyer and got advice. It turns out that was not

SKY + THE DOCTOR +

the smart thing to do. “Why would we deliberately try to build illegally? It makes no sense that we would sell up everything in the UK and risk it all.” Now Davey’s first thoughts are to avoid serving the jail sentence. He said: “My lawyer is trying to get the sentence suspended.”

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LINES DRAWN: Pedro Sanchez (top) and Fabian Picardo on opposing sides over the €300 million reclamation development

funds that it is expected to cost. The development sits on 130,000 square metres of reclaimed land using soil and construction waste on the eastern edge of the Rock. Over 1,500 apartments and homes, plus numerous commercial units, are set to be

built (see photo above). There are also potential plans for a hotel. Gibraltar’s decision to restart the project, halted by the COVID-19 pandemic, has angered the Spanish government however. It believes the waters surrounding the Rock belong to Spain, insisting the 300-year-old Treaty of Utrecht only applied to the land. Pedro Sanchez’s government, however, has condemned the plans, and has vowed to use ‘any legal

means necessary’ to prevent the development going ahead. Spain’s Foreign Minister Arancha González Laya even controversially insisted this week that the treaty only applies to certain areas of Gibraltar. Both the Gibraltar and British government firmly disagree and are set to continue the reclamation project this month. The aim of the project is to help rectify the Rock’s critical shortage of housing, an issue that is predicted to

OLIVE PRESS

See page 10

Welcome back THERE is a distinct sense of excitement in the air as British tourists finally started making their way back into Gibraltar. The first direct flights from the UK have been touching down bringing hundreds of excited tourists desperate for some sun. It is great news for the Rock with the tourists set to bring a huge multi-million pound cash boost. Experts predict a bumper summer with sun-starved Brits leading the charge. “With flights and hotels quickly filling up, we think that it will be a bumper year for our leisure industry,” Tourism Minister Vijay Daryanani told the Olive Press.

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Vibe

“There is an exciting vibe and the Government calls on the community to make it a joint effort in welcoming visitors and showing them the traditional warm Gibraltarian welcome.” The first flight in was British Airways’ BA492 from London Heathrow that left at 7.10am. It touched down at 11.05 local time on Monday. The airline tweeted shortly after it took off to say it was the airline’s ‘first flight to a green list destination’. British Airways Chairman Sean Doyle later described it as a ‘special day for many people’.

TRIO: Ex-wife Linda and two victims, Lisa Brinkworth (far right) and Carre Otis

CORDOBA SPECIAL

Your expat

voice in Spain

May 21st - June 3rd 2021

Voted Spain’s most popular historic city

See page 12

THE Olive Press has tracked down a beleaguered modelEXCLUSIVE ling agency boss alleged By Jon Clarke in Ibiza to have raped over a dozen teenagers on his books. we have helped to expose French fashion mogul his ald Marie has been livingGer- luxury lifestyle for a hard-hitthe ting TV documentary highlife around Ibiza, for Austaking tralia’s Channel long lunches and shopping, Nine. The 60 Minutes when not luxuriating at his ry, which aired documentamulti-million euro villa on end, heard from at the weekthe island. many alleged We watched the mogul dining former victims, including ex-Hollywood star Carre with friends and new Otis, Russian model Irina wife, journalist Lisa Brinkworth Bond- and British arenko, while the courts model Paula in Thomas. Paris continue to investigate “He basically said if you years of shocking claims. want The ex-Elite agen- to be paid you're going to have to have sex with cy boss is accused Thomas, me,” 52, told the show, LUXURY: Expensive of grooming Beauty and meals out for Marie the Creep. and sexually and wife Irina senting 14 former models assaulting a there are ‘12 more’ she and Elite string of womis also speaking to. en in attacks The former Elite chief is akin to those ing probed by a French be- The 71-year-old is expected court to be shortly of Ameri- over the claims of at least charged 13 the offences that stretch with cans Jef- former models, who claim back frey Ep- he either raped or sexually over 30 years. He even managed to continue stein and abused them. Harvey French prosecutors con- in his role as a fashion boss W e i n - firmed last year that Marie despite a BBC documentary into his abuses in 1999. was accused of raping stein. three A former colleague W h i l e models aged between 17 of Marie’s told the documentary h he is e and 20 in the 1980s and helping Paris detectives s t r e n - 1990s. Many more investigate the historic uously have since joined the allegations of abuse. denies prosecution. Whistle-blower Omar t h e Such crimes are punHarfouch claims Elite EXCLUSIVE: Huge c l a i m s , ishable by up to 15 hillside villa overlooks bosses had a scoreboard years in prison Ibiza coast they called 'the podi- backed up with footage from but the statute um of pussy' which a former undercover BBC There were three cars in of limitations handed points for investigation by journalist the drive and a team of staff is normally 20 having sex, gaining Donal Macintyre in the 1990s. maintained the well-clipped years so most more points for In the documentary in 1999 gardens. alleged offences virgins and young the Irishman went undercov- We watched him go out to are proscribed. eat on three occasions er as a photographer girls. In the case of on the along“My first impres- side aspiring journalist Lisa dot of 1pm, always getting the sex with a mision was he was a Brinkworth, who posed as a best tables by the beach. nor, this statute He looked healthy and sexual predator,” model. can be raised to happy and was constantly laughing said the business30 years which and one waiter at €75-a-head man, who claims may see him in Admits restaurant Es Xarcu described Gerald court. threat- Brinkworth now admits today him as ‘always upbeat, a real ened his life for that A lawyer, Anneshe was sexually assault- crack’. going public. Claire Le Jeune, haned by He gave chapter but the French fashion boss, He continued: “He is one of dling their case in ‘wrongly’ failed to report and verse on how to the Paris told the docuit our best clients and it doesn’t matter how busy we police at the time. the grooming pro- The mentary she is repreOlive Press spent a week will always get a tableare he cess worked, all locating right down by the beach.” his homes and nesses on the island, busi- Marie, who has two which daughters include various property Portals Nous, de- of his own, was eventually velopment companies. confronted by the film crew at 07181, He has an incredible villa a beachside restaurant in Ibithe exclusive Es Cubells in za Town, where he See page 13 & 16 Mallorca. denied the corner, hidden in the wooded allegations. hills and with breathtaking In an angry confrontation, he views along the coast and waved a film crew away and across to Formentera island. belittled their clothes, while he continued eating.

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Mallorca - Issue 106

worsen. “Projects like this encourage and facilitate these relocations and ensure that new companies wishing to move to Gibraltar can get accommodation for their workers,” said Chief Minister Fabian Picardo. “It also offers more houses to local residents, a demand that has proven to be insatiable given the popularity of the most recent private developments,” he added.

Vol. 4 Issue 106 www.theolivepres

Fashion mogul, once married supermodel Linda Evangelistato , lives the high life in Ibiza, while courts probe multiple claims of teenagers rape

Gibraltar - Issue 148

Flatten

In the meantime he has been forced to ask the town hall for permission to knock his own property down. “I will do it myself. I will borrow a JCB from someone and flattenI my home of the past 17 years. will not let the town hall do it and charge me more money.” He added: “I’ve no idea where to live afterwards. But the land isa still mine - maybe I can live in tent.” Tolox Ayuntamiento refused to comment, citing data protection laws.

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Tony Dean, Quesada

Be wise

John Price (by email)

TM

S u b j e c t

YOUR correspondents Lucy and Lex Ongley should go to Sabadell Bank. They have an account where you pay in your UK pension and there are no charges at all. Be aware that the pension is sent via a US bank which I believe is Citibank. There your money will reach your account a day later. If there is a US bank holiday then add another day. So sent on Friday into Sabadell first thing Monday morning. If there is a holiday, then Tuesday morning. Hope this helps

Morris Bishop (By email)

Tel: 952 147 834

14/02/2020 23:25

o n l y .

Bank solution

I HAVE been in touch with the EU concerning the 90 day visitor’s time limit problem and realised that in my opinion, there is in fact NO problem. The important message from their response is that as far as I can see there is no requirement to leave the Schengen States between 90 day periods of stay. I think that it has to be proved before being categorical, but hopefully it will give good hope to thousands.

Check Checkout outour ourmost mostrecent recentissues issuesonline onlineatatwww.theolivepress.es www.theolivepress.es See page 5 & 15

v a l i d

Good eating A hidden gem that unfussily serves up some of the tastiest food in Andalucia

GIBRALTAR is remaining defiant as it pushes on with a huge €300 million reclamation development. Work is due to continue on the Victoria Keys development, despite the risk of diplomatic tension with Spain.

Tel: 952 147 834

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Voted Spain’s most popular historic city

Girl power The female warriors who took on Drake’s army - and won!

By James Warren

Andalucia - Issue 370

952 147 834

May 19th- June 1st 2021

Tragic mystery The Olive Press helps TV investigation into the death of Kirsty Maxwell

Mega €300 million reclamation project presses ahead despite Spanish opposition

Legalise

In 2016, and then again in 2017, Davey was ordered to knock down his house, but, in common with a neighbour, he waited for more details. While his Spanish neighbour, Irene Millan, 29, did eventually hear from the court again, she was given six months to ‘legalise’ her property - an option Davey was never given. However, his neighbour’s apparent good luck turned into a poisoned chalice. Having spent €20,000 with the town hall to legalise the dwelling, the court finally refused to accept the new paperwork provided by the council. Instead, demolition was ordered which went ahead last week. To add insult to injury Irene’s 54-year-old father, Manuel Mil-

www.theolivepress.es

Prime suspect Bear in the frame for series of grizzly livestock killings in the Pyrenees See more on page 3

of his 17 British expat faces demolition - in year home - and a spell in prisoncase repeat of controversial Priors

EXCLUSIVE By Dilip Kuner

Vol. 5 Issue 148

Find out about Spain’s 10 capital cities

NOT AGAIN FREE

What problem? The

The

OLIVE PRESS

Mijas Costa

The Rock’s ONLY free local paper

Lucy and Lex Ongley asked how to get their UK pension paid in Spain without fees and our readers have rallied round with some suggestions...

I WOULD suggest Lucy and Lex use a transfer company named Wise (formerly TransferWise). They have extremely low fees, give you mid-market rates and the transfer is in your Spanish account within seconds. Spanish banks do not charge to receive this transfer, as it is sent from a centre in the EU (Belgium). If you transfer Pounds from your UK account to their bank account, then do the transfer, the cost is very minimal. Also, in answer to Come off it, I would remind the sender that if it hadn't been for Brexit many more thousands of COVID sufferers would have died in the UK, if they had to follow the tardiness of authorising and ordering of vaccinations by the EU leadership, purely on political grounds and getting 27 governments to agree on anything. The UK has been a world leader in its vaccination programme.

Martin Coles, Estepona

CORDOBA SPECIAL

GIBRALTAR

90 DAYS ONLY!

I REFER to a letter published in your excellent newspaper entitled Simply Crazy. The contributor writes: “Since Brexit and the introduction of the 90/180 stay rule we will no longer be able to stay for the winter.” Not only has the 90/180 rule been in existence for many years, our Spanish hosts have not introduced or changed any rules regarding length of stay. Any changes to the contributor’s circumstances have been brought about solely by the actions of the UK Government and their implementation of Brexit. The 90 day non visa visitor rule is the common practice for most countries, with the UK being the odd man out in allowing 180 days. Making a special exception for British citizens to stay longer in Spain would be a snub to other countries' citizens who have, and continue to follow this common length of stay rule, and expecting other countries to change their rules to suit the British is entitlement in the extreme.

) Cristina Stefanczyk (Javea

OLIVE PRESS

April June 22nd 3rd - June - May16th 5th 2021

3 1 / 1 2 / 1 9 .

1

21/6/19 13:30

21/6/19 13:30

1

Help is at hand

OP QUICK Crossword Across 6 Begin (6,2) 8 There's no place like it (4) 9 "--- the word!" (4) 10 Negative aspect (8) 11 "The Cradle of the Royal Stewarts", 6 miles from Glasgow (7) 14 A square mile has 640 (5) 15 Jump with surprise (5) 17 Absolute fanatics (7) 21 Common form of national government (8) 22 Seats for the flock (4) 23 "Oh soldier, soldier, won't you marry me, with your musket, --- and drum?" (4) 24 Messages quietly conveyed (8)

British expats in Spain are struggling to navigate Brexit red tape with heavy tax burdens and potential bans on living here, writes Julio Prieto

B

RITISH expats in Spain are facing a great deal of Brexit-related red tape over their immigration status post-Brexit. They are being urged to leave the country if they cannot apply for residency. Many failed to register their residency before the deadline of December 31, 2020 and, until Brexit came into force, had been flying under the radar. Worse, since Britain left the EU on January 1 expats are facing increasingly heavy tax burdens: UK non-resident taxpayers must pay 24% income tax, compared to EU nationals who pay just 19%. It has shone a spotlight on the issues around freedom of movement with thousands of British citizens previously splitting their time between Spain and the UK. Brexit restrictions are being taken very seriously by the Spanish authorities and border control systems mean that nobody can be invisible. The status of Britons trying to live in Spain who have not registered their residency will be subject to the new rules applying to the Schengen zone. It means British citizens will not be able to outstay the ‘90 out of 180 days’ limit which has been implemented. And there is no leeway for emergencies. Overstaying in the Schengen area could mean a ban from the country for three years. The only real solution for those who do not wish to become residents is to purchase the socalled Spanish Golden Visa, but this is restricted to applicants that purchased a property over €500,000 and has other conditions attached. What’s more, these visas are subject to large consulate fees of £1,623 for Brits, which is extortionate given Canadians pay just £86 for their visa which allows them the same benefit. Take the case of John, a British pensioner, who bought a house in Mallorca last year to spend

some of his retirement in Spain. Spanish law did not prevent him from buying a property in Spain priced at €499,999, yet he does not want to become a Spanish resident, which is entirely his right. Now under the new Schengen Immigration Policies in place since January 1, he was only entitled to stay at his holiday home until March 31 and won’t be allowed to re-enter Spain until July (due to the ‘90 days in and out’ rule). At Del Canto Chambers, we believe that not allowing access or imposing time limits to the use of properties may be a human rights infringement as per the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). It states that individuals have a legal right to ‘peacefully enjoy’ the possession of their home and by restricting the use to ‘90 or 180 days’ is illegal. If you are a British citizen who owns a property in Spain and would like to enjoy freedom of access, it is worth seeking legal advice. One must have exhausted all the remedies in the State concerned that could provide redress, usually by appealing through all the courts up to the Supreme Court or the Constitutional Court. For anyone who has been negatively impacted by this situation, it is worth exploring your options. Julio Prieto is an international barrister based in London. He is Director of Del Canto Chambers, an international tax legal firm based in London with a country focus on Spain. Del Canto Chambers has been advising numerous UK individuals and families on their tax and immigration status post Brexit. More details of the Firm can be found at delcantochambers.com.

Down

OP Sudoku

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1 Physician's patron (2,4) 2 Legs (4) 3 Required (4-2) 4 Medical examination (8) 5 Makeup mishap (6) 7 Military captives (1,1,2) 12 Masses of money (8) 13 "If ever, oh ever a --there was ..." (3) 16 Doctoral work (6) 18 Great Greek geometrician (6) 19 In the direction of (6) 20 Emit light (4) 22 Carbonated drinks (4)

All solutions are on page 21


LA CULTURA

Laugh track

TO paraphrase the old adage: first comes love, then comes carriage. At least that was the thinking behind Alfonso Sanchez latest romantic comedy Sí, quiero (Corredor)- a new short film created to help push for the creation of the Mediterranean Corridor, a high speed train that would connect the Mediterranean coast from Algeciras to the French border. Starring Alvaro Cervantes, Nuria Herrero, Macarena Gomez and Carlos Santos, the movie tells the story of a couple travelling on the Euromed train from Barcelona to Alicante, where their wedding is to be held.

Nuptials

The journey brings together the pair’s very different families who have travelled from Valencia and Catalunya to attend the nuptials and hilarity quickly ensues as the two clans clash over everything, from delayed trains to Spanish stereotypes. Currently the corridor to Murcia is expected to be completed by 2023 but the links to Algeciras could face delays of a further six years. To watch the film, viewers are asked to go to quierocorredor.com where they will be asked to sign a petition for the completion of the infrastructure in order to gain access to the movie.

MUSIC

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

11

Favoured son Many thought he was Italian, but Spain wants to claim Columbus as a national

?

RESEARCHERS have announced a bid to settle the dispute over which country should claim Christopher Columbus as their own. It was widely believed that he was the son of a weaver born in the Italian port of Genoa in 1451, but over the centuries he has been claimed as a native son of Greece, Catalunya, Portugal, Corsica, France, Scotland and even Poland.

?

Language

A recent academic study focused on his language and grammar, concluding that Columbus was in fact a Catalan speaking man from the Kingdom of Aragon, an inland region of north-eastern Spain at the foot of the Pyrenees. Others claimed the true origins of the man who discovered the Americas were hidden because he was Jewish or secretly working as a double agent for the Portuguese royal family. “Our aim is to provide objective data that can ... close a series of existing theories,” explained Jose Antonio Lorente, lead scientist of the DNA study at the University of Granada. The research will examine

PUZZLE:Was he a jew born in Mallorca or Aragon? By Fiona Govan

DNA extracted from tiny bone fragments from what are believed to be the remains of Columbus, his son Fernando and his brother Diego. The samples were first collected back in 2004-2005 but the team waited 16 years for technological advances to ensure the research would be successful. “Our team agreed on an ethical approach ... wait for a technological development that has now happened,” said Lorente. The DNA will be analysed in-

dependently by laboratories in Europe and the Americas, and should be published in October. To announce the study, Granada University hosted a meeting looking at alternative theories about Columbus’ birthplace, that include Valencia, Espinosa de Henares, Galicia and Mallorca, as well as Portugal’s Alentejo region. “I hope we will come to the conclusion that demonstrates that Columbus was a Spanish nobleman and not a Genoese sailor,” said Alfonso Sanz, an amateur history researcher and author.

Knowing the drill

A controversial music craze that is the new buzzword in Spanish cities is a more violent form of rap, that became infamous in London after being targeted by the Met, writes Glenn Wickman

A

‘NEW’ music genre is sweeping the poorer and more multiracial neighbourhoods of cities throughout Spain. Where first hip hop, then reggaeton and finally trap used to reign supreme, now the buzzword is drill. Described as a ‘more violent form of rap’, drill was born in Chicago in 2010 and spread rapidly until reaching global infamy in London in 2018. That was when the Metropolitan Police began cracking down on

CASHING IN: El Bobe

artists after linking the genre with a sharp increase in gun and knife crime in the capital. Relying almost exclusively on social media for promotion and distribution, drill fans saw dozens of videos targeted by the Met removed from YouTube, as the issue was suddenly blown open and analysts were quick to demonise everything relating to the style. Gangs of threatening teenagers dressed all in black, with faces obscured by balaclavas and rapping about explicit gang violence and drug use proved an irresistible scapegoat on which to blame all of society’s wrongs. However, other analysts and fans themselves countered that the lyrics and attitudes are merely a reflection of the artists’ daily lives in poverty-stricken surroundings. This of course is nothing new. Underground music genres and pop culture in general have frequently been blamed for corrupting the nation’s youth when the underlying causes are too complex and uncomfortable to address – remember rock and roll, heavy metal, punk, hip hop and even video games. Either way, increasing numbers of young people, almost exclu-

sively from racial minorities, are turning to drill as their possible ticket out of the food bank and dole queue. And as usual, Spain has taken a bit longer to catch on, but got there in the end. The style reportedly first appeared here in 2017, becoming recognised internationally two years later but is only now filtering through to the media and society at large. Hundreds of aspiring new artists upload their videos onto YouTube every day, with the STAR: Ghetto Boy (top and above) is one of the biggest stars in drill (inset) hashtag #spanishdrill opening up a universe of more than YouTube and Spotify. institutions and society, which racism, or police violence. 3,000 channels and 6,500 Ghetto Boy, a 23-year-old driller they claim leaves them open to However, analysts suggest that clips – and counting. son of Senegalese workers who attack and discrimination. Spanish drill is not as graphicalThe vast majority of Spanish was born and bred in Catalunya, Interestingly, Spain’s leading ly violent as its British or North drillers are sons typifies the new drillers register millions more American counterparts, and - women are breed of street streams of their songs on Spo- that often there is a thin line bestarting to break rappers: fre- tify and YouTube than estab- tween reality and fiction in the Ghetto Boy through very quently stopped lished national rock and indie lyrics and attitudes of artists. typifies the slowly - of African and identified pop bands – which is vitally and South Amerby the police de- important given the way online new breed of ican immigrants. spite being Span- music platforms work, where in cases of violence have yet One of the leadstreet rappers ish, and unable order to make any money artists No ing names in the to leave his par- need huge numbers of interac- been directly linked to drill in Spain and no police investigacountry is 19- performing drill ents’ house due tions from listeners or viewers. year old El Bobe, to not being able And, as always, controversy tions have been launched, albased in Barceto afford deposits sells. Drillers have discovered though it could only be a matter lona’s conflictive Raval area, or rent. that tracks praising family and of time. Either that, or the muwho reports earning between Other lyrical topics explored by friends don’t attract anywhere sic industry will find its next Ro€2,000 and €3,000 a month young artists are the rise of the near as many streams as songs salia or Bad Bunny and absorb with streams of his tracks on extreme right within Spanish about violence, drugs, prison, drill into the mainstream…

No violence


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LA CULTURA

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Spain has been ruled from 10 different capital cities and some of these ‘iron thrones’ will surprise you, writes Cristina Hodgson

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ADRID wasn’t always the capital of Spain. The hot seat of power has shifted between 10 cities down the centuries, changing with the Iberian peninsula’s various Roman, Visigoth, Moorish and Catholic rulers and the geographical location of their kingdoms. From mighty metropolises to more miniscule dots on the map, the Olive Press pays homage to the kingdom’s glorious forgotten capitals.

Sev i lla

Spain’s fourth largest city was the capital of Spain for two years during the Napoleonic wars. It was a period when Spain was bristling with Napoleon’s troops and some of the heaviest fighting took place around the city.

Founded by the Phoenicians in 1100 BC and the oldest inhabited city in Europe, the mantle of power passed to Cadiz for three years when the Cortes moved from Sevilla. It was during its brief reign as capital of Spain that the Spanish Constitution of 1812, ‘La Pepa’, was proclaimed in this Atlantic coastal city. It was a golden era for Cadiz when it monopolised trade as a central port of call on sea routes. Today valued for its golden beaches as well as its famous sherry, its wealthy colonial past is still evident in its noble architecture, elegant squares and magical gardens.

On December 16, 1808 Count Floridablanca, president of the Supreme Central and Governing Junta of Spain transferred the Cortes to Sevilla, with the Real Alcazar becoming its new headquarters.

1808-10

Capital status ended in January 1810 when the city surrendered to Napoleon’s troops. However since June 30, 1982, Sevilla has been the elected political capital of Andalucia.

Cangas de Onis 718-924

A

lthough it has little to show for it, this municipality at the gateway to the Picos de Europa National Park in Asturias was the ‘first capital of the Kingdom of Spain’. It’s where the Visigoth noble Pelayo set up the Asturian monarchy in the 8th century after the Battle of Covadonga, considered the first strike against the Moors in the Christian reconquest. Modern-day Cangas de Onis is more famous for its mountain scenery and has only one major monument standing, the socalled Roman Bridge actually built in the 1300s. But although there isn’t much to it except for two or three major streets, it once formed the nucleus of the Spain we know and love today.

CADI Z 1810-1813

T

his Andalucian city has been a big player since Roman times when it became the capital of the province of Hispania Ulterior. But its true splendour came a few centuries later at the height of the Muslim conquest when it became the capital of Moorish Spain under exiled Syrian prince Abd Al-Rahman I. The Great Mosque, his masterpiece, is one of the world’s most prized Islamic buildings, an authentic architectural treasure declared a World Heritage Site in 1984. By the time Abd Al-Rahman III became ruler in 929, Cordoba was Europe’s largest and most advanced city where Christians, Jews and Muslims co-ex-

766-

Cordoba 1236

Madrid

A isted in relative harmony. Following the Christian conquest it became part of the Crown of Castile.

1561-present day (with breaks)

lthough Philip II took the Spanish court to Madrid in 1561, it was a generation later under his son Philip lll that it became the official capital of both Spain and Portugal. Chosen primarily for its geographical location in the heart of the Iberian Peninsula, its new status transformed the history of what was previously just one more city in the kingdom. From this moment the accelerated growth of this city began, although for the next three centuries the Cortes parliament moved around somewhat, with the seat of power passing to different cities including Valladolid, Cadiz, Sevilla, Valencia and Burgos. In 1939, the capital of Spain returned to Madrid on a permanent basis.


LA CULTURA BURGOS

T

1939

he government of Franco’s rebel Republic moved three times between 1936 and 1939, from Valencia, to Barcelona and finally to Burgos. The city held the title of capital between April 1 and October 18, 1939, coinciding with

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

13

S

urrounded by orange orchards and sandy beaches, Valencia’s moment in the political sun came between November 1936 and October 1937, when the capital of the Republican government was transferred there amidst fears of losing Madrid. On March 30, 1939, after the fall of Catalunya and most other Republican territory, Valencia surrendered to Franco’s forces. It remains the third largest city in Spain.

the end of the Spanish Civil War. After the conflict, the dictator decided to restore capital status to Madrid, a position it has held ever since. Today, the medieval town of Burgos is celebrated for its magnificent cathedral. It also remains an important stop on the Ruta de Santiago (Way of Saint James) pilgrim trail to Santiago de Compostela.

VALENCIA 1936-7

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his swashbuckling city has been the capital of Spain at two very important moments in its history. The first was in the 6th century,

when King Liuvigild moved the court to Toledo, locating political power at the epicentre of the Iberian peninsula for the first time in its history. The second, in the 16th century,

saw Charles I of Spain and V of Germany establish Toledo as the capital of his considerable empire. And so it remained until 1561, when the honour went to Madrid.

Toledo 576-725, 1516-1561

With a history stretching back a thousand years, the city has always been a point of refer-

when the Duke of Lerma, Philip III’s favourite advisor, succeeded in transferring the Court of Madrid to this Castilian city. Although short and sweet, this unexpected royal interval brought the city its moment of maximum splendour. Nowadays Valladolid is known as a major industrial and commercial centre, but it has an impressive architectural legacy laid out in a number of excellent museums. One is dedicated to the life of the great explorer Christo1601pher Columbus 1606 who died in Valladolid in 1506.

ence, especially in the Middle Ages. But the key turning point for Valladolid came in 1601,

Vallad ol i d

W

Barcelona 507-576, 1937-39

hen the Roman Empire collapsed, its Spanish territories fell into the hands of the Germanic Visigoths who made Barcino, as it was then known, capital of their kingdom. Extensive archaeological excavations from this important period can be found in the basement of Barcelona’s Museu d’Història de la Ciutat, giving a glimpse into its glorious past. The city remained a provincial capital after King Liuvigild moved the Visigoth court to Toledo in 576. During the Spanish Civil War Barcelona enjoyed a second brief fling as capital of the Republic of Spain from November 1937 until January 1939.

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LA CULTURA

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Digging for Franco’s victims Expat experts join in the hunt for those missing after Spain’s civil war

A

TEAM of British archaeologists have started to exhume and identify victims executed by the Franco regime after the Spanish Civil War. Several bodies with gunshot wounds to the head, personal effects and parts of clothing have already been recovered by the experts from Cranfield University. They are looking for 26 people thought to have been buried in the cemetery at Almagro (Castilla-La Mancha) between 1939 and 1940. The team is working with colleagues from the University Complutense of Madrid (UCM) and social anthropologists from Mapas de Memoria (Memory Maps). SECLUDED: Some of the graves are hidden away from the main cemetery Families of victims have been found DIGGERS: Archaeologists from Cranfield in the UK and UCM in Madrid (aboin the hope of identifying relatives ve) have been unearthing the remains of Civil War victims (below) By Dilip Kuner through DNA analysis and returning the human remains for proper burial. The Olive Press has previously re- “Recovery of the bodies is carried ported on a number of excavations out layer by layer and is only the start searching for the remains of Franco’s of the process to identify and bring victims. Since 2000, dignity to the deceased over 7,000 victims and help to provide cloThey are have been recovered. sure and peace to their Dr Nicholas Marfamilies.” looking for 26 quez-Grant, from CranJose Barrios, whose field Forensic Institute people buried in great uncle - also (CFI), who is leading named Jose Barrios the excavation, said: the cemetery at - was executed and “This excavation is parAlmagro buried at the site, said: ticularly complex due “When the excavation now, we are coming to find you.” to the number of vicstarted I did not feel The excavation period will last until tims and subsequent much but when they found the first the beginning of June and will be burials in the cemetery during the body, I saw the skull and the feet of followed by a longer investigation postwar period. an individual, I thought: we are here involving anthropological analysis in the laboratory and DNA analysis until the end of 2021 to identify human remains recovered. A total of 11 pits have been identified for the excavation, and several pits have more than one person in them. Once remains are recovered, they are taken to the forensic anthropology laboratory at UCM to identify and If you thought there were no secrets left to surprise find out the cause of death. Genetic analysis with samples from you in Catalunya’s capital, 1,000 rediscovered air raid family members and bone samples shelters say you’re wrong, writes Graham Keeley then follows and where checks are positive, family members are idenECRET air raid shelters that kept Barcelona beneath the courtyards of apartment blocks and tified. Remains will then be passed residents safe from fascist bombs during the below town squares is a relic from the dark days of to the families for burial or returned Spanish Civil War have been mapped and Barcelona’s own Blitz. to the cemetery to be buried again if SAFE: People took shelter deep underground catalogued for a new way of looking at the From 1936 to 1939 the city was systematically that isn’t possible.

Going underground

S

city. An interactive website in English, Spanish and Catalan launched by the town hall pinpoints their precise location in modern day Barcelona. Described as ‘an underground city (built) to flee the horror of fascist bombing’, the immense network created in the basements of factories and houses,

bombed not only by Franco but also by the air forces of Hitler and Mussolini who supported the Nationalist uprising against Spain’s Republican government. Over the past 20 years, specialists and locals have slowly pieced the jigsaw back together and although few remain intact, and even fewer are open to the public, over 1,000 can be visited virtually online. Together with photographs from the time, the website reconstructs what life was like for the citizens of Barcelona who lived in daily fear of aerial bombardment. After Barcelona fell to the forces of Franco, Britain faced a similar threat from the air during the Blitz and the Battle of Britain. “I do not at all underrate the severity of the ordeal which lies before us but I believe our countrymen will show themselves capable of standing up to it, like the brave men of Barcelona,” said Winston Churchill in 1940. HARDSHIP: Air raids killed and injured many people The online project also recounts

how the community worked together to build the shelters. “Ten months of experience in Catalonia means we should unify all the efforts of the public and private bodies in the altruistic cause of saving lives from the fascist shrapnel,” wrote Lluis Companys, the Catalan regional president, in 1937. After the conflict was over, the victorious General Franco built over 700 more shelters in the city, and sent 12,000 men to build a line of bunkers in the Pyrenees, fearing that having defeated Hitler, the Allied Forces might try to attack Spain. While Spain did not take part in the Second World War, Franco was sympathetic to the Axis powers of Germany, Italy and Japan. “Barcelona’s air raid shelters were built by the citizens or the administration with the object of protecting against the brutal bombardment during the civil war,” said Jordi Rabassa, the city councillor for Historical Memory. “(They) are part of our heritage and collective memory and have become symbols of popular self-organisation, resistance and struggle.” The council has invited people to contribute towards the project if they have information about shelters which have been built-over or lost.

Science

Dr Maria Benito Sanchez, director of the scientific team for the project from the School of Legal Medicine at UCM, said: “As forensic anthropology professionals we have the responsibility of putting our science to the service of the relatives who have been searching for their loved ones for a long time now. Since I started working on mass graves, there have been many rewards which I take with me, and all are for the relatives – they are the engine for this work.” The wider Memory Maps project, which is funded by the Ciudad Real Provincial Council, has located 53 mass graves and named 3,457 people killed in the province of Ciudad Real by the Franco regime over the last ten years. So far the Almagro excavation is the largest mass grave opened in the province, although there are known to be others with hundreds of people buried in them.


BUSINESS Stock rising

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Bad influence SPANISH YouTube ‘influencers’ have been fleeing to Andorra in a bid to avoid taxes - but the authorities have them in their sights. Andorra applies a maximum tax rate of 10%, well below the 47% rate in Spain for those with an annual income of more than €300,000 - which some of these influencers comfortably surpass.

Tiny club first in Spain to be listed on stock exchange

A TINY football club is to become the first in Spain to float on the stock exchange. The news came after Sant Joan-based CF Intercity secured promotion to the Segunda Division, regional section. The Alicante province club - whose ground has a capacity of just 2,000 - decided in principle in 2018 to go for a listing and sharehold-

15

Flight

The flight of the influencers was highlighted at the beginning of the year with the announcement that the famous YouTuber Ruben Doblas, known as El Rubius, was finally moving there. Doblas said that Spain’s tax man had him ‘in the crosshairs’, and that he was being treated as a criminal when he was the ‘only influencer’ left staying in Spain and paying its taxes. But not everyone agrees with the alleged injustice ‘suffered’ by the famous YouTuber. Another influencer from Bilbao, Ibai Llanos, understands that those who earn a lot of money should pay more. Now Hacienda (Inland Revenue) has decided to act against people it suspects of tax evasion by setting up ‘residence’ in Andorra while still earning most of their income in Spain. The tax authority has created a ‘big data tool’ that will make the tracking of ‘delocalised’ taxpayers more effective. It will track internet activity to try to detect ‘false residencies’. It will examine more than 70 sources of information and has already come up with ‘several thousand’ people suspected of INFLUENCER: Ruben false residency in Doblas has fled to Andorra tax havens.

WINNERS: Rising through the leagues

ers have now confirmed the move. Trading in Intercity CF

Free cash ARAGON has passed a law to give every one registered in the region a minimum income of €522 a month. All political parties in the Aragon Cortes (parliament) backed the payments, which will be available to anyone who is either registered in the region whether Spanish or foreign - or who has submitted an asylum and refugee application and has a low income. The payment covers all immigrants including those who have not yet ‘regularised’ their right to be in Spain. All they need in order to register is a passport. An extra allowance is also available for those with families, as well as help with housing expenses.

shares will start by the end of June on BME Growth, which is Spain's stock exchange sub-market dedicated to small and medium sized companies. Intercity will have an initial market capitalisation of up to €4.5 million. Club president, Salvador Marti, along with two other club co-founders own around 50% of the enterprise. Marti said: “We realised that most semi-professional clubs are funded by a patron injecting money which ensures their survival. “We thought the club could instead take advantage of the financial markets to monetise its shareholding rather than relying on a single in-

vestor. And why not in such a soccer-loving country?” The listing is part of an extraordinary climb for a club that was born out of a restructuring of the Sant Joan d’Alacant football club in 2017.

Club

Backed by big money investors like ex-Atletico Madrid star, Juanfran, the team have climbed from the bottom rungs of the Valencian football league structure. On paper they are four promotions away from making it to the top flight to join Spain's big boys like new champions Atletico, Barcelona, and Real Madrid.

Take care!

New penalty system coming into effect for UK Income Tax by Emilia Carvell

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ROM 2023, landlords, or self employed taxpayers in the UK, with annual income over £10,000 will be subject to filing their tax position through the Making Tax Digital initiative. Through Making Tax Digital, taxpayers will not only submit one annual tax return, but also quarterly submissions of income and expenditure, to give a real time snapshot of their tax position throughout the year. And with a change of process, also comes a change in the penalty system, With HMRC implementing a new points based penalty system to better align with the new tax system. Speaking in a recent seminar, HMRC spoke of creating a new system, aimed at being more supportive of those with genuine reasons behind mistakes or late filing, whilst still penalising those who are consistently late. GO DIGITAL: Apari makes complying with HM Revenue’s new systems, simple and clear

So how has the penalty system changed? Well some could argue that it is more complicated! Currently the system goes by length of time since late submission, with the amount due increasing over the time period. The new system accrues points per late submission - and points accrued mean penalties! When a taxpayer misses a submission deadline then they will incur a point - these points build up to penalty thresholds, with each submission obligation (i.e quarterly, annually) having a different threshold. Once this point threshold is reached, then a fixed penalty amount of £200 will be issued for every missed submission. The Penalty thresholds are as follows: Submission Frequency

Penalty Threshold

Annual

2 Points

Quarterly

4 Points

If the penalty threshold isn’t passed, then the points will be cleared after two years. If the points threshold is passed, then all the points gained will be wiped only AFTER they have met a period of compliance as set by HMRC (Annual submissions 24 months, Quarterly submissions 12 months) AND submitted all the submissions due from the previous two years. For Late Payment, penalties are issued by length of time passed from the due date - however HMRC have said that they will take a ‘lighter’ approach for the first

year of implementation, and a way of easing taxpayers into the system. The basic structure surrounding penalties for late payment is: Number of days late

Penalty

0-15

No Penalty

16-29

2% of outstanding amount

30

4% of outstanding amount

31+ (2nd penalty only)

4% per day on outstanding amount

But don’t worry - This will not come into effect until 2023, and HMRC will be releasing more information in the lead up to the new system going live - to be the first to find out what’s new, join the APARI Community! For all the latest information and advice visit www.apari-digital.com


16

PROPERTY

AUTHORITIES in Spain are pushing for the family of General Franco to return an 18th-century mansion to the people, arguing that the family’s purchase of the home nearly six decades ago was fraudulent. The government of Galicia is insisting that the northwestern region reclaims La Casa Cornide as part of efforts to remove the last vestiges of the far-right authoritarian regime. The palace, built in an unusual late Baroque style and once home to 18th-century naturalist Jose Andres Cornide, was bought by the dictator’s wife Carmen Polo in 1962.

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Franco’s home

However, the government in Galicia has started legal proceedings to prove that the purchase of the house was not legal. They say that two mayors of A Coruña secured municipal ownership only to auction it to Franco’s wife days later for a fraction of the price. They also claim that the sale to the wife of the head of state was illegal. Experts have said in a consultation report that ‘the architects of the sale were well aware of this

prohibition’. Spanish authorities want the home to be brought under national heritage protection laws so that the public may visit the property. It would also prevent the family from selling the palace or disposing of its contents without permission. Last year the family put the 11 bedroom, 13 bathroom house on sale but did not share any photographs of the interior of the property. Luis Felipe Utrera Molina, a lawyer for the family, said they could ‘put up for sale any property that is theirs’.

DISPUTED: ownership of the house

Land, land everywhere

Cheap deals

THE Valencian Housing department is set to publish a report into the availability of land to build affordable housing. According to the study, there is enough land in the 542 towns and cities in Alicante, Valencia and Castellon to build 47,900 new council houses, or VPPs in Spanish. Researchers discovered a total of 444,115 square metres of publicly owned land currently standing empty that could be used to build VPPs. If all the estimated 47,900 properties were built, the total number of council homes on offer would effectively double current demand. However, half of that available land surface is not classed as urban, and as such would require specific development plans to be carried out before building. But analysts also suggest that just the remaining half that is immediately ready for construction would be enough to provide affordable council housing to everyone presently on the waiting list.

BANKS are continuing to release discounted properties onto the market. This time they are doing it through Haya Real Estate, which has put on sale 1,200 homes for less than €70,000 The campaign, called Te mereces tu propia casa (You deserve your own home) offers discounts of up to 30%, with a total of 2,900 properties in the scheme.

Interest in Spanish properties from UK buyers starting to boom SPAIN remains top of the list when it comes to Brits looking to buy a home in the sun – and it looks like there could be a surge in sales on the horizon. A new report shows that

Top of the list

interest in buying a European property is set to boom, even while there is still some

Landlord boom EU enquiries for Buy-ToLet mortgages up 34%

S

KIPTON INTERNATIONAL has enjoyed a rise in enquiries for its UK Buy-To-Let mortgages over the last year. The Guernsey-based bank saw a 34% increase in enquiries from residents of the EU in the period January to May 2021 compared to figures from August to December 2020. In contrast, there was a 16% increase during the same period for the rest of the world. Skipton International’s mortgage offering is available to British Expats and Foreign Nationals purchasing Buy-To-Let property in the UK. The largest percentage increase came from the EU, with Hong Kong and the

DEMAND: Roger Hughes has seen growth

UAE also proving popular jurisdictions for UK Buy-To-Let enquiries. The increase came against the backdrop of Brexit and a reduced number of UK-based lenders supporting EU residents. Skipton’s enhanced mortgage proposition, the UK Stamp Duty holiday and the sharp demands within the UK rental market are also contributing factors. Roger Hughes, Business Development Manager of Skipton International, said: “We have some of the most attractive UK Buy-To-Let mortgages on the market for Expats and Foreign Nationals. “This year the demand has continued to grow and we will be exploring ways to make our mortgage proposition even more attractive, allowing more overseas residents to access the UK property market for long term investment purposes.” To see how much you may be able to borrow you can visit Skipton’s online UK Buy-To-Let mortgage calculator at: www.skiptoninternational.com/mortgage-calculator/uk

For more information about the services Skipton International can provide, visit www.skiptoninternational.com

uncertainty in the possibility of traveling abroad. Kyero.com, indicates that almost 40% of prospective buyers are now actively viewing or planning viewings abroad. The research, which involved more than 2,500 overseas buyers, found that Spain remains by far the most popular destination for British overseas home buyers, with 90% of all those polled looking to buy in the country. And half of them aim to take the property plunge within the next three months to a year, and a further fifth (19%) stated that they wish

to move ‘as soon as possible’. Moving abroad is a lifelong dream for many people with 28% of respondents saying they have wanted to move abroad for more than five years.

Budget

In terms of budgets, the most common (45%) budget is €100,000 – €250,000, although a significant 35% are looking to spend less than €100,000. Some 13% have a budget in mind of between €250,000 – €500,000 and 3% have up to €1million to spend.

Brits get connected BRITISH buyers of Spanish properties say reliable internet services as well as good views and nearby shops are their top three priorities in sealing a deal. The findings come in the What Buyers Want survey compiled by the Savills Aguirre Newman real estate agency. The study showed that British buyers at 57% are still very much the dominant foreign market for Spanish property purchases.

Easy

The figures on a wish-list for a property showed that having a good view came top of the list at 94%. Easy access to shops and services came in second at 90% with high-speed internet access not far behind at 87%. Closeness to a beach came fourth with 77%. The rise in demand for a good internet connection has reflected lifestyle changes in the wake of the pandemic. The survey suggests 74% of respondents expect to work from their Spanish home on at least one day per week, compared to the pre-pandemic figure of 50%.

Bargains

Of these, 850 are located in the Valencian Community, 560 in Murcia and 535 in Andalucia. In Valencia, more 325 units are located in Valencia province, 275 in Alicante and 245 in Castellon. The offer in Andalucia is centered in the provinces of Almeria and Granada, with 190 and more 145 properties in the campaign, respectively. The campaign lasts until June 12.

Live long and prosper IF you want a long retirement, head to Spain. The country has the second longest retirement period according to a recent study conducted by comparethemarket.com which analysed 36 countries by comparing effective retirement age against life expectancy.

Relax

Top of the list was France, where people have an average 24.8 years in which to relax and enjoy life post-work, helped by a retirement age of 63.3 years. But people taking early retirement push this figure down to an average 60.8 years. In Spain the average age at which people collect their pensions is 61.7 years, giving them 24.15 years in which to sit back in their twilight years. Third on the list is Greece (24.1 years) and fourth Luxembourg (26.65). The UK does not make the top 10.


FOOD, DRINK & TRAVEL

Taste of the sea

A TEAM of scientists have designed a new type of gluten-free bread enriched with seaweed, which is said to have a longer shelf life than other brands. According to technological investigation institute Ainia, gluten-free bakery products often suffer from nutritional deficiencies, unappetising texture and colour, short use-by dates, less choice for consumers, higher cost, and manufacturing difficulties. But investigators in Valencia have unveiled a new recipe set to solve these problems and improve the product in the process. The feat has been achieved by adding a type of edible seaweed named Alaria esculenta, also known as dabberlocks, badderlocks or winged kelp. Ainia highlight the many properties of the algae, including a high content of minerals, vitamins, protein, fibre and non-digestible carbohydrates. OYSTER farms in Santoña can reopen after they were initially shut because of toxins. The Regional Ministry of Fisheries, Food and Environment has suspended a temporary ban on the harvesting and marketing of oysters in the Cantabrian town. The ban was lifted after

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

17

High flying MALAGA, Alicante and Palma de Mallorca are among the most popular holiday destinations for Brits this summer. Research from easyJet revealed that Brits were desperate to visit Spain as well as Faro, Lisbon, Madeira, Porto, Malta and Gibraltar. The average Brit has not been overseas for 630 days, according to data uncovered in the study. That could be set to change soon, following Spain’s announcement that it would be the first EU country to welcome vaccinated Brits back to its shores. Data from the airline also showed that Brits had saved around £4,889 during lockdown and 61% said they will be making their holiday ‘extra special’ this year to make up for the lack of travel, while 68% said they are planning to make up

What the shell water analysis confirmed that the levels of toxins in the molluscs had returned to normal after the oysters were affected by algae blooms known as red tide. The blooms usually appear on the coasts of Cantabria during the spring months.

Mediterranean Cuisine

Spain’s most popular destinations

By Kirsty McKenzie

for lost time by exploring new places. The nationwide study found that two-thirds (67%) of the UK said being in lockdown has made them crave new holiday Once it has receded, shellfish products are safe again and the Regional Ministry continues its surveillance work, which allows it to be detected quickly. While the oyster farming ban has been lifted it remains in force for the other bivalve molluscs including clams and mussels.

experiences, with a third (35%) of those surveyed said they have already booked a summer holiday abroad. Johan Lundgren, easyJet chief executive, said: “We know how much people value travel and can see the pent up demand every time restrictions are lifted. “This research shows just how much of a priority travel is after such a long period where it has been out of bounds. Brits cannot wait to get away on a sun filled holiday and have been saving hard to make their holiday a trip to remember. “We look forward to welcoming customers on board for a well-deserved getaway and remain hopeful that the Government will add many more European countries onto the Green list and allow safe travel this summer.”

Open every day – Closed Monday

reservas: 963 51 49 94

reservas@palaciodelabellota.com www.palaciodelabellota.com C/Mosent Femades, 7 CP. 46002 VALENCIA


18

FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL Graham Keeley and his family of six kids try out a pedal and paddle holiday through Spain’s Deliverance country

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Healthy homage to C

T

HIS was a holiday that way, gliding downhill through separated the men from valleys and over rivers most of the boys. the way, so we could admire Unfortunately, my fear the scenery. of the dark meant I ranked as The hardy souls huffing and one of the boys as I cycled - puffing uphill the other way very slowly - through a series were to be admired. of pitch black railway tunnels The beauty of the Via Verde that kept on coming. is that you don’t have to take With over 30 along this partic- your own bikes - the rentular Via Verde, no sooner do al companies provide them. you see the light They also bus at the end of you to the start one and you’re of the route, We admired into another. which finishes The kids, looking the hardy souls back where you on at Dad with a left your car. huffing and mixture of pity We set off from and embarrassXerta, a tiny puffing uphill ment, took it all village in the in their stride. the other way Parque Natural We were on the Del Ports. All of Via Verde in the us except one hills north of of our party the Ebro river delta, two hours dubbed Superman - who had drive south of Barcelona. cycled to Xerta all the way from The route takes you deep into Barcelona, 160 km away! the countryside, tracing the We piled into two coaches route of the disused track from having chosen our bikes - a Horta de Sant Joan to Xerta. little like bone crunchers, but The journey is about 30 kilo- they did the job - which were metres which you can do one stowed in a trailer behind, and of two ways - uphill or down. set off for our starting point. Thankfully, we chose the easy The village of Horta de Sant

Joan is famous because Pablo Picasso spent some time there in his youth between 1897 and 1898. He later returned to develop his Cubism

style of art. You can see why, because the square design of the houses resemble many of Picasso’s paintings and drawings from

Castles in the air THEY are majestic testaments to Spain’s past, capturing multiple layers of history between the crevices of their wind-battered battlements and time-worn turrets. Often Roman and frequently Phoenecian in origin, what we see today was mostly built in Medieval times to guard the frontiers between Moorish and Christian Spain, many of them drawn through what is modern Andalucia today. Hence, the region’s castle count

Castillo Bil Bil, Benalmadena This one’s a cheat as the delightful terracotta-pink Arabian Nights-style castle on the seafront is merely neo-Moorish. Although, as Benalmadena is one of the towns in Spain to have hung onto its Arabic name, it chimes with the local heritage. Originally built in 1927 for a wealthy French family, it was taken over by the town council in 1980 and turned into a cultural space for exhibitions, concerts and conferences. Ornamental gardens with Moorish-inspired fountains and nocturnal lighting afford it a singular romantic beauty. No wonder it’s the most popular public building in Malaga for civil weddings.

Over 90 legendary fortresses loom over the landscapes of Malaga province, conjuring up days of old when knights were bold. Cristina Hodgson raises the drawbridge on her own High Five runs into the hundreds and Malaga has its fair share. Sadly, many fortresses were destroyed or abandoned after the Reconquest and despite best efforts to restore the most iconic examples, all the money in the Spanish treasury wouldn’t be enough to put every one of

Malaga Alcazaba and Gibralfaro Castle

just before the First World War. If you are an art lover, take time to visit the Picasso Centre. Gliding downhill past green

Spain’s 2,500 castles back together again. Today their stone battlements and flying buttresses are mere filigrees of their former glory. Yet despite the ravages of time, their striking silhouettes leave a lasting impression that can still inspire dreams …

valleys and rivers was a beautiful way to see a part of Catalunya which most people rarely glimpse. To get the most out of the

D

ominating the hilltop and remarkable for its size, its robust honey-coloured walls once guarded one of the most important frontier castles in the Kingdom of Granada. Inside the gates there’s little but gardens and ruins to evidence its status

P

residing magisterially over Malaga city and port, the alcazaba below the castle is one of the best-preserved citadel in Spain and one of Malaga’s most visited monuments. Set on a hillside protected by the Montes de Malaga mountain range which has natural park status, the castle was built in 929AD by Abd-al-Rahman III, Caliph of Cordoba, on a former Phoenician defence post and lighthouse. From here the rulers could keep watch on the local population scrabbling a living at its feet as well as enemies trying to invade by land and sea. A tour takes you to the ruins of a neighbouring theatre built by the Romans who also knew a dramatic location when they saw one.

You may be forgiven for wondering why you have never seen it. But if you can take your eyes off the designer merchandise in the cute whitewashed boutiques of Marbella Old Town you can spot the telltale crenellations of castle walls. Sadly they are all that remains of the most important vestige of Muslim civilisation in Marbella. The castle was originally built in the 9th or 10th century during

Castillo de Marbella

the reign of Abderraman III, first of the Caliphs of Al-Andalus.The walls were reinforced with 11 rectangular towers of different sizes to protect the city from attack. In the 19th century, the castle ceased to be used for military purposes and became inextricably entwined with the town growing up around it.


FOOD, DRINK & TRAVEL

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

19

Catalunya

POP–UP STORE 3rd–12th–June

SKFK sita murt/

THINKING MU

and much more

Sun

and discounts up to

experience, give yourself the whole day. This way you can stop off for a dip in the river or a picnic (there is only one tiny cafe en route). Although we

today but the views through the horseshoe shaped windows of the Torre Blanca tower are as spectacular as ever. Noted for its unusually wide keep with its angular floor plan, its insidious dungeon also leaves an impression - a hell

spotted snakes in one of the rock pools, which put us off taking the plunge. Dimly-lit tunnels are a feature of the route but bikes are

hole six metres deep by three metres in diameter, covered by a metal grill and completely exposed to the elements. In 1582 a bell tower was added above the keep to house what was then one of the largest bells in Christendom.

Alcazaba of Antequera

This ‘working’ concert hall castle at the mouth of the Fuengirola River is in excellent nick thanks to multiple refurbishments down the centuries. The Moors built a fortress here

Castillo Sohail, Fuengirola

in the 10th century, and then the Christians did it up to become one of the most economically efficient military outposts in the land. And in 1730 it was remodelled again as a squadron base tasked with stemming smuggling between Spain and the newly British Gibraltar.

equipped with extra lights for this. Even so, for the faint-hearted among us - i.e. me - it was a case of creeping along very slowly through the murky twilight. Of course, the kids were fearless, zooming through while yelling their heads off. If you’ve got the time, I recommend staying the night somewhere at the end of the route like Tortosa rather than facing the drive home as you will be pretty pedalled out. Having recovered the next day, we set off on another adventure: kayaking down the Ebro. One of the biggest rivers in Spain, and the site of a decisive battle in the Spanish Civil War, today it is a magnet for tourists looking for a wild river experience. The kayaking company guides you to the finishing point at Benifallet where you leave your car, and transports you back to the starting point in Miravet village. With six young children in tow, we booked a guide to join us on the water in case we needed some help, even though we had some experienced kayakers in our midst. Two hours afloat was the limit for us but some people go for much longer.

Pleasure

Once on the water, it was a pure pleasure to glide along and view the wider countryside from such an unusual angle. Vultures circled above a tiny village we passed, and fish popped up to the surface to say hello. We were the only people on the river that day but in the height of summer over 100 kayaks are rented daily. The real beauty of the Ebro is there’s just enough of a current so that paddling is not hard work but no scary rapids to navigate like the ones in the film Deliverance. No murderous hillbillies either! And a

very happy ending on our return to dry land in Benifallet, spoiled for choice for restaurants, where we enjoyed a long and hearty lunch.

C/BURRIANA, 30, VALENCIA 46005 OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 10AM TO 9PM SUNDAY FROM 11AM TO 9PM

GREEN CATWALKS Valencia gears up for Ruzafa Fashion Week with the focus on sustainability and environmental responsibility

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ASHION fans should know that June 3 to 12 will see the celebration of the Ruzafa Fashion Week in the Valencia neighbourhood of the same name. Leading brands including SKFK, Thinking Mu, Duuo Shoes, Sita Murt, Kontatto, García Jeans, Nudie Jeans and Champions will strut their stuff at the Vicente Llorca Showroom at Calle Burriana, 30 from 10am – 11am on Sunday – to 9pm uninterruptedly over nine days. This year’s edition takes on special relevance due to a focus on sustainable fashion, with one

event in particular timed to coincide with World Environment Day on June 5. The evening before the occasion, at 7pm on Friday June 4, the general director and founder of men and women’s design label SFKF, Mikel Feijoo Elzo, will chair a conference on sustainability within the world of fashion. SFKF, previously known as Skunkfunk, was launched over 20 years ago in the Basque Country (northern Spain) and nowadays operates in 34 countries. It is one of the leading lights of the ‘eco fashion’ wave currently sweeping the sector – an issue that leads Feijoo to travel all over the world to share the message. At the root of his campaign is a desire to change the whole approach to how clothes and accessories are manufactured and consumed by the public, focussing on environmental responsibility to end the present over-consumption craze that leads to such ridiculous extremes as in 2019, when the fashion industry manufactured an estimated 100 billion items of clothing for a population of just seven billion.

For further information on the Ruzafa Fashion Week visit www.ruzafagallery.com/ruzafa-fashion-week/


20

OPENING COURSE 2021-2022 BRITISH EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM FROM 3 TO 18 YEARS OLD

The pillars of our education

Instilling Values

Language and Culture

COLUMNISTS

Quarantine! So, what’s new? V

ISITORS from the UK will have to quarantine for 10 days when returning from their Spanish holidays. So, what’s the problem? It used to take me at least two weeks to recover from my alcohol-fuelled, Dan Air, Iberian breaks during my younger, heyho, days. I have vague memories of struggling through Luton Airport, loaded when we were only down with donkeys, fla- allowed to take £50 on menco dolls, foreign holidays. Amacassinettes zing, but life and bottles The first two in Spain was of sangria, weeks back vastly diffewhilst desperately trying rent, and home were to balance a much cheaalways a bit of per. Mucho large Sombrero hat on pesetas to the a blur my somewhat pound, no non-existent, motorways, numb bonce. only narrow, rough And all this in the days roads leading down to

U Educational Spaces Art and Science

Health

Family Harmony

www.shackletonschool.com 96 105 19 13 info@shackletonschool.com Calle Benieu 9, 46100, Burjasot Valencia

OLD HA CK IN TH E SU N

Benny Davis

Ramblings of an 80-somethin g expat

small village-type holiday resorts that offered everything a young single Englishman could wish for on his once-ayear holiday. Boozy days on sun-drenched beaches, boozy nights at frantic fiestas and sealing life-long friendships with local Was nice comment a complete set up? Spanish folk, whilst not unNLIKE serious columnists involved with derstanding a argumentative and bloody word debatable subjects, that was said. my humble, humorous offerSo, as I menings do not entice readers’ to tioned, the make their alternative views first two weeks known through the magic of back home in the ‘Letters’ section. London were ‘Belligerent of Benidorm’, always just a ‘Anxious of Almeria’ or even bit of a blur, ‘Psychotic of Palma’, totally accompanied by-pass the ‘Old Hack’ while by the inevitasetting their beady sights on ble sore head important subjects that afand isolation of fect their everyday lives, such the brain But, as speed limits, NIE’s, dog worth every poo and tattooed string-vestpenny of my ed, noisy visitors invading CLOSE SHAVE: Benny at the hard-earned, Benidorm on Age Concern sharp end coach trips. 12 months pigHopefully, my readers manage to raise a smile, before settling back to gy bank savings study the nitty-gritty news of the day and maybe end up exercising their of £50. About brains with the crossword puzzle. the price of a ‘Old Hack’ forgotten until, if still on this mortal coil, the next edition of couple of airthe Olive Press. port cardboard So, it was a real boost to my ego to see the ‘Old Hack’ mentioned in a cups of weak, previous issue of the Letters section. brown-colouTricia Gabbitas of Malaga wrote that my scribblings made her and her red liquid pohusband, ‘Laugh out loud’. An accolade humbly received by yours truly, sing as ‘Café especially during these troubled, depressing times. Americano,’ But, yes, there is always a but, it didn’t take long for my social media plus – forget the enemies to sharpen their fake news long knives. good old sau‘A complete set-up’, wrote one combatant. ‘Obviously paid the letter writsage sarnie and er from his offshore illicit bank account. `BLT´– a choice How many letters did you write before getting this one published?’ said of either a veanother sad person. One even wrote, ggie and egg ‘She knew a person that used to live next door to a Mrs Clodhopper in white sandwich Blackpool, who eventually moved to Spain and met an ex-vacuum cleaner salesman at a nude Bingo session.’ with Shirataki ‘This person told her that the woman he suspected as the letter writer, rice? Or mawas in fact not the so-called, ‘Tricia’, but a fee-based social media influybe, sausage, encer living in Dubai’. egg, free-ranI, of course, hotly deny any of these accusations and only hope that the ge mayo, and lovely Tricia of Malaga is not offended. Incidentally, Tricia, if you are readcheese on croising this, please say hello to Auntie Doris, and tell her I will write soon. sant? I give up!

The letter

Disruptive Educational Approaches

June 3rd June 16th 2021


HEALTH Staying healthy SPANISH scientists claim that the Mediterranean diet acts as a shield against COVID-19. This is according to a Spanish study published in the journal Clinical Nutrition. It claims that protection against infection increases significantly when people stick to a diet heavy on vegetables, fruit, lean meat, nuts and olive oil. Experts monitored 9,677 middle-aged people for the study. They found a clear association between a mediterranean diet and a reduction in the risk of infection of up to 64%.

Stub it out MORE than 283,000 people have signed a petition calling for a smoking ban on all of Spain’s beaches. Environment minister, Teresa Ribera, received the petition organised by the No Fumadores group. They want beach visitors to be protected from the effects of passive smoking. They are also worried about the environmental problems caused by cigarette and cigar butts being discarded at the seaside. Some 475 beaches have already banned smoking with more joining the list this year. No Fumadores president, Raquel Fernandez, said: “The thousands of people that have signed the petition sends out the message that we just cannot wait any longer.

Pollution

“A new law would stop children and people with respiratory diseases from inhaling smoke,” she added. “It would also send out the strongest possible signal to youngsters that it’s wrong to smoke on beaches which are public spaces.” A 2018 survey by the European Environment Agency showed that cigarette butts were the biggest source of pollution on beaches on the continent. Besides the mess, the butts can kill marine life if swallowed. Many municipalities have staged annual campaigns handing out ash trays and containers to collect fag ends to reduce the levels of beach debris.

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

HAY fever sufferers have been warned that pollen levels will soon exceed the ‘risk threshold’. Levels of olive and grass pollen have already been high enough to affect allergy sufferers in several parts of Spain, with the concentrations continuing to rise across the country. Now scientists are warning that olive pollen levels are expected to soar, especially in

Something to sneeze at the southern half of the peninsula. Places like Andalucia, Extremadura and Madrid will be the most affected areas, where concentrations are expected to exceed 200 grains per cubic metre. Experts recommend people prone to hay fever should use

masks, keep windows closed as much as possible and stay indoors when pollen levels are the highest. Usually those hours are between 5am and 10am. They also recommend avoiding hanging clothes outdoors and taking medication when it’s not prescribed by a doctor.

Soothing the nerves

‘Breakthrough’ in treating anxiety and depression A SPANISH biologist has discovered a new protein that helps regulate anxiety and could open a new chapter in mental health treatment. Javier Gilabert Juan, winner of the Valencian Young Scientific Talent award in 2016 and currently Anatomy and Neuroscience professor at Madrid University, has been working on the protein known as OTX2 for the past three years.

Team

Gilabert and his team first discovered that OTX2 was involved in the development of abilities such as sight and hearing during childhood. Their investigation then led them to check whether it could have an effect on depression, anxiety and learning difficulties as adults. Experiments with mice revealed that those injected

By Glenn Wickman

with OTX2 had a less anxious behaviour than ‘normal’ mice. The next step, says Javier Gilabert, is to move onto more complex mammals to check exactly how the protein works to modify behaviour. Previous studies showed that OTX2 was easier to regulate when the brain was still being formed but it has now also been found to work for adults. The team aims to study the effect of the protein in cases of stress, post-traumatic stress disorder, and schizophrenia.

Protein

If successful, the trials could open a new chapter in mental health medication, as the protein could boost the effect of existing drugs and help create new ones.

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EXCITED: Javier Gilabert is hoping for a breakthrough

21

Taking a toll THE COVID pandemic has increased mental health problems among vulnerable children, with financial strain on parents a major factor, a study by Cardiff University has found. During the pandemic, researchers interviewed 142 five to 10-year-olds who had been identified by schools as ‘at risk’ of mental health problems, and they then compared the information to pre-pandemic data.

Link

There was a strong link between financial stress and mental health problems in parents, which was in turn associated with worsening mental health issues among children, the researchers discovered. The study showed children living below the poverty line face more anxiety, stress and even abuse because of the temporary shutdown of different public services, such as free meals and daycare, which are often a safe haven for vulnerable children.


22

HEALTH

June 3rd - June 16th 2021

Someone to turn to Handling the downside: Special feature by Wendy Andersen [Ph.D. MPCBT (AAC)]

Wondering about mental health options in Spain? HELP: There is no need to be alone

W

E may have left everything Firstly: If you are suicidal, you behind for a life in the can go directly to urgencias. You sun, but even Spain can will be able to talk to a psychiahave its downside – especially trist to help you get through the in these mid-COVID post-Brexit crisis. times. Not knowing when we will be able There is also a suicide hotline in to travel makes family feel even Spain: 902500002 and the Safurther away. maritans 902 883 535. Perhaps you have lost someone this year but have had to grieve For non-emergency situations, alone. Is the rapid return to re- you can make an appointment striction-free living making you with your GP (médico de cabecfeel anxious? Has the stress era). With the help of a friend or of being stuck in together put Google translate, you can explain a strain on your relationship? the basics of what you are feeling There are a number of studies and, if you choose to, request a looking at depression as a long course of anti-depressants or anterm effect of COVID – with up to ti-anxiety medication. Most GPs 29% of people who had COVID be- are very sympathetic and helpful. ing affected. You should start to notice the difOf course it is a normal part of ference within a couple of weeks. life to suffer from If you do not notice sadness or grief from a difference, rememtime to time, which ber that there are The leading may leave us wonmany types of antidering if what we’re cause of people depressants on the feeling is normal or market, each with taking time something more serian efficacy of about ous. For 15% of the 60%. off work, is population it is more This means that for depression than just something nearly half of the you can shake off. population the first The leading cause prescription will of people taking time off work, not work. In which case you will across the globe, is depression. need to go back to the doctor afThe world was shocked when ac- ter six weeks (the length of time tor Robin Williams took his own for the tablets to take full effect) life in 2014 – but every year one and request a different type. It is million people commit suicide. not unusual to have to try two or There are signs to watch out for in three types before you get the one yourself or those you care about that suits your chemistry. Do not (see box, right). Suffering from give up if the first ones have no three of more of the symptoms impact. could indicate depression. The pharmaceutical solution is a A good rule of thumb if you’re un- good starting point, but it is not sure: is what you are suffering a permanent solution – it lasts stopping you from living the life while you are taking the mediyou want to live? If yes, then help cines (and for some they can kick is out there, even here in Spain start a complete recovery) but for non Spanish speakers. it is common to have a relapse once you stop taking the tablets if you do not address the issues that caused the depression/anxiety in the first place. I often tell clients it is a bit like liposuction – it will provide immediate help, but if you don’t change your lifestyle you will be back where you started before long. Thus the ideal is a combination: use the medication to give you a window for making changes – and therapy to ensure that the changes you make will have the biggest impact. Unfor tunate-

ly, long term psychodynamic counselling with a native English speaker is not an option with Signs of clinical depression the Sistema Sanitario, the public health service, in most areas. • Feelings of hopelessness • Decreased energy or fatiAnd unlike a broken leg, where • Loss of interest in activigue you can trust any doctor to work it ties you used to enjoy • Problems concentrating out and put a cast on the affected • Changes in sleep patterns • Sluggishness and slow limb, the subtleties of discussing (too much or too little) movements emotional issues requires com• Changes in appetite and • Recurrent thoughts of plete understanding between paweight death or suicide tient and doctor. There are private options available – a quick Google search will provide a list of English speaking psychologists in the bigger cities. available on the big platforms you bulimia or overeating). Expect to pay €65/hour for a ther- see advertised on Facebook, warn You will also need to consider apist or €75/hour for a psychia- that the platforms take the lion’s which type of therapy you want to trist (who can also write prescrip- share of the fee. This means you try. There are a vast number of tend to get inexperienced thera- therapies available – so it’s worth tions). doing a bit of Googling to know These are covered with some pists with little supervision. You might find a pri- which is right for you. In a nutmedical insurance vate therapist that shell, there are two broad types plans – you will need online pro- to chose from: psychoanalytic to get in touch with An economical works vides a better service therapy – which is a long term your insurance proand is less expensive treatment looking at the causes vider for details. alternative than the big plat- of your issues; and Cognitive BeIf heading to the to one-to-one forms. havioural Therapy (CBT) – which city is not conveTech options also in- looks at what maintains your curnient, another optherapy is clude apps for your rent problems (usually 10-15 sestion is tele-therapy or web-therapy. This support groups smartphone. They’re sions depending on the presenta nice idea, but un- ing problem). option offers lots of fortunately not ad- CBT is quite a wide umbrella, with convenience: you many subsets, such as mindfulcan do it from home, in English, vanced enough yet to be of use. at a time that suits you. It may be I looked through a few of the op- ness and couples therapy. In all, harder to form a good relationship tions and quickly realised they about 75% of UK based therawith a therapist that you do not are based on a set-script with lit- pists are CBT therapists, with another 10% focusing on Cognitive meet in person – but as with any tle room for individual insight. therapy, you may need to try a few An economical alternative to one- therapy and 10% Behavioural. to-one therapy is support groups. Keep in mind, the process of therbefore you find one that clicks. A couple of things to be careful of There are English speaking sup- apy can be uncomfortable at times port groups for substance misuse - facing the things you may have – do your research. Always verify the therapist’s iden- (Alcoholics Anonymous and Nar- been trying to ignore for a long tity – ask to see their passport cotics Anonymous) and impulse time. A good therapist will make photo. Check that the therapist control groups (Gamblers Anony- that process a lot easier, and more is licensed – this includes con- mous, sex addiction, and food re- likely that you see it through. tacting the accrediting body and lated disorders such as anorexia, checking that the therapist is indeed registered with them (and that that body is a reputable one Wendy Andersen [Ph.D. MPCBT (AAC)] is a CBT therapist such as the BACP – the British specialising in expats living in Spain. More information is Association of Counselling and available on www.cadiz-therapy.com Psychotherapy). Also check for Appointments are available face-to-face or online. confidentiality and privacy rights. Critics of Online therapy, the ones


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The

OLIVE PRESS

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VALENCIA / COSTA AZAHAR FREE Vol. 1 Issue 14 www.theolivepress.es

FINAL WORDS

Bus-ted TWO robbers attempted to dodge police by using buses as their getaway transport across Costa Blanca. However, they were soon arrested - along with the stolen hotel bag - on an Alicante bus.

Boar off THERE was traffic jam chaos in Barcelona, as a mother boar and her cubs ran wild along one of the main streets. The humbug-like animals held up traffic for over two hours, during rush hour.

expat

voice in Spain June 3rd - June 16th 2021

In a hole

Nou-gat to be joking NUTTY Spanish sweet, Turron, could be given its own United Nations World Day, as Alicante Provincial Council looks to make November 7 World Turron Day.

Your

By Kirsty McKenzie

Feeling ruff A GIANT Poodle has become the first pet in Spain to be infected with the British ‘Kent’ COVID-19 variant. Experts at the Complutense University of Madrid (UCM) have been studying coronavirus infections in pets for a number of months. They have confirmed that a 14-year-old giant poodle tested positive in PCR tests for the ‘Kent’ variant which first came to light last December. AN unscrupulous businessman has been thrown in the slammer after he sold 800,000 kilos of horse meat as beef. The 60-year-old from Castellon has been sentenced to four years in prison and

FOLLOWING an argument with his parents, aged 14, hotheaded Andres Canto took a pickaxe into the garden and started digging to work off his frustrations. Six years later, the hole is now a den with a bedroom, wifi and sound system. Andres, from La Romana in Alicante says he can’t remember what the fight was about - but is delighted his bizarre act of petulance became an obsession, even enlisting a friend with a pneumatic drill to blast the 10 foot deep cave. The excavation was done by

What a mare! ordered to pay €470,000 in compensation by the Supreme Court. The conman supplied meat to a company in Torrent (Valencia)

Row leads to Hobbit style ‘home’

hand using buckets, but as Andres went deeper and deeper he developed a homemade pulley system. between the years 2011 and 2013. Although the contract was for beef, the supplier began surreptitiously introducing horse meat into the batches he sent the firm in order to increase his profit margin.

The layout of his retreat was often determined by the obstacles that got in the way of the project and authorities even paid him a visit to make sure the build was legal. Like his parents, they found no issue with Andres’s unique project, which he estimates has cost him a grand total of €50. The aspiring actor said the labour of love was inspired by his passion for building huts and tree houses as a child.

Good thrashing A POLICE car was given the ‘Basil Fawlty’ treatment when an angry man attacked it with a branch. In a scene that was almost a carbon copy from the famous UK TV comedy of the seventies, a 64-year-old man appeared outside the Alcantarilla police station in the Murcia region. Police officers saw him clutching a one-metre-long tree branch. He then started to give a police car ‘a damn good thrashing’, to use the line uttered by John Cleese.

Agog

They watched agog as the Portuguese national did substantial damage to the car’s bodywork. He also smashed the front and rear windows of the vehicle. The irate attacker was eventually calmed down and hauled in front of a judge. It’s unclear why he decided to vent his anger on the police car.


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