Valencia Olive Press - Issue 38

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Moraira MARVELLOUS

May 2022

Close to Benidorm

J

yet a world apart

- discover the Spanish

UST half an hour up Benidorm, you’llfrom builtBy Kimberley Mannion of the most relaxed find one seaside towns in Spain. Oozing with charm, Moraira is one fishing villages, and it remains full of the Costa Blanca’s of history classic old unspoiled and tradition, and largely today.

charmer with expat

You won’t find signs for English breakfasts or lager pint here, this is an at one euro a as popular with upmarket resort

refined Spaniards as it is with upmarket foreign tourists-in-the-know.

appeal

This is not to say Moraira is undiscovered by holidaymakers – far from it. The demographics confirm its status as a popular tourist destination. Continues on next

We also have delicious pies and Scotch We have gluten eggs. free and Keto diet Contact us for any options as well. special requests. Call for details about delivery.

early til late.

Don’t miss our special pullout on the evocative secret village of the Marina Alta

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MARVELLOUS MORAIRA

VALENCIA / COSTA AZAHAR FREE Vol. 2 Issue 38 www.theolivepress.es

Your expat

...and what were Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn doing there?

voice in Spain May 19th - June 1st 2022

Policy of denial Driven to distraction The UK licence drama deepens

Page 4

Get on board

Travel industry bounces back

Page 6

Piece of the action Our Spanish language picks on Netflix

Page 18

Expats’ €14,000 medical bill because insurance company ‘wouldn’t answer phone’ after accident

A BRITISH couple have been handed a huge medical bill for hospital care, despite being fully covered by their private health insurance company. The expats have been slapped with a debt of €14,000 because of the company’s negligence - they claim. Dawn Bridge, a 50-year-old writer, originally from Cheshire, suffered a bad fall in her hometown of Mazarron, Murcia, in December 2021. Husband Adrian, an academic, immediately went to call the number on his nsurance medical card, believing emergency staff would be on call to deal with it. However, after a whole NINE MINUTES of waiting - while Dawn screamed in agony - the 59-yearold still had no answer. Eventually he was persuaded to call an ambulance by a concerned neighbour and a local emergency service turned up ‘within minutes’. She was soon receiving emergency treatment for two bad fractures at Cartagena’s public hospital Dawn to St Lucia. She also had to have a dislocated ankle put back into place. But, in reality, her problems had only just begun, as despite paying two premiums for a policy that promised ‘immediate access to care’ and ‘no copayments’ the opposite occurred.

EXCLUSIVE By Simon Wade

Indeed, on leaving St Lucia Hospital, some days later, they were handed the bill which their insurance company REFUSED to pay. This despite them paying €1,300 a year. The main reason given; because Dawn was treated in ‘the wrong hospital’. “Yet during that week, I received no advice on transferring her to a hospital recognised by our insurance company,” slammed Adrian, a former history lecturer at York University. “We had no help in providing additional care, no communication and no explanation why our emergency call wasn’t answered.” And over the last half year, he claims they have received ‘not an ounce’ of concern or compassion regarding their plight. This despite Dawn still being heavily dependent on a wheelchair for mobility and having to endure intensive physiotherapy sessions. A remarkable email stream, the Olive Press has seen, demanded if the couple could ‘prove the [emergency] call’, and also questioned if they had even rung the right number. “We both feel totally abandoned, and lost within a spiral of confu-

Open every day Closed Monday

BETTER DAYS: The Bridges on holiday and (right) Dawn after accident sion, bureaucracy and data protection,” continued Adrian. “If only they’d answered their own emergency number (and we’d gone to an appropriate hospital), my wife would have been treated in a timely manner AND without costs.” Thankfully, the Cartagena Hospital has been gracious enough to offer the Bridges a staged payment scheme which eases the financial burden. In the meantime, they hope their experience might save others from the same pain, cost and anxiety. “It’s the principle,” insisted Adrian, “they’ve just washed their hands of us, all

reservas:

963 51 49 94

down t o their o w n t e r rible service when we needed them most.” A spokesperson from St Lucia de Cartagena told the Olive Press “When the insurance company does not cover the services provided or the patient is not registered with Seguridad Social, we require them to pay the bill.” The couple paid €1,300-€1,400 a year for their insurance health bill. On deadline the Olive Press received a letter from the insurance company's lawyer saying that the company had acted ‘in strict and rigorous compliance with the terms of the policy’. Opinion Page 6

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

A BOY aged 12 has died in Valencia’s La Fe Hospital after falling from a fourth floor balcony in Algemesi. The youngster was playing with some other children when he plummeted onto the concrete patio. The boy underwent emergency surgery but died later in the ICU.


2

CRIME

www.theolivepress.es

NEWS IN BRIEF Clamp down THE Valencian government wants all councils to pass a bye-law that targets pimps and people asking for sex. Some town halls have already introduced the measure which fines offenders up to €3,000.

Gas blast A Denia man suffered second-degree burns after a butano cylinder exploded at his home on Monday. He was taken to hospital after the third-floor blast.

Park build BENIDORM council has advertised a €2.1 million contract to build a youth hostel and exhibition centre at the city’s Sequia Mare park.

No bull PLANS costing €10 million to transform Benidorm’s bullring into a performance venue and exhibition hall have moved forward with the securing of European development money.

A TEACHER in charge of a school trip to Sant Joan d’Alacant chased a thief and recorded him on video at the same time. It came after he saw a 66-year-old woman getting mugged from behind. She was talking on her phone, when the robber approached her from behind. The 33-year-old thief violently shook

May 19th - June 1st 2022

Rental car rip-off

Have a go teacher her to steal the phone and raced off. The teacher on an excursion with his students immediately pursued him as his pupils watched the drama unfold. While running, he took out his phone and recorded footage of the robber. He gave up the chase but when a Poli-

cia Nacional patrol arrived, he showed officers the video with a perfect image of the thief who was arrested soon after, still out of breath from his escape. The thief was wanted over three other street crimes involving elderly people in Sant Joan.

CULT BOSS DEATH

Leader who hypnotised followers and filmed ‘ritual orgies’ found dead in prison

A SEX cult leader accused of crimes including child sex abuse, extortion and fraud has been found dead in his prison cell. The alleged sex offender, Tio Toni, was facing charges of sexually abusing members of

a cult he ran in Vistabella del Maestrat, Alicante, following his arrest on March 15. The 64-year-old used hypnotism to brainwash dozens of people into handing over their money and even their homes over a period of 30 years.

He was accused of indoctrinating his victims into his ‘Vistabella cult’ with the belief that he could cure their ailments including cancer. But once they had moved to live on his vast inland estate in the rural Maestrazgo region of Va-

Gang busted

Sick locals

POLICE in Benidorm have brought down a major marijuana growing and distribution gang. Some 4,200 marijuana plants with a street value of €1.2 million were seized. The plants were grown at warehouses in Altea, Gata de Gorgos, La Nucia and Teulada. Some 60 officers arrested 14 people who have been remanded in custody by a Benidorm court.

A PENSIONER, 78, has been arrested for having sex with a underage girl in a Castellon public park. He told police he had paid her parents in the village of Ribalta, in Castellon, €100. They had been called when a witness spotted him with the girl in the park. He was arrested, along with the girl’s parents on charges of prostitution and the exploitation of a minor.

lencia, they effectively became his slaves. He is also alleged to have carried out ‘ritual sex sessions’ sometimes involving underage girls, which he filmed. Police ‘liberated’ 12 victims including two children when they raided the property. The man who self-styled himself as a ‘son of God’ was found dead after allegedly ‘experiencing an extended period of ill health’. Antonio, who walked with a frame and slept with an oxygen mask, had recently returned to his cell after spending a fortnight in hospital. An investigation by the Olive Press last month detailed the widespread abuse carried out at the finca.

A SCAM selling-off rental and lease vehicles netted a gang over €10 million. Police made 82 arrests including 33 in Alicante Province and 11 in Murcia. The criminals operated in six clusters in Alicante, Almeria, Jaen, Madrid, Murcia, and Tarragona. They created bogus companies that leased cars as well as lorries and vans. Fake documents were created for the vehicles which were then sold off in Spain and across Europe.

Gang rape A PAIR of 12-year-old girls have been raped in an abandoned house in Burjassot. One of the girls managed to escape after being raped by one of two men they had met up with via Instagram. She contacted a friend who alerted the parents and subsequently the police. Before the cops arrived, four more friends, all believed to be teenagers, had arrived to rape the second girl who had been left alone. The girls claimed it was a joke once they were located, but after being taken to hospital for an examination evidence of sexual assault was clear.

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NEWS

www.theolivepress.es BRITISH entrepreneur Richard Branson hung out - and played - with tennis legend Rafa Nadal at the star’s tennis academy on a recent visit to Mallorca. The pair also visited Virgin’s latest resort - the Son Bunyola in Mallorca, which is due to be formally opened this week and coincides with the new cruiser Virgin’s Valiant Lady docking in Gibraltar before making an inaugural call to Mallorca. Following his visit, the 71-year-old said: “Rafa was deep into preparations for the

Coals to Newcastle

A TAIWANESE dance group has just won the top prize of a Flamenco competition held in Madrid. The Genio Dance Group scooped the award in the 31st edition of Certamen de Coreografia de Danza Española y Flamenco. Lead dancer Hsueh Yu-hsien (below) said she was ‘surprised and delighted’ to beat Spaniards at their own game in the highly competitive final which featured six other teams. The group was invited to Madrid after judges viewed a YouTube video of their performance. The competition was founded in 1992 and is held annually by Producciones Maga, a company currently headed by Spanish dancer Margaret Jova.

May 19th - June 1st 2022

SERVED UP

current Masters tournaments, building up to the French Open he has dominated for so long. But he was good enough to give us a few hours to sit and chat about what is going on in the world – and of course share some of his tennis wisdom. I’m still looking to improve!” See Virgin hotel, page 16

From lead to gold New life for set of doomed BBC show Eldorado

IT was the TV deal that producers had golden hopes for, but after just a year and two series Eldorado turned to lead. The BBC soap famed for its wooden acting, dreadful sound quality and unknown thespians was cancelled. And its purpose-built set in Coin, inland from the Costa del Sol’s Fuengirola was left abandoned. In the years since the minitown has been used as a hotel, tourism attraction and most ignominiously as a paintballers ‘battleground’ before being finally left to crumble. But now the set has been taken over to be turned into a

Cheeky!

RE-BIRTH: New resort on the series set By Kimberley Mannion

plush new hotel and commercial centre. So any fans of the programme (and there weren’t too many) will be able to relive the golden days of Eldorado with a nostalgic BRITISH actor Dennis Waterman has died at hosholiday at the pital in Spain at the age of 74. new Versus His fourth wife, Pam Flint, who the actor married Resort. in 2011, was at his bedside when he passed away. Hotel bosses The popular actor was a permanent fixture in have signed a dramas in the 70s and 80s where he usudeal with the ally played a hard-man role, starring as local counbodyguard Terry McCann in Minder and cil for 8,000 copper George Carter in The Sweeney. metres of In his later years he starred in the popucommercial lar investigative series New Tricks. space, 4,000 He then announced plans to retire to La metres of garManga in Murcia to do ‘f*** all’. dens and a hotel with 170 rooms. The company will

Final curtain for Waterman

pay €90,000 per year for the privilege. The contract has been granted for 50 years. Versus Resort will hope that it lasts longer than the one year which Eldorado ran for. Focusing on the lives of expats on the fictional town of Los Barcos on the ‘Eldorado’ coast, the BBC had hoped the programme would be as much of a hit as soaps like Eastenders with the twist of the exoticism of Spain.

Disaster

The production, which cost the BBC around £10 million, is widely considered one of the BBC’s biggest disasters and has become a synonym for fiasco. The new hotel will have four stars - which some unkind critics might say is four more than the BBC soap had.

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SPAIN has broken its tragic record as a Eurovision failure and come in third after a raunchy performance by Chanel with the reggaeton hit SloMo. Chanel won 231 points from the jury and 228 from the televote, which placed Spain in third spot overall. It is the best result since 1995 when Anabel Conde came second with the song Vuelve conmigo. The 31-year-old Cuban-born entertainer wore a revealing outfit styled on a bullfighter’s traja de luz. The last time Spain won Eurovision was in 1969 with Salome’s Vivo Cantando. This year’s contest, which was held in Turin, was won by Ukraine’s Kalush Orchestra, in a symbolic show of public support following the country’s invasion by Russia. Sam Ryder came second for the UK, the country’s best result since 1998.

A new Banksy? HAS Banksy snuck into the Axarquia to protest against the Russian invasion of Ukraine? This mural is unmistakable in his style and has appeared under a motorway bridge between Torre del Mar and

Velez-Malaga. It is inspired by the anonymous artist’s iconic Girl with Balloon series of stencils that first appeared at London’s Waterloo Bridge. Banksy has several times used variants of this design in social campaigns.

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4

NEWS

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Four day carrot By Alex Trelinski

GRANTS of up to €200,000 are being offered to firms who move their staff onto a fourday working week in an intriguing regional experiment. The regional government of Valencia also wants the number of weekly hours cut to 32 hours. In one of the first such experiments in Europe it’s hoped such a move can bring improvements both for companies and workforces. Shortened weeks both reduce workplace energy bills; cut pollution with fewer journeys to work; and improve both employee morale and productivity.

Productive

“We are working over 100 hours a year more than the European average, but we are one of the least productive countries,” explained Valencia employment secretary, Enric Nomdedeu, on introducing the scheme. The subsidies will run for three years with the aim of ensuring workers won't be paid less. Each company will get €9,611 per employee over three years with an overall limit of €200,000.

AN expat restaurant owner has appealed for client-power to help him fight the closure of two of his well-known restaurants. The French businessman has asked customers for help after seven chiringuito beach restaurants were ordered to shut on Javea’s popular Arenal beach. Hundreds of jobs are on the line and thousands of tourists were left puzzled just as the summer season approaches. A flood of social media messages have slammed Javea council for its actions and the ‘damage’ it is doing to the local economy. Edgar Slama, owner of the Javea Company, has organised a ‘solidarity event’ this Thursday evening in an effort to put pressure on the town hall to rethink its order.

May 19th - June 1st 2022

Call to action

The gathering on his venue Bambula’s terrace starting at 7pm will take the form of a ‘cacerola’ concert with people asked to bring pots and pans. The Valencian authorities have ruled the seven outlets do not have the necessary licences. They also claimed the businesses have not informed the coastal authorities over use of protected land. While firmly denied, and stressing payments had been going to the authorities, Javea council sent in police on Tuesday to shut two restaurants, Acqua and Bambula. Frenchman Slamar says he has

all the required papers to trade and has filed an appeal in the Alicante courts. “This is unfair and discriminatory action by Javea Council and I ask them how many businesses lack a proper licence but are allowed to remain open?” he asked. He has received an enormous amount of support online and on social media, as well as from local businesses. One expat boss, Sam Kelly, described the bars as ‘very successful and well run businesses’. “This will ruin the town and cost hundreds of jobs. It could even affect property prices.”

Getting testy THOUSANDS of British expats have been left unable to drive legally in Spain after the failure to strike a bilateral deal. And they are getting angrier about it, with dozens speaking out slamming the British government for betraying them. In most cases, they are longterm expats who were either wrongly informed, let down by bureaucracy or were even defrauded. They include 62-year-old Alastair Carmichael, resident

Anger mounts over driving licence ‘betrayal’ for Brits in Spain despite possible deal still in the offing in Spain for most of his life and who is now stranded in the small town of Lloreda in Cantabria and even one of our own staff Tina Brace. According to sources Spanish authorities have not agreed a deal because the UK refused to give Spain access to its vehicle owner database so it can chase up holidaymakers with unpaid driving fines. Marbella lawyer Mark Wilkins has vowed to hold the British government to account for its inaction: “This is a preposterous position. The government

would rather protect British tourist law breakers than the legitimate interests of the legally Spanish resident British population.”

Paralyzed

Wilkins, who has directly contacted transport minister Grant Schapps, told the Olive Press: “We must offer a hand of cooperation to the British Government who seem paralyzed.” The British Embassy this week told the Olive Press it is

still working on an agreement to allow the exchange of driving licences without the need for a Spanish test. Since May 1, Brits resident in Spain for at least six months and hadn’t yet swapped their licences for a Spanish one can no longer legally drive here. Ambassador Hugh Elliott explained that he sympathises with the hardships caused. He said: “If your inability to drive is putting you in a very vulnerable situation, you can always contact your nearest consulate for advice.”

Dun roaming KING Juan Carlos will return to his former realm this weekend for the first visit since he fled into exile in Abu Dhabi in August 2020. The scandal-hit monarch will attend a yachting regatta in Galicia. He will then travel to Madrid to meet with his son King Felipe. The exhead of state, 84, who abdicated in favour of his son in 2014 left Spain in the wake of a series of damaging financial scandals. The return comes after a judicial investigation into his secret fortune was shelved on technical grounds, despite finding that the former king had evaded more than €50 million in tax by failing to declare offshore accounts.

Water hazard DRINKING water supplies had to be cut off after toxins more than 1,000 times over permitted levels were found Now a Castellon waste management factory owner is being investigated over a toxic discharge that forced supplies to be cut off for a fortnight at a Vall d'Uixo industrial estate. Police had been called in following a report of polluted water.

Toxic

They discovered a strong smell coming from the drinking water, which had a whitish appearance. Inquiries revealed that the pollution came from a hazardous waste company. A breakdown in the firm's production process led to toxic waste seeping into the drinking water network.

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END OF SUFFERING

IT’S taken 82 years, but a group of families in Valencia have finally received the remains of their dead relatives executed by dictator Franco. It comes after the infamous Pit 111 of Paterna cemetery gave up the remains of 21 republican soldiers after years of exhumation work. The group had been executed by firing squads in the aftermath of the war. Many of the family members who attended the ceremony to collect their remains wore the colours of the Span-

ish Republican flag. They included Lina Torres, whose father Amadeo Torres was only 28 when he was shot in the head by nationalist forces. Meanwhile, the dau ghter of Regino Garcia, said: “They gave him a summary trial and then they shot him. “By then, we’d already been through a year of misery. We didn’t have to look for his remains for years because my mother always knew which grave he was in.”

Valencia city not bluffing

VALENCIA city is to name a street after cartoonist Carlos Gomez Carrera, also known as ‘Bluff’, who was shot after lampooning former dictator Francisco Franco. Although they have yet to decide which street will be renamed it will be near one named after his friend and colleague, journalist Carceller in the Malilla district. “He was one of the most significant cartoonists of the Second Republic,” said a spokesman for Valencia City Hall. He was executed in 1940 in Valencia’s Modelo prison, where he was being held, for some of the drawings which were published in the prison’s magazine.

Sad farewell LEN PRIOR who had his ‘illegal’ home demolished by order of the Junta despite having a building licence from the town hall, has died aged 77. He and wife Helen spent 14 years living in their garage after the bulldozers flattened their Vera (Almeria) villa in 2008. The local council was eight years later ordered to pay compensation. In 2016 a law came in to protect homeowners who bought in good faith from having their homes demolished until compensation was agreed .


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NEWS FEATURE

www.theolivepress.es Voted top expat paper in Spain

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

OPINION Have a heart ‘RULES are rules’ says Javea council over the enforced closure of seven popular Arenal beach bars and restaurants, accused of flouting urban planning laws. The businesses have gone to court to try to resume trading but this is hardly good news for Javea. Think of the staff and owners - already badly hit by the pandemic - trying to earn an honest crust. Jobs are in the balance and what about the many local and tourist visitors they attract, bringing cash into the local economy? Yes, rules have to be followed but there’s a whiff of injustice that the Arenal businesses seem to have been singled out. They say they have followed the law to the letter, getting all the right licences. They’re also upset that less law-abiding enterprises seem to be going untouched. Javea council may have had to do the bidding of the Valencian Anti-Fraud Agency over the closures, but some heartfelt support and assistance to people who have dedicated everything to making their businesses work for the benefit of the area might not have gone amiss.

Surely not INSURANCE companies are frequently in the firing line for their heartless treatment of claims and continual blocking of payouts. But their blatant failing of an expat couple in Murcia proves just how low they sometimes stoop. How the health insurance firm failed to help the couple after failing to answer an emergency line is shocking in the extreme. When such a firm’s entire business is based on the concept of protecting people from financial loss they simply cannot be allowed to get away with not paying a loyal customer what the time comes for a claim. It is cases like this that surely call for a review into the industry, which seems to be getting shadier by the day.

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FROM BUST TO

E

ASTER is the unofficial start date for the Spanish tourism season, and with hotels averaging 85% occupancy during the holy week, the year looks set to be a bumper one. The figures for April - down just 6% on 2019 - suggest that Spain is back on everyone’s bucket list this year. Yet, you use hotels rather than run them, it’s easy to forget how apocalyptic everything looked back at Easter in 2020. The president of the Spanish Hotel Association, Manuel Vegas, told me at the time: “I’ve been through the economic crisis and the Madrid train bombing, but they were phases to be endured after which we moved on. “It’s the uncertainty that is having a negative effect. However, we have to keep going for future generations. I believe we’ll get out of this. I want to be optimistic.” Two years on, and there is optimism aplenty – even a bit of swagger. It comes after a record €3.2 billion was invested in hotels last year, despite the tricky travel restrictions, further waves of Covid, and low visitor numbers. In total, 75 new hotels are set to open over the coming three years (according to TopHotelsProjects) adding another 14,225 new rooms between now and 2025. “The reaffirmation of Spain as a preferred destination for international-level hotel investment is positive,” explains Laura Hernando, boss of the hotel sector at Colliers International. And she expects it to continue at a similar level for the next few years. Super-luxurious properties are opening across the country. The launch of Barcelo’s Canfranc Estación, a Royal Hideaway Hotel, in Aragon last year is one of them, as is the 500-room Club Med resort this month in Marbella. In contrast to predictions in 2020 that a quarter of the hotels along the Costa del Sol would shut down for good, most have survived and plenty more are set to be reborn. They include Hotel Byblos, in Mijas, where the Rolling Stones and Princess Diana stayed

Spain’s hotel sector is charging back stronger and fitter post-pandemic, discovers Sorrell Downer

MODERN: inside Med Magna Marbella’s restaurant and a typical bedroom in the 1980s, soon to reopen as a Hyatt hotel called La Zambra. Then there’s the vibrant, adults only Hard Rock Marbella, which will offer visitors 385 rooms and a good time from June, as well as the five-star METT Hotel opening west of Marbella for summer. Further west look out for the newly-opened Ikos in Estepona, as well as the Silken Maravilla Palace which launches after a two-year delay nearby. Oh and Lionel Messi recently opened his sixth hotel, the MIM, in Sotogrande. By 2025 the Costa del Sol will also include the W and Four Seasons brands in Marbella. “The coast has changed enormously for the better,” believes Javier Hernandez of the AEHCOS hotel association. “International tourists will definitely notice a change for the better – not only will their perception of resorts such as Torremolinos, Benalmadena and Marbella change, but they’ll be surprised by the new level of professionalism.” His counterpart on the Costa Blanca, Toni

Sir James Goldsmith JUST as famous for his personal life than his business dealings, Goldsmith’s antics and extramarital affairs filled many column inches of the British tabloid press. The business tycoon died at a farmhouse he owned in Benahavis in July 1997 at the age of 64, with speculation his family hastily flew him to Spain to avoid paying a larger death tax. STATUS Quo were indeed rockin’ all over the world – and for almost half a century. Rhythm guitarist Parfitt was key to the band’s success, which included a record 60 UK chart hits. A drug and alcohol-fuelled lifestyle led to a triple heart bypass in 1997, but he cleaned up his act and lived until December 2016, eventually dying of sepsis in hospital in Marbella.

Mayor, from HOSBEC, feels much the same way about Benidorm: “So many hotels changed hands like the Fenicia, Rosamar and Primavera Park but they are all reopening, upgraded,” he explained. In particular, the grand old Benelux is due to reopen as Hotel Mercure Benidorm on June 1, while Pierre & Vacances is stepping in to spruce up Hotel Palm Beach. “Luckily, we had five strong years before the pandemic; not one hotel has suffered. Easter saw occupancy similar to 2019, mainly British, so we are all happy. “There’s a lot of faith in the resurrection of tourism, in the industry’s resilience.” And it’s not just beach resorts that have benefitted from multi-million investments. The rapid transformation of Madrid’s hotel

Never forgotten

Following Dennis Waterman’s death near La Manga, George Mathias remembers eight other foreign celebs who ended their days in Spain

S

PAIN is the retirement destination of choice for many rich and famous – and a few infamous. Inev-

itably, over the years, those big names pass on (and not always from old age). Here are 8 long gone but not forgotten:

Freddie Starr FOREVER known for the British tabloid headline ‘Freddie Starr Ate My Hamster’, the stand-up comedian and actor started out as a singer in the early 1960s before finding fame on Opportunity Knocks (winning it six times) and the Royal Variety Performance. He was found dead at his home in Mijas, Costa del Sol, in May 2019, aged 76.

Rick Parfitt

Denholm Elliott WELL-KNOWN for roles in Alfie, A Private Function, A Room with a View and the Indiana Jones films, English character actor Elliott died of Aids-related tuberculosis at his Ibiza home in Santa Eularia des Riu in October 1992, aged 70.

Bing Crosby POPULAR and prolific, Crosby made over 70 films and recorded more than 1,600 songs. The American crooner collapsed and died instantly from a massive heart attack just after finishing 18 holes of golf with Spanish golf champ Manuel Piñero at La Moraleja Golf Course in Madrid in October 1977.

Willie Thorne FAMED for his break-building, the former snooker pro and BBC commentator died aged 66 at Torrevieja Hospital on Spain’s Costa Blanca in June 2020, following a battle with leukemia.


May 19th - June 1st 2022

www.theolivepress.es

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HIP: The stunning reform of Aragon’s new Canfranc hotel landscape is breathtaking. In August 2020, 70% of hotels (including all but four of the five-star properties) were closed, with doomsayers predicting many might not make it through the crisis. That Four Seasons Madrid chose to launch one month later showed enormous faith in the bounce back ability of Spanish tourism. “Completely true,” agrees PR boss Marta Centeno. “The decision was made considering the situation of the pandemic and with all safety measures in place. It was a way to bring a ray of sunshine following the strict lockdown, some positivity to the market and to Madrid.” And while business was understandably slow for two years, this year bookings are strong. “Madrid is becoming an international hotspot and we are attracting visitors that would have never considered the city in their travel plans,” she adds.

Cilla Black CHAMPIONED by The Beatles, fellow-Liverpudlian Cilla shot to the top of the UK charts with Anyone Who Had a Heart and You’re My World in 1964. Following a long, successful singing career she became a gameshow supremo, hosting TV classics Blind Date and Surprise Surprise. The iconic star died at the age of 72, after falling at her house in Estepona on the Costa del Sol in August 2015 Roy Kinnear A FAMILIAR face on British TV, Kinnear was also a film actor, with roles in The Three Musketeers and the original Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory. While filming The Return of the Musketeers in Toledo in September 1988, he fell off a horse, broke his pelvis and suffered internal bleeding. He was taken to hospital in Madrid but died of a heart attack the following day, aged 54.

KEEPING THE WORLD INFORMED

T was a full 12 hours before the world’s media caught up with our exclusive that police had found traces of missing toddler Madeleine McCann in Portugal. Revealed by an Olive Press source, we ran it having checked first with the German prosecutor leading an investigation against prime suspect Christian Brueckner. Not only the Mail, Sun and Mirror followed it up but over the next two days, international outfits including El Pais, the Telegraph and the New Zealand Herald took up the story. But more was to follow when our story, last issue, about Brueckner being probed over five sex attacks, including one on a beach just 19 days before Maddie vanished in 2007, ended up on the Sun’s front page this Sunday (right). CHASE : In a further two-page spe- MYSTAR SEX ULT cial inside (below), our ed- ASSA ORDEAL Klopp’s kings clinch cup itor Jon Clarke was joined BRUECKNER BID TO HIDE I.D. by German investigative journalist Jutta Rabe to pen a 1,500-word piece on the state of the case. As Clarke pointed out in our last issue, Brueckner is set to be charged with at least three sex crimes in the coming weeks. The German drifter, who spent a lot of time in southern Spain and Portugal, will face the music ‘by mid-June’. Two further cases and charges over Maddie - who was abductEXCLUSIVE ed while on holiday in Praia da By JON CLARKE & Luz, age 3 - will come by the end JUTTA RABE of the year. Whether it’s crime, the enviPROSECUTORS are confident Madeleine McCann ronment or prime suspect Christian Brueckner will be charged politics, the CKNER BRUE INTO E P PROB N ON this year over her disapS CLAIM BOMBSHELL Olive Press pearance and a sex attack on another little girl. has its finIt comes after we supplied German police with a dossier ger on the of some of the evidence from our own probes into the 45-year-old monster. pulse. We have exposed gaping holes in Brueckner’s claims of innocence. Its young Our investigations found the GerPROBE man worked for a firm doing jobs at the Portugal holiday apartments team of where Madeleine went missing — and knew the place “inside out”. journalists And the convicted paedophile and rapist had dental surgery on potentially incriminating buck are probteeth just months after she disappeared from the Ocean Club in ing over a Praia da Luz in 2007. That revelation is hugely importantCUTORS as he ARE has repeatedly tried to dozen big lPROSE distance himself from a nearby MOVE ‘CONFIDENT’ OF child sex attack 19 days before ON TO ATTACK stories a lLINK Madeleine vanished aged three. DAYS BEFORE GIRL 19 On April 9, 2007, a ten-year-old German girl was playing on the month. beach at Salema — just seven SHOWBIZ EXCLUSIVE

Sunday, May 15, 2022

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MADDIE MONSTER IN SECRET FACE OP Hunt . . youngster

18,000 establishments around Spain would have gone bust if it hadn’t been for the ERTE, Hotspot is an understatement. The capital is the government job retention and furlow a showcase for white-hot brands and design- plan. The rise of the Spanish Staycation really helped too, he adds. ers – and they just keep coming. group that really focussed on this sector The Madrid EDITION opened in March, nearSunday, One May 15, 2022 4 ............... Puerto del Sol, with interiors by John Pawson was the Califa group with three hotels around and Ian Schrager, while Philippe Starck is Vejer, Cadiz. creating the look for Brach Madrid, to open Its boss, expat James Stewart believes the next year. And let’s not forget the Ritz just pandemic was an ideal opportunity to attract reopened looking fabulous, as Olive Press domestic tourists. “As a year round average 45% of our clients editor Jon Clarke reported this Spring. Among other upcoming attractions are the come from outside Spain, but during the panThompson Madrid and JW Marriott and plen- demic 98% of our business was from national ty more visits by Hollywood star Robert de tourism,” he explains. Niro (below) who opens a Nobu Hotel here “At first, with the municipal lockdown, the only potential clients lived locally, which was pretty next year. Meanwhile, OKU Ibiza delayed its opening by useless. But both 2020 and 2021 summers a year, but thanks to ‘bold plans’ it opened were very strong – in fact we had our busiest last year and has surpassed all expectations, summer ever last year, and that’s with no international tourism at all. despite Covid. “It was the right decision,” explains brand “We got so many new clients. The Spaniards manager Claire Morrissey. “Our first year’s who previously didn’t come are now booking s u c c e s s ahead and the Brits can’t get a room. surpassed “We had losses, but on reflection, we’ve all expecta- come out of it very well.” Another expat hotelier based in inland Cadiz tions.” But how was very pleased with the Spanish clientele was it for levels, but is most worried now about finding hoteliers try- staff. ing to work “When we reopened, it was scary,” says through the Mona Arain Crites of Hotel al Lago, in Zahara de la Sierra. “Now we are fully booked, but pandemic? Jesus Me- struggling to find the staff because people nendez, of are used to being at home. Covid is still an evHotel Mys- er-evolving problem, and it’s just hard to know tery Guest, what’s coming next.” b e l i e v e s Spain’s hotel association boss Manuel Vegas 5,000 of is feeling more hopeful, but agrees. a r o u n d “The pandemic isn’t over, but it has subsided, thank God, and, using common sense, we can move forward. “Tourism has recovered at a very significant speed, thanks to the internal drive and European tourists. We are almost at 2019 figures. “But you never know what’s next and we are always dependent on external elements that cannot be manipulated, such as the fuel crisis or Ukraine. SPLENDOUR: One of Califa group’s pools and (above) De Niro at “All that said, I remain optimistic.” the Ritz

Hotspot

APRIL 2007

Suspect Brueckner had protruding teeth at time

EXCLUSIVE By TOM WELLS

SEPTEMBER 2007 He had them straightened in dental op soon after

V2

MADELEINE McCann prime suspect Christian Brueckner had a facechanging op four months after she vanished, a TV investigation has found. The paedo’s jaw was reset and four distinctive “rabbit” teeth straightened in a secret visit to Continued on Page Five

BOMBSHELL CLAIMS ON N

Monster will face Maddie charges this year

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lPROSECUTORS ARE ‘CONFIDENT’ OF MOVE lLINK TO ATTACK ON GIRL 19 DAYS BEFORE

APRIL 2007

Monster will face Maddie charges this year

E-fit of buck-toothed suspect lurking near McCann pad, and Brueckner then

EXCLUSIVE

SEPTEMBER 2007 Brueckner after dental reconstruction surgery months later back in Germany

By

JON CLARKE & JUTTA RABE

PROSECUTORS are confident Madeleine McCann prime suspect Christian Brueckner will be charged this year over her disappearance and a sex attack on another little girl.

It comes after we supplied German police with a dossier of some of the evidence from the our own probes into 45-year-old monster.

in We have exposed gaping holes Brueckner’s claims of innocence. GerOur investigations found the jobs man worked for a firm doing at the Portugal holiday apartments — where Madeleine went missing out”. and knew the place “inside And the convicted paedophile on and rapist had dental surgerybuck incriminating potentially disapteeth just months after sheClub in peared from the Ocean Praia da Luz in 2007. That revelation is hugely importried to tant as he has repeatedly nearby distance himself from a before child sex attack 19 days Madeleine vanished aged three. ten-year-old a 2007, On April 9, on the German girl was playing seven beach at Salema — just man miles away — when a naked approached her. Speaking in German, the pervert pergrabbed her arm and began himself forming a sex act on parents before the girl’s horrified direcarrived and he fled in thedo Rio tion of Brueckner’s Boca beach haunt. of They gave cops a description with a young, tanned white manon his short blond hair, a bandage — and, arm, marks on his body teeth crucially, four protruding from his upper jaw. idenThe girl, now 25, has since near tified Brueckner, who lived as Praia da Luz for seven years, police — the suspect to German rabbit”. saying he looked “like a Germany Brueckner, in jail in for raping a 72-year-old American fiercely tourist in Portugal, has perv. denied he was the beach stems But perhaps his confidence from knowing he had drastically after. changed his appearance soon For we can reveal he secretly Lisbon flew back to Germany from denin September 2007 for major surgery. tal reconstruction his His teeth were repaired and in jaw reset at a private clinic typiWuerzburg, Bavaria — an op euros. cally costing around 9,000 this The German police have now evidence and prosecutors are over confident he will be charged the Salema case — and Madeleine’s. The Sun has previously reported an FBIan e-fit drawn up by 2008 also trained artist in January showed a suspect with prominent “sticking out” teeth. the He was seen lurking neartimes McCanns’ apartment three Police on the night she vanished. down later claimed to have tracked and ruled out the suspect. ChrisGerman prosecutor Hans he tian Wolters told us last week to proshas “everything he needs” referring was He ecute Brueckner. girl but to the case of the German also to Madeleine. that We can also today disclose will he prosecutors have told us charges “definitely” face further and early “between the end of May

Brueckner knew each and every apartment at Ocean Club — FRIEND WHO WORKED AT HOLIDAY COMPLEX

We have everything we need to prosecute Brueckner — WHAT PROSECUTOR TOLD INVESTIGATORS

Scene . . . holiday complex where Madeleine vanished

Hunt goes on . . . Madeleine was three when she went missing in Portugal in 2007

serfiend worked for a technical jobs vice company that often did at the holiday complex. apart“He knew each and every inside ment. He knew the locationtold us. June”. out, he knew the locks,” he tools They also include the alleged tour “He was very good with as abduction and rape of Irish and machines and had trained rep Hazel Behan and indecent at an a car mechanic. He often mounted veranexposure to four children canopies on balconies and Algarve play park in 2017. at the Ocean Club.” have Meanwhile, other sourcesto the das But the former office administrada Luz linked Brueckner further tor, who lived near Praia Ocean Club. for 25 years, had “no suspicions had One old friend, whose identity him in about him.” He added: “He we we are protecting, first met the this lovely girlfriend Silke and Portugal in 1995. He revealed

miles away — when a naked man approached her. Speaking in German, the pervert grabbed her arm and began performing a sex act on himself before the girl’s horrified parents arrived and he fled in the direction of Brueckner’s Boca do Rio beach haunt. They gave cops a description of a young, tanned white man with short blond hair, a bandage on his arm, marks on his body — and, crucially, four protruding teeth from his upper jaw. The girl, now 25, has since identified Brueckner, who lived near Praia da Luz for seven years, as the suspect to German police — saying he looked “like a rabbit”. Brueckner, in jail in Germany for raping a 72-year-old American tourist in Portugal, has fiercely denied he was the beach perv. But perhaps his confidence stems from knowing he had drastically changed his appearance soon after. For we can reveal he secretly flew back to Germany from Lisbon in September 2007 for major dental reconstruction surgery. His teeth were repaired and his jaw reset at a private clinic in Wuerzburg, Bavaria — an op typically costing around 9,000 euros. The German police have this evidence and prosecutors are now confident he will be charged over the Salema case — and Madeleine’s. The Sun has previously reported an e-fit drawn up by an FBItrained artist in January 2008 also showed a suspect with prominent “sticking out” teeth. He was seen lurking near the McCanns’ apartment three times on the night she vanished. Police later claimed to have tracked down and ruled out the suspect. German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters told us last week he has “everything he needs” to prosecute Brueckner. He was referring to the case of the German girl but also to Madeleine. We can also today disclose that prosecutors have told us he will “definitely” face further charges “between the end of May and early June”. They also include the alleged abduction and rape of Irish tour rep Hazel Behan and indecent exposure to four children at an Algarve play park in 2017. Meanwhile, other sources have linked Brueckner further to the Ocean Club. One old friend, whose identity we are protecting, first met him in Portugal in 1995. He revealed the

the enquiry is closed.” 2007 — the night moment, they pursued the evidence, twice. Mr ning of May 3, vanished — telling her Had discovered find it viewed her at length have would police are still in touch. I still done so Wolters told us last week: “She Madeleine perfectly he was “on a long journey”. had Brueckner, then 30, almost hard to believe that he has doesn’t trouble us at all.” investigaAppalling police blunders many bad things.” potentially matched the description. During our painstaking in or television British that prevented him from bars before At the time, he often stayed week, Last tions, we have established being behind Boca do Rio in his VW investigator Mark Williams-Thomas prosecutors have checked every one already from Rothley, Leics, around girlfriends. the McCanns, Westfalia camper van. said he was convinced Brueckner and case. of Brueckner’s former in Portugal 15 years ago. Instead, no action was taken had an alibi in the Madeleineclaims “None could give a clear testi- arrived days after the sickening Five disappeared soon after. Mr Wolters dismissed his agree. police captain Madeleine mony,” one source told us. lived indecent exposure, a Brueckner was not questioned within 24 hours — and we One ex, Nicole Fehlinger,over a dismissed pursuing the suspect. is a incident. Brueckner’s supposed alibi have about eitherand with him on and off forprison in Jon Clarke are working on a In his report, which we l JUTTA Rabe of into 17-year-old German holidaymaker looking documentary in a year after he got out 2006 follow- exclusively obtained, he writes: “As television and Madeleine’s disappearance. Jon’s book, My whom he claims to have been Portugal in December there is nothing more to report relationship with at the time. of carrying Search For Madeleine, is available on Amazon ing a sentence for theft. had there is no possibility We can today reveal German the and as an audio book. She told German police he exisany due diligence at police have known about her inter- actually called her during the eve- out have and tence for years

Continued from Page One a private dental clinic in Germany. He flew from Portugal, where he was living close to the scene of Madeleine’s May 2007 disappearance, to his homeland for the op that September with the global hunt for the three-year-old at its peak. Soon after, a sketch by an FBI-trained artist showed a man with protruding teeth who had been seen lurking near the McCanns’ holiday apartment in Praia da Luz. And a girl subjected to a sickening indecent exposure nearby — 19 days before Madeleine went missing — also told cops of the culprit’s “sticking out teeth”. Sources said he later renewed his German passport before flying back to Portugal after the estimated £7,500 op In another twist, a new witness revealed Brueckner knew the hols complex where Madeleine vanished “inside out” after working there as an odd-job man. The bombshell evidence was uncovered by two investigative TV film-makers now liaising closely with prosecutors. dismantle they Today Brueckner’s defence — and set out why prosecutors are convinced he is their man. The fiend, 45, is currently languishing in a German jail for another sex crime. Journalists Jon Clarke and Jutta Rabe, who has worked for German channel SAT1, today write in The Sun on Sunday he is likely to face charges for the vile exposure incident — and in relation to Madeleine’s case German “The said: They prosecutor told us he has everything he needs to prosecute Brueckner.”

Please get in touch if you have a story at newsdesk@theolivepress.es

The top five most read stories on www.theolivepress.es in the past two weeks are:

dies after cliff dive on Spain’s Mallor1-caTourist takes tragic twist with girlfriend recording it on phone Calima Sahara sand: Calima 2- Carry onreturns to Spain’s Andalucia EXCLUSIVE: €10.000 a year expat school 3-forced to close doors after stinging inspection These four seaside towns are officially the 4-sunniest in Spain and they’re not on the Costa del Sol Hunt goes on . . . Madeleine was three when she went missing in Portugal in 2007

fiend worked for a technical service company that often did jobs at the holiday complex. “He knew each and every apartment. He knew the location inside out, he knew the locks,” he told us. “He was very good with tools and machines and had trained as a car mechanic. He often mounted canopies on balconies and verandas at the Ocean Club.” But the former office administrator, who lived near Praia da Luz for 25 years, had “no suspicions about him.” He added: “He had this lovely girlfriend Silke and we

are still in touch. I still find it hard to believe that he has done so many bad things.” Last week, British television investigator Mark Williams-Thomas said he was convinced Brueckner had an alibi in the Madeleine case. Mr Wolters dismissed his claims within 24 hours — and we agree. Brueckner’s supposed alibi is a 17-year-old German holidaymaker whom he claims to have been in a relationship with at the time. We can today reveal German police have known about her existence for years and have inter-

Dennis Waterman dies 5- Legendary TVatactor home in Spain

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viewed her Wolters told doesn’t troub During our tions, we h prosecutors h of Brueckne “None could mony,” one s One ex, N with him on year after he Portugal in D ing a senten She told G actually calle


8

GREEN

www.theolivepress.es

May 19th - June 1st 2022

Breath of air By Kimberley Mannion

MADRID’S Royal Botanic Gardens have been given a makeover with investment from Chanel. The design house restored the Botanic Gardens’ rose garden in 2021, which is home to 140 different types of roses, and this year will fund the introduction of nine new species of rose as well as pay for new courses for students. The gardens are viewed as a key ‘green lung’ for the capital, helping improve air quality and the lives of local residents.

Train

Thanks to Chanel, courses on the ‘Installation and maintenance of gardens and green areas’ and the ‘management and maintenance of trees and ornamental plants’ will train people between the ages of 18 to 24 for careers in the field. Another two courses will be funded on medicinal and aromatic plants, as well as a perfume workshop in the gardens’ Quercus school. The Royal Botanic Gardens have recently fully reopened after several of the gardens’ points of interest were restored including the gates, arbours and 30 decorative fountains.

Cultural

Work began almost a year ago after areas classified as Assets of Cultural Interest (BICs), such as the Puerta del Rey and sections of Paseo del Prado were found to be deteriorating. Funding to repair the green site came from the Spanish Ministry of Transport, Mobility and Urban Agenda’s program for Historical Heritage Conservation and the government’s Higher Council for Scientific Research (CSIC).

Chanel helps to restore Madrid’s ‘green lung’

The Gardens have been a feature of UNESCO’s World Heritage List since July 2021, and those involved in its management emphasise its significance to science and botany in Spain.

KITTY KILLERS

SPANISH scientists have labelled cats as killers and are opposing a new Bill that would protect feral moggies. A letter signed by Spanish scientists from several universities and institutions calls cats ‘the most damaging invasive predator for biodiversity’. Based on their research, predation by cats beats hunting and cars as a killer of small animals and birds, particularly on the Balearic and Canary Islands. The scientists have criticised a government Bill intended to grant protection to groups of feral cats, replacing slaughter, which has eradicated populations, with fertility control. The group fear this could lead to even larger groups of cats roaming Spain and having a negative effect on biodiversity.

The many excuses for inaction are putting us in trouble

PROMISES LIE IN TATTERS

THE bottom line is we’re in trouble’. This was the harrowing statement by US climate envoy John Kerry. Just six months on from COP-26 in Glasgow, promises and commitments made by the world’s leaders lie in tatters. Regular readers of this column are familiar with the need to restrict global warming to less than 1.5C by the end of this century. That’s 78 years away. According to a UN report, the world is on track to warm by 3.2C this century.

footballer in the 1970s). In 1973 a waiter was delivering champagne and caviar to a hotel room. He opens the door to see George Best lying on the bed with his girlfriend (the then Miss World), surrounded by piles of cash he had won in the casino the previous night. The newspapers of the time were focusing on his drop in form on the pitch. The waiter, seeing his idol surrounded by empty champagne bottles, cash and Miss World asked... “So, Bestie, where did it all go wrong?”

BIG TROUBLE FOR PLANET EARTH The consequences of our collective inaction will result in unprecedented heatwaves, widespread water shortages, terrifying storms, death and destruction of human life and nature. When COP-26 President Alok Sharma closed the gathering in Glasgow, he claimed the conference was a ‘fragile win’ for the world. Fragile means easily breakable. The agreed target was to keep warming to a maximum of 1.5C by 2100. The United Kingdom’s Met Office researchers say that it is a 50/50 chance that the world will warm by more than 1.5C in the next five years!

The reasons for government inaction are many. Vladimir Putin’s insane invasion of Ukraine has led to disruption in global fossil fuel supplies. This is good news long term for the world, as it has accelerated plans to deploy more renewable energy - wind , solar etc, much faster than originally planned. But it is bad news in the short term as we return to increased use of coal and gas to fuel our energy-hungry way of life. It’s sad to see some countries placing higher importance on securing alternatives to Russian oil and gas supplies than reducing carbon emissions.

Let me lighten the mood for a moment. ‘WHERE DID IT ALL GO WRONG?’ A famous and humorous quotation popularised by an incident involving George Best (the most famous

Sadly the reasons for our climate’s destruction are not funny.

NOT ENOUGH FINANCIAL SUPPORT In 2021, developed countries committed to $100 billion of annual aid to help fight carbon emissions. Apart from my own view that this is nowhere near enough (too little, too late), the UK government recently stated that this will not be achieved in 2022 but it was confident the target would be hit by 2023. Talk about kicking the problem down the road… Developing countries, without necessary investment, continue to harm the world’s environment.

Green

WARNING: John Kerry says we are in trouble India is a prime example. Desperate to grow its economy, demand continues to surge. Coal India, the world’s largest coal miner, has increased production by more than 15% and it’s still not enough to supply local demand. Power outages are regular. Earlier than expected, searing heatwaves in April (global warming….no surprise) pushed up demand for electricity to record levels. How is the electricity produced? COAL. What does burning coal do? DESTROYS THE ENVIRONMENT. (India’s coal is high in ash - 35% more, which makes it highly polluting.) Some100,000 Indians die every year through coal emissions according to Greenpeace. GOVERNMENTS FINANCIAL PRIORITIES HAVE CHANGED Sad but true. As the world faces the absurd actions of the lunatic Putin, finances have had to be diverted to funding an unnecessary war effort. This avoidable, futile and needless war results in killing not only human life, but also the environment.

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

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Moraira MARVELLOUS

May 2022

Close to Benidorm yet a world apart - discover the Spanish charmer with expat appeal

J

UST half an hour from builtup Benidorm, you’ll find one of the most relaxed seaside towns in Spain. Oozing with charm, Moraira is one of the Costa Blanca’s clas-

By Kimberley Mannion sic old fishing villages, and it remains full of history and tradition, and largely unspoiled to-

We also have delicious pies and Scotch eggs. We have gluten free and Keto diet options as well. Contact us for any special requests. Call for details about delivery.

Open 7 days a week, early til late.

day. You won’t find signs for English breakfasts or lager at one euro a pint here, this is an upmarket resort as popular with refined Spaniards as it is with upmarket

foreign tourists-in-the-know. This is not to say Moraira is undiscovered by holidaymakers – far from it. Continues on next page


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May 2022

Moraira

BEAUTY: Much of Moraira’s charm comes from the stunning coves

From front

CHARM AND CALM The demographics confirm its status as a popular tourist destination. Moraira’s population of around 10,000, more than triples to 36,000 in summer. And more than half the people who live here are expats. “It is such a beautiful place to live. Every morning I have the privilege of a commute to the office via the stunning coast road, and every day it puts a smile on my face, even in the winter weather,” explains Helen Tye, of Coast and Country Properties. “I cannot think of anywhere else I would rather be. It’s a wonderful place for children to grow up, it has a great community, and it is unbelievably pretty. It is close enough to the airport for people to visit, but small and friendly with lovely beaches and lots of restaurants.” Restaurateur Honorato Ibanez, 60, agrees. “The peace here is the main thing. It’s just cortijos and campo. There is almost no stress and there are not even

traffic lights.” It is 35 years since he moved here from his native Granada and he has seen some changes. In particular in the demographics of the types of foreigners who came to settle here. “Originally there were loads of among the top attractions. Germans alongside the British, Dating back to the 18th century, but the Brits, by far our preferred the structure served as a defencustomers, really started to do- ce against attacks from Berber pirates, and was one in a chain minate. “Today there are plenty, but now of watchtowers working together we also have many Dutch and to warn each other of incoming Belgians and generally a nice all offensives. Today, the tower is more comround mix.” It’s this international commu- monly used for enjoying the nity that really appealed to bu- stunning views it offers of the sinesswoman Amanda Bourne, Moraira coastline than looking 58, who moved here six years out for pirates. From the top, you can see the ago to take over Poharbour, beaches, lly’s bookshop. and Penyal d’Ifac “I love the multiculNatural Park, as Moraira’s tural mix. This morwell as the gorgeous ning alone I had a Mediterranean shades of blue of the Hungarian, a FrenMediterranean. coast is ideal chman, a Dutch The watchtower can couple and a Scoufor lovers of be accessed by a ser, enter the shop” fairly easy hike from explains the former watersports Portet beach, one teacher. of the most popular “But best of all I like playas. You will find it here because it is NOT Javea. a marked footpath leading up to It is so different in character and it from the end of Calle Puerto much less focused on tourism. “On top of that it feels really re- de Alcudia. laxed and safe. It shuts Another place to enjoy the area’s down at 3pm and only nature up close is at the Marjar slowly comes back to del Senillar nature reserve, located next to l’Ampolla beach. life in the evening.” While this changes a The site was given nature reserve bit in the summer status in 2004 and its several lawhen the hordes goons are home to many species do at times des- of plants and animals, some of cend, the town which are in danger of extincalways maintains tion. its old school Spa- Slightly outside Moraira and only nish charm and accessible by boat, though well picture perfect tra- worth the trip, are the Caves of Les Rates, a site which was also ditional feel. And while a great declared a protected reserve in choice for a fami- 2004. ly beach holiday, The caves are home to historic there is still plen- artefacts from the Bronze Age, ty to see beyond along with several species of its beautiful bea- bats. Visits are not encouraged between the months of April and ches. For most tourists, August when the bats are brethe Cap D’Or eding. Every good coastal watchtower is town needs a

VIGIL: Ancient watchtower guarded against Berber pirates

good marina and Moraira is no exception. With a yacht club in addition to a fishing port, Moraira accommodates all seafarers, whether weighing anchor for work or pleasure. Fishing continues to be one of the most important sectors in the region’s economy, and the Fishermen’s Guild of Moraira, founded in 1929, is still going strong. Unsurprisingly, restaurants in the vicinity boast excellent fresh seafood, courtesy of the local fishermen.

Being located on the Mediterranean coast also makes Moraira an ideal retreat for lovers of watersports. It’s possible to rent kayaks and paddleboards at the most popular beaches, and at the marina. Best of all is the area’s snorkelling and thanks to clear water, you’ll see plenty of fish and starfish and beautiful rock formations without having to plunge in too deeply. Moraira’s busiest beach is Playa de l’Ampolla, thanks to its location next to the town centre. The next most popular is Playa el Portet, a blue flag beach and considered one of Costa Blanca’s very best. At the other end of the scale, if you are looking for a more secluded spot, try Llebeig Cove, one of many small coves carved into the cliffs along the Costa Blanca’s breathtaking coastline. If all that is not enough to keep you entertained, its prime location makes it an ideal base for day trips to nearby Javea and the inland Xalon valley, as well as the bigger cities of Alicante and Valencia. And there are always the fleshpots of Benidorm if you’re looking for that one off wild night out! But probably you’ll be happy just hanging out in Moraira.


List

Selling Your Property? ith us... w it

sell Avd. de la Paz 3 • 03724 Moraira +34 965 270 636 +34 693 554 967 @coastandcountry.properties info@ www.coastandcountry.properties


SIMPLY THE BEST Established in 2006 Select Villas has grown year on year and offers a multilingual team for an international market

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HETHER you want to buy or sell a home then Select Villas is the answer for you. With 16 years of experience in Moraira, they now have a team of eight professional, multilingual staff, between them speaking English, Spanish, French and Dutch, as well as German, Italian and Valenciano. Covering the coastline from Denia to Altea, and inland to the Jalon Valley, they offer a wide range of new and resale properties catering for all budgets, as well as a professional and efficient service for both buyers and vendors. Perhaps you are thinking of selling your property but have no idea where to start. This is where Select Villas can help you out. The expert staff can advise you on listing and selling, or buying a home. They can give you the inside take on the current market, the selling procedure, documentation needed and the costs involved. Not only that, but they offer a free valuation service, with no obligation for you to list with them. The professional team offers a package including a 20% reduction on the standard commission rate, free floor and site plans, a free 3D video tour and a free Energy Performance Certificate (ready at notary) to vendors who list with them exclusively.

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FEELING BEACHY T HERE is much more to see in and around Moraira than sea and sand, but it is still the perfect place for a beach holiday. From busy beaches with watersports and tourist activities, toilets and lifeguards, and easy access to bars and restaurants, to private and peaceful little

Llebeig Cove TUCKED away, and off the regular tourist trail is Llebeig Cove. Much harder to reach than Moraira’s two central beaches, you’ll need to hike a trail from neighbouring coves, or arrive by sea in a boat or kayak. The hassle of getting there is well worth it to see the hidden gem. The small idyllic cove feels like a private slice of paradise. Aside from a few old fishermen’s houses, there is nothing here but nature, so take what you need, including shade and water.

Contact them for further information on +34 616002993 (Telephone and WhatsApp) or email: enquiries@select-villas.es Go to www.select-villas.es for more information

‘Your home in the best hands’

SELECT Villas

‘We have the team and the tools to sell your property’ Multi-lingual Staff

Property Valuation

Collaborating Agents

We speak Spanish, English, German, French, Dutch, Italian & Valenciano.

We visit your property to discuss with you the most appropriate marketing and pricing strategy.

We work with an extensive network of local and foreign agents who can provide your property a greater visibility in the international market.

FREE SERVICE

Real Estate Showcase

Property Description

Vendor Private Area

We advertise your property in our office windows, located in a high-profile corner position.

We design your personalised property listing with attractive descriptions and up to 40 professional photographs of the interior and exterior of the house.

Log in to our private area for vendors and get access to your property performance information 24hrs from anywhere.

of Moraira

EXCLUSIVE VENDOR PACKAGE: Reduced commission from 5% to 4% (+IVA) FREE Floor & Site Plans • FREE 360 Video Tour • FREE Energy Performance Certificate (at notary)

Area covered: La Marina Alta - Denia to Calpe Avenida de Madrid 5, 03724 Moraira

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t: +34 616 002 993

Tough work but someone has to do it: Kimberley Mannion checks out all the many coves and beaches in Moraira and picks seven of the best

coves tucked into enclaves along the towering cliffs outside the centre, Moraira really does offer the full range of beach experiences. If you are driving or, especially, hiking to one of the more remote hidden gems, do remember to take everything you need with you and leave nothing behind.

Combined with full property descriptions, up to 40 professional photographs, worldwide advertising - international buyers ready and waiting to purchase - and an extensive network of collaborating agents, this gives you the very best chance of finding your buyer. They also give you 24-hour access to your own private vendor area, showing the property performance information so you can keep track of interest shown in your property. The team at Select Villas of Moraira passionately believes your buying and selling experience should be an enjoyable, risk-free, and stress-free experience.

We mediate between buyer and seller with fluent communication.

Morai

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www.select-villas.es

e: enquiries@select-villas.es


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Playa el Portet

MAKE THE RIGHT CHOICE

Avd. de la Paz 3 • 03724 Moraira +34 965 270 636 +34 693 554 967 info@ @coastandcountry.properties www.coastandcountry.properties

Those wanting to sell their property should make Coast and Country their first stop

C MORAIRA’S second busiest beach also has a blue flag. El Portet is smaller and picture perfect, with its unusual horseshoe-shaped beach curving around stunning turquoise clear water. A promenade

flanked by palm trees runs along its length, connecting beach-goers to shops, tapas bars and restaurants with sea views, so you can really set yourself up here for the day.

Cala del Moraig

Platgetes Beach

If you need any help sorting out your paperwork, getting a valuation or would like tips on making the process as easy as possible, pop in and see the team at Coast and Country in Moraira or give them a call on 965 270 636 or contact info@coastandcountry.properties

A COMBINATION of both rocks and sand, Platgetes beach is a sandy bay sandwiched between blocks of rock, with rock pools where it is possible to swim. Or if you prefer, you can stick to the shallow waters of the sandy bay. Slightly out from Moraira centre, Platgetes is a popular spot amongst locals for a quick dip.

Experience and knowledge Mark Petrie offers the best possible insurance for you

Andrago Beach ANOTHER quieter spot, this cove is similar to Llebeig, and carved out from the rocky cliffs of this amazing coastline. The beach is gravelly, but that means crystal clear waters and some of the best snorkelling in the area. Swimmers can explore a series of small natural caves called Cova del Arcs, adding a bit of adventure to a beach day as well as a great photo opportunity.

ANOTHER beach with Blue Flag status, Andrago is a pebbled beach balanced out with crystal clear waters. A little promenade overlooking the beach also offers spectacular views of the coast. Playa L´Andrago restaurant on the beach serves traditional Spanish tapas and paella.

Playa de l’Ampolla

BRILLIANT for keen swimmers, Cap Blanc’s secluded location ensures that it remains something of a secret treasure. There is a diving jetty, and a ladder to use to get in and out of the sea, a rocky beach, incredibly clear water, and stunning views across to Calpe what more could you need? The beach is accessed from the coastal road, through pine forests. If you are driving, you’ll be able to park at the top of the bay and take the steps down the cliff.

Cap Blanc Bay

HOOSING the right property professionals to help you with your real estate transaction is perhaps the most important decision you will make when selling property. With Moraira being such a popular destination for so many different nationalities, a multi-lingual team is essential if they are to effectively market your property. And they need an in-depth knowledge of the local market so they can guide purchasers effectively and help them make a decision quickly. After all, they will not bring potential buyers to view your home if its location does not meet their requirements. For sellers, this is a key requirement – as anyone who has had to suffer a seemingly endless stream of viewers who are not even interested because the area is not right for them. This is where the efficient and knowledgeable team at Coast and Country comes in. They personalise and research properties for every individual client to make sure they understand exactly what they are looking for and to guarantee that they will show properties that meet the client’s criteria. Helen Tye explained: “People who are listing with us know that not only do we offer our own property portfolio but we also offer a personal property finding service. “This means that we can often sell their home before it has even been officially marketed. We have more buyers than sellers at the moment, so if someone lists with us we may well have a purchaser ready and waiting!” They have a database of clients from Holland, Belgium, France and the UK currently looking for properties - so Coast and Country Properties should be your first stop when putting your home up for sale.

GIVEN its location next to the town centre and close to the castle, Ampolla is inevitably Moraira’s busiest beach. But the fact that it’s a good beach – gently shelving, family friendly and with a coveted blue flag and full services – is another reason people choose it. This beach really has something for everyone, from sun loungers available for hire for those who want to do nothing, to volleyball nets and a children’s playground for the more energetic.

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ARK Petrie Insurance Brokers brings over 50 years of experience offering clients the best-available policies tailored to their individual needs. With offices in Javea and Denia, his experienced team offers a wide range of insurance services from car, home, health and pet insurance to legal assistance policies. Mark Petrie came to Spain when he was just 11-years-old and opened his first business here in 1977. Today he counts on hundreds of loyal clients from all over the country and was awarded an MBE for his professional services to expats. Because the brokerage is not affiliated with any one company, it can crucially offer the most appropriate policies on the market to suit individual needs at the most competitive prices. His team of five works with all the leading companies such as Liberty Seguros, Allianz, Plus Ultra, DKV, Salus and many more to offer a personalised service from day one. “Each policy is tailored to what the customer needs and wants and we are very expat-orientated,” explains Mark, from his office on the paseo in Javea port. “While we have many clients here, we have others from as far away as Galicia, Madrid, Sevilla, and Malaga,” he adds. “By reducing response times and with an insurance programme run by professionals, our clients get the most out of any policy that they take out.”

Visit www.mark-petrie.com, call 965 793 712 or e-mail: brokers@mark-petrie.com


Making the difference Casa Ambiente - if you really want to sell

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HEN listing your property, there is an endless choice of estate agents to choose from. It can be a daunting experience, raising the question of how to make it more enjoyable. It all comes down to the different ways your agent approaches you as a vendor. And choosing Casas Ambiente in Moraira will show you a different experience. We’re a family-run business established in Moraira since 1995, run by mother and son, Mirjam and Rouben Brösen, supported by a team of five. Between us, we have decades of experience. Our Dutch heritage means we have an eye for detail, a caring attitude when dealing with people and, of course, a head for negotiations. Our international team can speak English, German, Av. de la Paz 10b • 03724 Moraira www.casas-ambiente.com Dutch, French and Spanish fluently. contact@casas-ambiente.com When you list your property with Casas Ambiente, you’re (+34) 966 498 595 left with the feeling that not only will we do our very best to sell your property, but we’ll also stay in touch, keep you informed with updates and offer friendly yet incisive advice. However, we don’t rest on our laurels. Professionalism is about staying up to date. We undertake regular training, and we are one of only a few agents who are CRS (Certified Residential Specialist) certified by the Real Estate Council and affiliated with the International Association of Realtors.

If you’d like to ‘experience the difference’, pop in for a chat and find out for yourself. our office is in the heart of Moraira on Avenida La Paz 10B (the street with the Palm Trees leading down to the castle). The team can be contacted on 966 498 595 or info@casas-ambiente.com We look forward to meeting you.

Moraira Something to write home about 6

May 2022

SELL WITH THE AGENT THAT SELLS

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• Established in Moraira since 1995.

ITH its stunning views of the Costa Blanca to inspire • Ask about our ‘advantage for the package’ imagination, exclusive listings. it’s not hard to see why Moraira is a great literary town. North American writer Chester Bomar Himes died in Moraira of Parkinson's disease in 1984 and was buried in nearby Benissa cemetery. He was one of the celebrated authors who called Moraira home. • A thoughtful, friendly and professional multi-lingual team.

• Our sole aim is to sell your property in a stress-free manner.

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Literary traditions of a tiny Costa Blanca village

He was attracted to the town after reading adverts in the Sunday Times for land in a development called Pla del Mar. An African American, Himes did complain of experiencing discrimination on account of his colour in Moraira. But his home eventually came to life, in the name of Villa Griot, where he enjoyed walks down to the beach passing the famous Cap d’Or watchtower. Another great mind to have chosen to settle in Moraira was Martha Gellhorn, the American novelist, travel writer and widely considered one of the greatest war correspondents of the 20th c e n t u r y, including

SCRIBES: Karina, Chester and (below) Martha with Hemingway

reporting on the Spanish Civil War. Aside from her own work, Gellhorn is also famous for being the third wife of novelist Ernest Hemingway. In addition to Moraira, the journalist spent time living in Cuba, Rome and Wales. Her Moraira property, situated slightly inland at Benissa with five bedrooms and four bathrooms, is up for sale for the price of €650,000. More recently Venezuela writer Karina Sainz Borgo explained said: “Moraira is the ideal destination for anyone who wants to read, write or simply relax.” In fact she seems to manage all three at the same time: She wrote 50 pages of her book El tercer pais on Ampolla beach

Speaking to teluadamorairadigital.es she explained: “It is a novel that required me to sit down to work without anyone bothering me, without anyone talking to me, with long hours of concentration. “As I like the sun, what I did was write on the beach and despite having people around me, there was nothing to bother me. I felt very comfortable. “I came to Moraira looking for peace to write, looking for blue sea, clear skies, tranquillity and I got it... in fact, I noticed that, on the breakwater, there was a small sculpture of a writer and that confirmed to me that I was in a town for writers.” That sculpture was a memorial to Himes, who continues to be an inspiration to many.

SELL WITH THE AGENT THAT SELLS • Established in Moraira since 1995.

• A thoughtful, friendly and professional multi-lingual team.

• Our sole aim is to sell your property in a stress-free manner. • Ask about our ‘advantage package’ for exclusive listings. Av. de la Paz 10b • 03724 Moraira www.casas-ambiente.com contact@casas-ambiente.com

(+34) 966 498 595


Mark Petrie

CORREDURIA DE SEGUROS • INSURANCE BROKERS

ACCIDENTS | CAR OR COMMERCIAL VEHICLE / MOTORCYCLES AND MOPEDS CIVIL LIABILITY | COMMUNITIES | DEATHS | DECENNIAL AND CONSTRUCTION / OFFICES INSURANCE FOR DOMESTIC DOGS AND CATS | LEGAL ASSISTANCE / TRAVEL ASSISTANCE LI FE / HEALTH / H OME | MACHINERY B R EAKDOWN | R ECR EAT I O N A L BO AT S | S H O P S

DÉNIA – Avda. Marquesado 22, 03700 DÉNIA (ALICANTE) – 965 781 815 – 965 780 757 – 658 919 777 JÁVEA – Avda. Marina Española, 24, 03730 JÁVEA (ALICANTE) – 965 793 712

brokers@mark-petrie.com www.mark-petrie.com



LA CULTURA A PHOTO exhibition showing the plight of Ukrainian refugees has opened with pictures from a photographer who has just returned from the war zone. The exhibition, entitled From the shadows of a war to the light of the Mediterranean was inaugurated by its author, 48-year-old Manuel Lorenzo at the CASA Mediterraneo museum in Alicante. He has selected 16 images which detail refugees’ journeys from the Polish border until their arrival to the safety of Spain.

Human

Lorenzo’s aim is to convey the ‘human drama’ and civilians as the ‘main victims’, rather than including sensational images of bombs and explosions. “The great loser is the civilian population, the innocent, who are the ones who have had to leave their lives, their belongings,” said the photojournalist. The exhibition also hopes to portray a ‘Spanish connection’ given that many Ukrainian refugees are coming to Spain where family and national ties already exist. Director of Casa Mediterraneo, Andres Perello, stated that the exhibition ‘tries to reflect in images the pain that war produces and also the solidarity that it awakens in other parts of the world’.

VALENCIAN coffers have been swollen by €1.6 million from a collection of Nazi and fascist memorabilia. A German woman who lived in Denia died without leaving a will and with no heirs, so the regional government will ‘inherit’ her collection of Nazi and Francoist medals and 31 gold coins, which will be auc-

Final sale tioned off. Gertrudis Ficher had three properties in Denia. After she died intestate in 2005, they were sold off by the Valencian government who used the proceeds for social projects.

Warhol pic of Marilyn Monroe pricier than Picasso’s most expensive work PABLO Picasso has lost his place as creator of the 20th Century’s most expensive work of art. Andy Warhol’s iconic picture of Marilyn Monroe has been sold at auction for $195 million (€184.7 million) in New York. This was not only a record price for an American artist’s work but also beat the $179.5 million (€170 million at today’s exchange rate) paid for Picasso’s Women of Algiers (1955) in 2015. This had made it the most expensive piece of 20th-century art – until Marilyn was put under the hammer. Despite the whopping amount paid, it did not quite meet the €200 million estimate Christies had put on it. The enormous price tag is good news for several charities. Cash from the sale of the silk-screen

By Dilip Kuner

painting will fund several projects to help children. Titled Shot Sage Blue Marilyn (1964), it is one of four made by Warhol featuring Marilyn and was completed two years after her death. Picasso’s Women of Algiers focused on his second wife Jacqueline Roque and was created as an homage to his friend and rival, Henri Matisse. The work was part of a series that Picasso began in 1954, shortly after the Nationalist uprising in Algeria against French rule. It had prev i o u s l y fetched ‘just’ €31.9 million (€30.25 million) when auctioned in 1997.

Queening it up

Become a live-in carer in the UK Opportunities for those with the right to work in the UK and those looking for sponsorship

Apply online helpinghands.co.uk/jobs

Ficher kept herself to herself and very little was known about her. She had €350,000 in her bank accounts and a share portfolio worth €480,000, which were also appropriated by Valencian authorities. Now 17 years after her death, the last piece of estate business is set to be concluded with the auction.

MOVE OVER PICASSO

A ONE million euro mural inspired by Puerto Banus and designed by British luxury designer Debbie Wingham has been unveiled in the marina for the summer of 2022. The maritime-themed mural adds to her portfolio, which includes a €50m wedding cake, €17m Muslim abaya mantal, and an €11.9m Christmas tree, and has earned her the reputation of being the ‘queen of the most expensive’. Wingham claims that Puerto Banus’s rich history and her appreciation of nautical life came together to inspire the project. Start your journey as a The work will remain in place all summer to live-in carer today! be admired by tourists attracted to MarEarn up to £750 per week bella’s sense of luxury Flexible work patterns. and prestige, with an estimated 2 milPerfect work/life balance lion visitors expected during the mural’s To find out more, please email period of display.

spanishrecruitment@helpinghands.co.uk

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Playing to the gallery SPAIN is home to three of Europe’s most highly rated free art galleries, a new survey has found. The findings, published by Online learning centre The Knowledge Academy, ranked the Museo de Malaga as the 4th best in the world. The gallery has works from Francisco de Goya, Pablo Picasso, and Luis de Morales all on show for free as part of the museum’s 2,000 strong collection of fine art.

Best

The Cathedral de Santa Maria in Murcia was 12th best on the list. The 13th century building is comprised of three portals awash with sculptures. The central one is a homage to the Virgin Mary, the left one dedicated to San Gil and the right one to the Final Judgement and Saint James. The Museum of Cadiz came in at number 27, with work by Francisco de Zurbaran, Bartolome Esteban Murillo and Peter Paul Rubens. Top of the list was London’s the Wallace Collection, which features fine art from the 15th to 19th centuries.

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Across 1 Change phases for circles and squares, for example (6) 5 What the ladies of the harem of the court of King Caractacus do (4,2) 8 Extirpated (8) 9 Immense (4) 10 Journey (4) 11 Withdraws (5,3) 12 Bounder (3) 13 Film format (1,1,1) 14 “Can’t Help Lovin’ --Man” (Kern/Hammerstein song) (3) 15 One or the other (6,2) 18 Royal house of Riyadh (4) 19 Right to keep possession until a debt is paid (4) 20 Looks up (8) 21 Words for numbers? (6) 22 Set sail (6) Down 2 Excessive restlessness (13) 3 Shored (7) 4 Suddenly took notice (3,2) 5 Went canoeing (7) 6 Goalie’s achievements (5) 7 Mixed suet, but critic runs amok in the kitchen (7,6) 13 Oversees productions (7) 14 Unsettle (7) 16 --- Matisse (5) 17 Continuous stretch of building (5)

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May 19th - June 1st 2022

WE BINGE RIGHT IN

Narcos 1

11 Spanish language shows on Netflix that make reading subtitles worth the pain

SET in Latin America, Narcos is the smash hit dramatisation of the rise of the Colombian cocaine trade in the late 80s. The first two seasons focus on evil but charismatic drug lord Pablo Escobar and the efforts of the CIA agents and Colombian law enforcement agencies to find him. No spoilers, but after three brilliant seasons, Narcos leaves Escobar behind and moves on to semi-fictionalised story of the drug trade in Mexico for a further three seasons. It is edge of seat stuff with a great theme tune.

Jaguar

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PANISH crime drama Money Heist (La Casa de Papel) has proved a big hit with English speaking audiences around the world. Telling the story of the biggest heist in Spain’s history, when billions were stolen from the Bank of Spain, audiences were so gripped they were happy to follow the action by reading the subtitles. Watching Spanish TV is a great way for anyone trying to learn the language to pick up new words and phrases – but it doesn’t have to feel like you’re back in school. Here is our Top 11 of shows that are great in their own right. All are in Spanish with English subtitles and available on Netflix.

NOT wildlife, but a good watch for anyone interested in Spain’s history, Jaguar is set in Francoist Spain and delves into the country’s murky past as a haven for Nazis fleeing Germany. The plot follows a Spanish survivor of Mauthausen concentration camp who had been forced as a child to work as a maid in the household of a Nazi responsible for killing her father. We fast forward to the 1960s to find her teamed up a group of Nazi hunters and seeking revenge.

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Valeria NOW for romance: Valeria centres on a writer who, feeling something is missing in her work and personal life, turns to three female friends who guide her through the problematic areas of love, friendship and jealousy, and give her hope for the future. The hugely successful first season of this rom-com premiered in 2020, followed by a second in 2021. Fans will be happy to know a third series is currently in the works.

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Ingobernable SET in Mexico, Ingobernable focuses on a fictional First Lady as her husband attempts to govern the country. As the title suggests, plenty of murder and domestic abuse at the top of Mexico’s political system makes his job tricky. Even advanced Spanish speakers might find the subtitles useful for this one as it is full of fruity Mexican slang. Interestingly, some of Kate del Castillo’s performance as First Lady was filmed in the US because she was wanted at the time by Mexican authorities for having met with drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman while he was on the run.

Elite

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A teen-thriller anyone can watch, Elite is set in Spain. Three working class teenagers win scholarships for a top private school, and class clashes with their new peers ensue. Addictive and pretty low-brow, this series is a guilty pleasure. During the course of the five seasons, you’ll also have a great opportunity to spot locations and pick up lots of new Spanish youth slang.


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Brigada Costa del Sol

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La Casa de las Flores

BACK to Mexico again, though this time for something lighter. A comedy-drama, it follows a dysfunctional upper-class family who owns a florist shop and a struggling cabaret club – both called House of Flowers. It has been dubbed the ‘millennial telenovela’ and deals with themes of homophobia, transphobia and race. Three seasons of the show are available, and Netflix premiered the follow-up feature-length film in 2021.

A police detective series set in the 1970s, Brigada Costa del Sol centres around a group of detectives chosen to set up a special drug-fighting unit on a limited budget. Based in Torremolinos and around the Costa del Sol, it should provide a bit of nostalgia for older British expats. The antics seem crazy but the plot is based on the true story of one of Spain’s first anti-narcotic squads.

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Las Chicas del Cable

A Spanish period drama about four young women starting a job in a spanking modern telecommunications company in Madrid in the 1920s. The five seasons of Cable Girls follow their blossoming friendships, and the new level of independence working gives them in the old-fashioned and male-dominated Spain of the time.

Sky Rojo One to get on soon with the third and final season scheduled for release in 2022 is Sky Rojo. The series centres on three women working at a brothel united by a fatal turn of events on a wild run from their pimp and his henchmen. The gripping series comes from the same creators as Money Heist.

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DESCRIBED as an ‘escapist watch’, White Lines is set in the rave scene of Ibiza, with some scenes shot in Manchester. The dramatic plot follows the murder of Manchester-born DJ Axel Collins whose body is found, two decades later, on the property of the wealthiest family in Ibiza. From the creators of Money Heist, Heist, a gripping storyline and authentic club scenes will keep British viewers especially hooked. The characters are mostly expats and the show’s dialogue switches between Spanish and English – so you don’t have to concentrate quite so hard.

Paquita Salas is a bit of a has-been in her industry. As one of Spain’s biggest talent agents in the 90s, she has now lost most of her big stars. The light-hearted comedy series follows Paquita as she tries to rebuild her life and career whilst stuck in her old-fashioned ways.

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BUSINESS

20 Cuts ahead

SPAIN’S government has said it might reduce speed limits in order to save energy as Russian oil and gas exports are cut. Teresa Ribera, the minister of Ecological Transition has also said it will urge people to drive less, turn down heating and use public transport if the situation has not improved by winter. In an interview with RTVE, Rivera insisted that there was a high probability of a reduction in the maximum speed for cars, in line with a recommendation from the International Agency of Energy. In 2011 the maximum speed on motorways was cut from 120kph to 110kph for four months in response to fuel shortages during the Arab Spring.

King-size factory THE King of Spain was on hand to oversee the opening of a new hydrogen plant by Spanish utility company Iberdrola. The new plant will generate up to 3,000 tonnes of green hydrogen per year. The facilities at the site also include a state-of-the-art solar farm and will cost over €150 million. It is the largest facility of its kind in Europe.

A NEW initiative to convince media giants to create film and TV productions in Spain has been launched by Queen Letizia. She chaired a meeting between representatives of Spain’s film and TV sector and around 40 companies and producers from the US in an attempt to schmooze and promote Spain as the ideal place to make content. The meeting follows a wider aim by the government to boost Spain’s media sector, which has been given a €2 billion cash injection to try and increase audiovisual productions by 30% by 2025. In addition, members of the American Society of Cinematographers visited the Canary Islands, and Sevilla, which has previously been used as a set for Game of Thrones and Star Wars. During the meeting industry professionals pitched Spain as

May 19th - June 1st 2022

ACTION!

Queen Letizia launches bid to make Spain a cinema superpower FEEL THE FORCE: Sevilla was a film set for Attack of the Clones

By George Mathias

the ideal filming location, owing to its weather and low tax incentives.

SPANISH prosecutors have shelved an investigation into whether firms paid kickbacks to secure a contract for Saudi Arabia’s high-speed rail link citing ‘insufficient evidence’. Anti-corruption prosecutors were investigating the 2011 contract worth some €6.8billion to a consortium of Spanish firms to build a high-speed rail link between Mecca and Medina. The ruling added that information was ‘in part contradictory’.

Alongside the Queen, Reyes Maroto, the minister for industry, trade and tourism and the United States Ambassador to Spain, Julissa Reyno-

Probe dropped The probe was opened after allegations were made by the ex-mistress of former King Juan Carlos, who claimed to have overheard discussions about kickbacks. A separate probe into allegations that King Juan Carlos pocketed €65 million from the Saudi King for brokering the deal was dropped in March.

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GBP/EUR exchange rates plunges after bleak BoE predictions, writes FX specialist Peter Loveday

HE pound to euro (GBP/EUR) exchange rate tumbled through the first half of May as the UK’s economic outlook darkened, causing markets to pare back Bank of England (BoE) rate hike expectations. GBP/EUR plunged three cents from over €1.19 to €1.16, before rebounding to around €1.17.

WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING? During the first week of May, the BoE’s interest rate decision triggered a sharp sell-off in the pound, causing GBP/EUR to tumble to a five-month low. Although the bank raised rates by 25 bps, with three policymakers voting for a steeper rise, it also said it expects inflation to peak at over 10% in autumn and warned that there is a risk of recession. In response, traders pared back their bets for further rate rises. It now seems as though the BoE is close to pausing its rate hike cycle. In the wake of hawkish rhetoric from some European Central Bank (ECB) officials, this helped the euro rise. Investors now expect the gap between ECB and BoE policy to narrow through the second part of 2022. The pound euro pair then wavered. Energy fears weighed on EUR after Ukraine cut some Russian gas supplies to Europe due to ‘interference’, while the UK’s cost-of-living crisis kept Sterling subdued. Brexit tensions flared up as the UK threatened to scrap the Northern Ireland protocol, causing the pound euro pair to briefly slip to a seven-month low. However, GBP/EUR quickly rebounded, despite a contraction in UK GDP in March. With Finland and Sweden formally requesting to join Nato, Russia warned of retaliation. This reminder that the Russia-Ukraine war could quickly escalate weighed heavily on the euro. What do you need to look out for? A number of high-impact data releases are due out over the coming fortnight. In particular, the UK CPI on Wednesday could have a big effect on the pound. Economists expect UK inflation to jump from 7% to 8.9%. With the BoE

Bogus brokers

so were also in full woo mode. The royal is known to have a keen interest in film and is often spotted at film premieres and festivals. Following the events she had separate meetings with the World Red Cross as well as a visit to the town of Pinofranqueado with husband King Felipe. Spanish TV and film have exploded in popularity in recent years, with series’ such as Money Heist among the most widely streamed in the world.

A GANG of 21 swindlers offering big returns on stock market investments has been arrested. They made €6 million out of a bogus brokerage which was advertised via the internet. Police said they had got over 130 complaints about the gang. Investigations started 18 months ago when a victim reported that he had been scammed out of nearly €700,000. Investors were reeled in via a brokerage website offering the chance to get quick returns on the stock market. The fraudsters even offered real-time information to clients suggesting that the value of their investments had plunged dramatically to cover up what they were really up to. Most of the cash was converted to cryptocurrency and then distributed among the gang members. Arrests were made in Madrid, Barcelona, Guadalajara and Toledo.

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likely to resist aggressive rate hikes in the face of an economic recession, this high reading could hurt Sterling. The latest flash PMIs for the eurozone and the UK are also potentially market-moving releases, as investors will use these business-activity snapshots to gauge the health of the relative economies. Aside from economic data, fears around the UK’s cost-of-living crisis may continue creating headwinds for the pound, as could any big Brexit developments. For the euro, news around the Ukraine crisis may drive some movement. Any negative developments, such as an escalation of violence, would likely weigh on the single currency. PROTECTING AGAINST VOLATILITY This kind of volatility can cause some nasty surprises if you need to transfer money overseas. On a £200,000 transfer, that three-cent gap between €1.19 and €1.16 translates to a €6000 difference. And the larger the sum, the higher the discrepancy. Fortunately, there are ways that you can protect against volatility. Specialist currency brokers, such as Currencies Direct, offer different tools to help you navigate the ups and downs of the currency market. For instance, you can use a forward contract to secure an exchange rate for up to a year. This way, you won’t lose out if the market moves against you. Services like rate alerts and daily updates make it easy to keep track of what’s going on in the forex world so that you can make informed decisions. And with Currencies Direct you’ll have a dedicated account manager there to provide guidance and support whenever you need them. At Currencies Direct we’re here to talk currency whenever you need us, so get in touch if you want to know more about the latest news or how it could impact your currency transfers. Since 1996 we’ve helped more than 325,000 customers with their currency transfers, just pop into your local Currencies Direct branch or give us a call to find out more.

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FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

Splash the cash

The average spending by tourists in Spain has risen above pre-pandemic levels, according to Spain’s Institute of National Statistics. The average tourist spent €1,257 in Spain in March, 15% higher than the March 2019 average. Four million tourists visited Spain in March, spending over €5 billion Despite the increase in average spending, total spending was 29% lower than March 2019 and the duration of each trip averaged at half a day lower. Spain’s tourism minister Reyes Maroto welcomed the news and said the government expected this trend to intensify in the summer period. Almost a fifth of the tourists who visited in March were Brits who accounted for 20% of tourism spending.

SPAIN has kept its position at the top as the nation with the highest number of blue flag beaches in the world. Valencia is again the region with the most award winning playas in Spain while Andalucia has seen the largest increase in beaches recognised. Blue flags have been awarded to 4831 beautiful beaches around the world which comply with a series of environmental, accessibility

May 19th - June 1st 2022

Flags are flying

and safety criteria. The Spanish coasts are home to 621 blue flagged beaches, which is six more than last year, located across 250 municipalities, which is an increase of seven than last

year. Valencia took the lead with 139 award winning beaches. Three Valencian beaches have been recognised for the first time: Cala Baladrar in Benissa, Escollera y Marenyet-L’Illa in Cullera, and Auir in Gandia. Breaking it down by province, Alicante wins, holding 91 of Spain’s recognised beaches, ahead of Pontevedra in Galicia with 63 and Andalucia’s Malaga which has 44.

Arrive in style

Ban extended SPAIN has extended the existing entry ban on non-essential travel by non-vaccinated travellers from a long list of non-EU countries. The ban will now last until midnight on June 15, unless it is extended again. Under the rules, unvaccinated travellers from all countries outside the EU that do not appear on the ‘safe list’ will not be allowed to enter Spain.

Proof

Travellers must have valid proof that they are fully vaccinated with an EU approved vaccine that was administered at least 14 days before entry and with the last dose no more than nine months (270 days) prior to entry. Those who haven’t been fully vaccinated but have recovered from Covid-19 within the last six-months and have a certificate to prove it are also exempt from the ban. This applies to all those over the age of 12, however those aged between 12 and 17 who are unvaccinated and have no recovery certificate can travel to Spain for tourism purposes if they provide a negative PCR test taken within the 72 hours prior to travel. Under 12s are exempt from the ban.

By Kimberley Mannion

RENFE is offering four new luxury train routes transporting passengers across historic locations of Spain in the height of style. The experience of using Renfe trains to get from A to B as quickly as possible is a world away from the rail company’s new luxury travel experiences. The new Al Andalus train will transport passen-

gers through the historic heartlands of Andalucia, visiting the cities of Ronda, Jerez, Cadiz, Granada,

THE battle to rename Murcia’s international airport at Corvera in honour of a local air pioneer has taken a new turn. The region’s Governing Council, led by President Fernando Lopez Miras, approved on Thursday the new name of Murcia-Juan de la Cierva. The body said it would be an appropriate tribute to the ‘legacy and figure that the Murcian inventor deserves’. It added it will use the name irrespective of what the government in Madrid thinks over his possible fascist history. De la Cierva, born in Murcia City in 1895, invented an early version of the helicopter, known as the gyrocopter in the early twenties. He met his end ironically in a plane crash, as fog caused a flight from Croydon to Amsterdam to hit a Croydon area house in December 1936. De la Cierva was the first person to call for the construction of a commercial airport in Murcia in April 1935.

Across: 1 Shapes, 5 Pass by, 8 Uprooted, 9 Vast, 10 Trip, 11 Pulls out, 12 Cad, 13 D V D, 14 Dat, 15 Either or, 18 Saud, 19 Lien, 20 Consults, 21 Lyrics, 22 Embark. Down: 2 Hyperactivity, 3 Propped, 4 Sat up, 5 Paddled, 6 Saves, 7 Biscuit cutter, 13 Directs, 14 Disturb, 16 Henri, 17 Range.

SUDOKU

Quick Crossword

Keep on running SPAIN has the best cities in Europe to run a marathon, with three of the continent’s top five running destinations. The study by ‘Runners Need’ looked at air quality, weather conditions, number of landmarks, cost of running necessities, and marathon popularity in over 60 European cities. Overall, Barcelona and Madrid were awarded first and second place, with Athens coming in third.

Top

But with Sevilla coming fourth, Spain proved itself to be the top country overall for fans of the sport. Barcelona had the third most scenic running route, (with 757 landmarks to take in) and was tenth for air quality. Second-placed Madrid also scored highly for the number of landmarks and offered predictably dry weather conditions. Sevilla scored highly for affordability with a running package of one litre of water, one kilo of bananas, and a pair of running shoes costing €15 less than average.

Renfe offers the chance to see Spain’s history in style on new luxury trains

What’s in a name

OP Puzzle solutions

21

Baeza, Ubeda, Cordoba and Sevilla. But the service doesn’t come cheap. The luxury train trip will cost passengers an eye-watering €3,895 per person, and an extra €1,000 to upgrade to a deluxe suite.

Cuisine

The passengers receive a high class experience on board in terms of accomodation and cuisine, guided tours at each stop, and the train stopping in stations on the route each night to ensure a good night's sleep for the price. This route will operate over the months of May, June, September and October. During July and August, Al Andalus will also run a four day tour leaving from Sevilla and travelling through Merida and Lisbon before arrival in Porto.

Enjoy Mediterranean cuisine in a beautiful environment

Pilgrimage

Renfe is also rolling out similar new routes called the Transcantabrico, which travels northern Spain’s Cantabrian coast, the Expreso de la Robla between Leon and Bilbao which offers travellers the chance to walk parts of the famous pilgrimage Camino de Santiago. The final luxury route is the Costa Verde Express, going between Bilbao and Santiago de Compostela.

Paseo Maritimo de la Patacona n 14, 46120, Alboraya, Valencia I T. 96 372 40 95 I 618 356 043 I info@casapatacona.com


22

FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

DAYS OUT 5 weird tourist attractions across Spain: food fights to skate churches

TOURIST recommendations for Spain can get very predictable. If you ever grow tired of lying on the beach, exploring castles, or eating wonderful food, rest assured there is no end of weird stuff to see and do. Here is our pick:

Lucena’s chair, Cordoba

May 19th - June 1st 2022

Lovers of Teruel, Aragon A SPANISH Romeo and Juliet from the middle ages, Juan de Marcilla (known as Diego) and Isabel a Segura were lovers. Diego fell on hard times, and Isabel’s father forbade them to marry but agreed that if Diego could make his fortune within five years he would win his bride. Diego did this, but returned to find Isabel being married to another suitor. Heartbroken, he died at her feet, and Isabel died at his funeral. The deaths affected the people of Teruel so much that the bodies were exhumed in 1560 and the caskets put on display. The Amantes de Teruel now lie side by side in marble tombs near lots of art inspired by their story.

Skate church, Asturias

FURNITURE maker Grupo Huertas, for reasons best known to themselves, built the world’s biggest chair in April 2005. Standing 26 metres tall, it incorporates enough wood to make 9,200 regular-sized models. Unfortunately, while they still claim to have the biggest, according to the Guinness Book of Records, they have been usurped and there is now a 30-metre chair in Austria. Still, something to see on a rainy day if you are in Lucena.

TO save the disused church of Santa Barbara in Llanera from total ruin, Red Bull sponsored a complete makeover and, with the help of a local association, ingeniously converted it into an inside skate park. Graffiti artist Okuda San Miguel was responsible for the multicoloured murals. It’s unusual but it works.

BELIEVED to be the world’s largest food fight, La Tomatina sees thousands of people converge on the town of Buñol for the specific purpose of throwing more than 145 tonnes of tomatoes at each other. The festivities take place on the last Wednesday of August each year, and kick off with a person shimmying up a two-storey-high greased wooden pole to fetch a leg of ham. Legend has it, the tradition began in 1945 when boys knocked into a parade of people dressed as giants causing one to topple into a vegetable stand.

La Tomatina, Valencia

Pot museum, Castilla y Leon YES, the Museo del Orinal is exactly that: a collection of piss pots. The museum in Ciudad Rodrigo is dedicated to the history of the chamber pot. The fact that most exhibits come from the private collection of one town resident, Jose Maria del Arco, makes it even stranger. Niche.


Summer learning A great way for children to have fun and keep learning during the holidays

W

ITH summer just around the corner it is time to plan on how to ensure your children stay busy, have fun and don’t fall behind with their education. The summer holidays in Spain can seem endless and it is all too easy for children to get bored and even worse, fall behind in their learning. It is crucial - especially for those of pre-secondary school age - to remain intellectually and physically stimulated and have fun while doing so! This is why The Shackleton International School has designed a summer school programme that is about adventure, art, cooking, music, sports, drama, homework and much more. Each week, the crafts, workshops and classes will be based around a theme, for example, Nature, Food and Space.

Shackleton Summer School is an immersion course for children from three to 12 years old. Children will improve their decision-making skills, self-expression, and self-esteem through exploration, communication and critical thinking, all conducted in English. A premium is placed on encouraging children to use their imagination and creativity in order to get the best out of the course. And judging by the success of the Shackleton’s first year and the enthusiasm shown by both pupils and staff it is sure to be a great experience. The summer school will stay true to Shackleton’s founding ethos that sets it apart from other education establishments. The Shackleton International School in Burjassot is an extension of the Superfriends English nursery that for the last

decade has provided early learning for youngsters up to the age of six. Shackleton's CEO, Vanessa Cabrelles, said: “We live in a changing world which requires a new approach to learning and communication while maintaining humanity and high ethical standards. “When the Superfriends nursery launched, parents asked for something to be created that maintained schooling once their children reached six, and so that's how Shackleton was created. “We understand that children don't have to fear making mistakes because they learn, grow and mature from that, not only in academic work but in life in general.” The school philosophy is about inspiring youngsters with confidence through encouraging creative thinking and talent – and this will be carried on through the summer school programmes. “Shackleton International School, adopting the British model, favours practical and intuitive training as well as

promoting teamwork and regular monitoring of a child's progress,” Cabrelles said. This starts with helping parents raise children with basic values like solidarity, respect, resilience and taking responsibility in addition to creative, critical and collaborative thinking. Children are taught about the balance between 'body' and 'mind' in having a good lifestyle. Cabrelles said: “Our students learn about healthy eating as well as the importance of exercise in addition to promoting relaxation and good mental health by reducing stress. These are core values for us and all children in our

summer school programmes will benefit from them.” The summer school will run from June 27 to July 29 from 9am to 4.30pm. Children can be enrolled for five, four, three or two weeks, with meals included. Prices for tuition and meals start at an affordable €350 for two weeks, up to €610 for five weeks. More details are available via the website, shackletonschool.com or via their Facebook page, Shackleton International School. Email: info@shackletonschool.com 960 45 03 40 Calle Benieu 9, 46100 Burjassot


The

OLIVE PRESS

REuse REduce REcycle We use recycled paper

Sausage dog party

FINAL WORDS

SOME 100 sausage dogs and gathered for a day of socialising in a Valencia park. A WhatsApp group for owners planned the gathering, with plans for a future event involving food trucks and music.

False claim A Cartagena man, 24, who turned up at a police station with his mum and claimed he had been sexually abused in an alley and suffered memory loss as an excuse for missing an exam, has been charged with reporting a fake crime.

Jaws HOLIDAY makers have been panicked by the sight of two sharks swimming just metres from beaches on Mallorca and Ibiza.

VALENCIA / COSTA AZAHAR FREE Vol. 1 Issue 38 www.theolivepress.es

Your expat

voice in Spain May 19th - June 1st 2022

Quacked off

CHEAP DAY OUT

Sunderland football fan flies to London via Menorca to save cash A SUNDERLAND football fan has decided to fly to London via Menorca as it’s cheaper than getting public transport to the capital. James Jelly, 33, bought the connecting flight tickets for £51, far cheaper than the £161.99 cost of a direct flight from Newcastle. The flight to Menorca on its own was a snip at £12.50.

By George Mathias

Jelly (pictured far left with friends) said: “There’s some out there that have been ridiculously priced. I looked up flights from Newcastle to Heathrow and it was £161.99 return and I thought ‘I’m not paying that’.” But while a cheap flight to

Spain has been his saviour, it is a different story for Scottish fans. As Glasgow Rangers take on Frankfurt in Sevilla tonight, a number of people

Nou-gat to be joking IT might seem a long way away, but Spain’s favourite Christmas treat is in danger after Spring storms. The coldest April since records began has devastated the Costa Blanca almond harvest, threatening nougat production. Farming organisations have already reported a drop in profits, which puts direct pressure on the nougat production ahead of the

festive season. Those factors, combined with frosts in March, have destroyed some 70% of almond crops, according to farmers. As well as an immediate shortage of the popular nut, nougat prices will increase as producers will have to import almonds from other markets if they are to keep the nation supplied with its favourite Christmas treat.

have expressed their dismay at local price gouging. Campbell Ferguson told the Olive Press: “A friend of my son has paid £2,000 for a ticket. He’s talking of paying €800 for a taxi from Malaga to Sevilla.” With up to 100,000 Scots set to descend, direct flights to Sevilla from anywhere in the UK on Tuesday or Wednesday had all been booked. Meanwhile, authorities in Sevilla have confirmed that fans without a ticket to the game can watch it at the nearby 57,000 capacity Estadio La Cartuja - the same stadium Celtic played against Porto in the Uefa Cup final in 2003.

A MAN impersonating Donald Duck suffered serious, but not life-threatening, injuries after getting run over by a children's train ride at a Valencia area fair. The Disney character decided to cheer on children travelling on the 'Tren de la Bruja' on the Alaquas fairground. He waddled gleefully alongside the moving wagons but then he waded in front of the small locomotive that was pulling the carriages, and was run over. The man suffered a broken arm, a head wound and various chest injuries. The train carriages carrying the children did not overturn.

The kid is alright A BABY mountain goat just over a week old has been rescued by a local police officer and two park rangers after it took refuge on the roof of a dog kennel in the Sierras de Tejeda (Malaga) national park. The kid, only a week old and emaciated, and dehydrated, had been cornered by a mastiff.


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