Euro Weekly News - Costa de Almeria 31 May - 6 June 2018 Issue 1717

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31 May - 6 June 2018

COSTA DE ALMERÍA YOUR PAPER, YOUR VOICE, YOUR OPINION

Pride and joy!

Photo credits Facebook/Windstar Cruising

ISSUE NO. 1717

Newspaper in Spain 2017 & 2018

ELEGANT: The MS Star Pride glides through the sea. ONE of the world’s most luxurious small cruisers will dock in Almeria on Friday. Winstar cruises’ MS Star Pride will arrive at the Almeria’s Levante quay after its voyage from Palma de Mallorca, according to the Bahia Almeriport foundation. It will stay for 12 hours before continuing its journey to Malaga. The vessel which flies the Nassau-Bahamas flag makes v o y a g e r s f e e l lik e true sailors, the foundation said.

The 212-passenger boat has an essence of spectacu-

lar ‘romantisicism’ and sports an elegant but infor-

mal atmosphere, according to Bahia Almeriport.

Housing call backed THE head of Almeria’s Diputacion has announced he is backing a push from a group representing British expatriates to change rules affecting their properties. Gabriel Amat, of the conservative Partido Popular (PP), met with around 50 British members of the Abusos Urbanisticos Almanzora

NO (AUAN) group in Fines last Monday. Amat was joined by party officials to discuss an amendment currently making its way through the Andalucian Parliament which propose changes to housing laws. The efforts follow cases of British families such as the

PROPERTY SPECIAL

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Paynes and the Priors being forced out of their homes under the current planning regime. The proposals would allow for temporary documents to be issued for irregular homes if passed. Gerardo Vazquez, a spokesperson for AUAN, said the group thanked the PP for their support.

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Freak fireball A BURNING fire ball whizzing through the atmosphere at 90,000 km/h has plummeted into the Mediterranean Sea. The meteorite crashed into the waters off the Almeria and Murcia coastlines in the early hours of the morning, according to Jose Maria Madiedo, an astrophysics expert at the University of Huelva. Several celestial observatories captured the moment the burning rock entered our planet’s airspace 89 kilometres above sea level. The engulfing flames fizzled out at 19 kilometres above the earth’s surface. The meteorite did not disintegrate as it approached earth.


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