Olive Press Costa Blanca South and Murcia Issue 114

Page 1

AUTHORITIES have revealed details behind the arrest of British ‘Narco King’ Brian Charrington, who has been accused of running a cocaine smuggling gang. . Information had been withheld due to a secrecy order imposed by the investigating court in March.

It’s alleged that 67-year-old Charrington's gang was the biggest criminal group in the Valencia region and the Policia Nacional probe was assisted by the UK National Crime Agency and US drug enforcement officers.

A boat carrying 1.1 tons of cocaine between Suriname and Valencia was seized in the Ca-

THE family of a British expat who died ‘during the prime of her life’ after taking Nolotil have revealed how they sued Spanish caregivers and won.

Yvonne Flowers, 67, had been living in Spain for 23 years when she fell over, suffering two slipped discs and pinched nerves.

She only spent a week in hospital but during that time, Hospital Clinica Benidorm ramped up 20 counts of negligence, including the prescription of Nolotil.

In 2021, the private hospital paid out over €400,000 after two court cases in both the UK and Spain.

“They’ve taken a mother’s life, a grandmother’s life. Money can’t bring her back but it is justice for her,” Jenna Flowers, Yvonne’s step-daughter, told the Olive Press.

Though officially they admitted no liability, the family allege HCB ‘hid quite a bit about Nolotil’.

Yvonne went into hospital on

February 2, 2020 after she fell over and suffered two slipped discs as well as trapped nerves. She was told she would have to wait a week for an operation despite being in ‘intense’ pain.

Yvonne was put on a painkiller drip, which was moved after a few days.

According to the family, the wound was not cleaned nor bandaged and she caught an infection, eventually developing sepsis.

Yvonne’s pain intensified, leading doctors to prescribe three doses of Nolotil, a drug known to have potentially deadly side effects for Northern Europeans.

KILL THE DRUG

EXCLUSIVE

page 6

“From that point on, she started to deteriorate quite rapidly,” said Yvonne’s husband, Peter Flowers.

“The next day she suffered all day. She was in a lot of pain from the sepsis and on top of that, she had been given Nolotil so her immune system was taken away.”

A popular painkiller in Spain, Nolotil is known to reduce the white blood cell count of some Northern Europeans to dangerous levels, significantly weakening the immune system.

Durruti

A

Narco king

nary Islands and another similar-sized shipment thwarted during the police operation. Some 23 searches of addresses at Altea, Benidorm, Villajoyosa, La Nucia, Javea, and Calpe yielded the seizure of assets worth €10 million.

Police impounded three boats valued at €4.2 million, 44 vehicles, 40 high-end watches, 60 works of art, 54 mobile phones, a virtual cryptocurrency wallet, and three weapons. 44 properties have also been seized and 74

How the family of a British woman ‘killed by the lethal Spanish painkiller’ sued and won

Although Yvonne was becoming more and more ill, the family claim her condition was ‘ignored’ by hospital staff. By Saturday, she was on oxygen and had ‘blisters’ all over her face, signs of an allergic reaction to Nolotil.

Nerves

“Nobody said anything or did anything about it. They were all in denial,” Petrer said.

“They just upped the painkillers. If they had done their job maybe she would have stood a chance of surviving.”

Although Yvonne became ‘unable to speak or get out of bed’, she was still taken to surgery on Monday.

When she arrived the surgeon reportedly asked: ‘What is this woman doing on my operating table? She is seriously ill.’

Yvonne was immediately taken to A&E but her organs had ‘already started to shut down’.

bank accounts blocked.

The police operation also allegedly helped to prevent the kidnapping and attempted murder of a rival gang member over a settling of scores.

As previously reported by the Olive Press, Charrington and 30 others were detained and bailed following a major police sweep in March.

Another of those arrested was a former Benidorm Policia Nacional officer. They face charges of drug trafficking, money laundering, the illegal possession of weapons, kidnapping, the dissemination of secrets, and belonging to a criminal gang.

NOLOTIL PAYOUT

some justice.”

Peter filed a claim in London, backed by his two children and three grandchildren.

The court found 20 counts of negligence including ‘failure to treat infection’, ‘prescription of Nolotil without monitoring’, ‘failure to notice, heed or treat development of potential agranulocytosis and sepsis, known risks of Nolotil’.

In particular, the case found HCB ‘prescribed Nolotil to the deceased when it was contraindicated’ due to Yvonne’s British heritage.

Clinica Benidorm for comment but received no response.

However, the private hospital group responded to the Olive Press campaign urging hospitals to follow AEMPS advice.

They said: “At HCB Hospitals, we are very aware of the recommendation not to prescribe Nolotil to foreign patients, even though it is not an absolute contraindication.”

Court

The beloved mum and grandmother died the following morning on Tuesday, February 12, little over a week after going into hospital for back issues. Immediately following their mother’s death, Yvonne’s children based in the UK flew to Spain to understand how their healthy mother could have died in the ‘prime of her life’.

According to Peter, hospital officials told the family to ‘get on with their lives’ claiming Yvonne died of sepsis. Despite repeated attempts to uncover the truth, the family was met with silence.

But Peter wanted justice for his wife. He told the Olive Press: “People said I was wasting my time. But, I had to get

HCB’s insurance company, Berkley Seguros España settled out of court, admitting no liability and paying out some £200,000.

Months later, the case was brought to Benidorm’s Palau de Justicia.

They extended the British judgement and the insurance company was ordered to pay out over €200,000.

Despite some justice for Yvonne’s family, Jenna says it is not enough.

“How many more people need to die for them to do something about it?

Mum died because of Nolotil.”

The Olive Press has contacted Hospital

ALL YOUR LEGAL ISSUES DEALT WITH! La Marquesa Commercial Centre, Office 4C, Ciudad Quesada, Rojales 03170 tel: 966 943 219 www.mylawyerinspain.com Here to help with your life in Spain including wills, residency, tax returns, buying and selling property We speak your language! 952 147 834 Promotion valid until 30/06/24. *Subject to conditions and underwriting terms. Tel: 952 147 834 See page 5 Vol. 5 Issue 114 www.theolivepress.es May 2nd - May 15th 2024
COSTA BLANCA SUR / MURCIA here for the latest news SCAN
O P LIVE RESS
GRANDMOTHER: Yvonne with stepdaughter Jenna and grandchild HAPPY FAMILY: Before the horrific tragedy
SOMMELIER Se s SEE PAGE 15
fair start Feria season has kicked off and we delve into the very best of them See page 10 FROM COLUMN TO COCKTAIL The story
See
of anarchist Jose

Major treatment

ORIHUELA’S Torremendo district has been put forward as the site for a Vega Baja region waste treatment plant that will process 200,000 tons of rubbish annually from 27 municipalities.

People power

OPPONENTS of plans to build a solar energy farm on 200 hectares in San Miguel de Salinas to serve Torrrevieja’s desalination plant, will stage a protest in Alicante this Tuesday.

Police plea

UNIONS representing Guardamar’s Policia Local have demanded urgent measures from the council to employ extra officers to rectify an inadequate service for residents.

Deadly blaze

A SPANIARD, 57, and his dog died in a fire on Tuesday lunchtime which started in the kitchen of their home in the Mirador del Mediterraneo area of San Miguel de Salinas.

A MURCIA gang exported large quantities of marijuana to the UK hidden in refrigerated lorries full of vegetables.

Six Spaniards have been arrested in a joint operation by the Guardia Civil and Policia Nacional.

Veg and more

Inquiries started last October into the group that ran several marijuana plantations in Cartagena and Murcia. They used large UK-bound refriger-

ated trucks containing locally-grown vegetables, but also carrying significant amounts of vacuum-packed marijuana hidden inside the crates. Six homes and warehouses in Cartagena, Fortuna, and Murcia were raided.

Blood money

ONE of Europe’s most wanted crime bosses has gone on the run after a Spanish court released him on bail, sparking fury in the Netherlands. The feared Karim Bouyakhrichan, leader of Holland’s 'Mocro Mafia', was captured to great fanfare in January after a fiveyear operation to unravel his criminal empire. Dutch authorities immedi-

Netherlands are fuming after dangerous mafia boss escaped Spanish custody upon paying €50,000 bail

HIGH ROLLER

AN Italian ‘guru’ has been arrested for selling psychotropic drugs from his El Campello spiritual retreat.

ately requested his extradition over death threats he had made towards the Netherland’s Crown Princess, Amalia of Orange, when she was just 18. Ironically, Amalia had been living in Madrid until just a few months ago, where she had ‘taken refuge’ a couple of years prior after kidnap plots emerged in her home country. She has since returned to Amsterdam.

Clients - some from as far away as the United Stateswere charged €1,200 for a weekend stay.

Numerous plants from which mescaline is extracted, bottles with alleged ayahuasca extract, capsules that could contain cactus powder, hashish, and magic mushrooms were seized in a police raid.

Officers also removed more than half a kilo of marijuana and several boxes containing chocolate sweets laced with marijuana.

Despite his rap sheet, Bouyakhrichan’s extradition was blocked by a Malaga court on the grounds that he had serious charges to face in Andalucia, according to sources consulted by Cadena Sur.

Instead, the brother of notorious crime lord Samir ‘Scar-

face’ Bouyakhrichan - who was stabbed to death in Benahavis in 2015 - was granted his freedom in exchange for posting €50,000 bail and a promise that he would show up to court every 15 days.

The decision enraged not just the Policia Nacional but also the Dutch security services.

The Dutch-Moroccan was released on provisional bail on March 19, eight weeks after his arrest on January 25, with orders to regularly sign on at a Marbella court.

Unsurprisingly, the mafia boss made just one trip to the court, on April 1. On his next expected appearance on April 15 he failed to show, leading to a search and arrest order to be issued against him.

Police sources have told the Olive Press Bouyakhrichan is being sought in the Moroccan town of Nador, which they likened to a ‘Moroccan Tijuana.

Baby con

A WOMAN used the identity of a deceased two-month-old baby to gain Spanish nationality before forming a criminal gang that operated for a decade. The fraudster - from the Dominican Republic - set up shell companies, purchased properties and brought over family and friends from her native country, after getting them residency by using fake papers. They then acted as fronts for her criminal enterprise, appearing as bank account holders and homeowners, as cover for the woman and her boyfriend. Now 11 people of Spanish and Dominican nationalities have been arrested by the Policia Nacional following an investigation lasting several months.

Bungling robber

A THIEF'S getaway from an Orihuela jewellery store was thwarted by passers-by snatching his haul and taking his photo.

The 38-year-old Spaniard threatened a shop assistant with a screwdriver and ran off with a palette of jewellery after the employee resisted him. Several people outside the store snatched his loot, with some of the witnesses pursuing him down the street. The shop worker saw the thief try to get into a car but he had lost his key and ran, pursued by three citizens.

CRIME www.theolivepress.es May 2nd - May 15th 2024 2 NEWS IN BRIEF

GREEN QUEEN

A CAMPAIGNER has won a ‘Green Nobel’ prize for fighting pollution in the Mar Menor lagoon.

Teresa Vicente, 61, a law professor at the University of Murcia, will receive the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize after being announced as one of this year’s seven winnersout of around 100 nominations from around the world. Vicente was praised for leading a successful campaign to give the Mar Menor a legal right to conservation and protection. She was inspired to act after the dumping of nitrates caused by illegal farming irrigation systems killed a massive number of fish in 2019.

Big hoax

OVER 100 scamming gang members have been arrested across Spain for conning 238 people in Alicante Province out of €850,000 by using phone apps to masquerade as distressed family members needing cash.

SAN JAV SOARING

OVER 50 aircraft from Spain and Europe will be taking part in the first San Javier Air Show this Friday through to Sunday.

Amongst those flying high will be the UK’s Team Raven who founded their display team in 2014 and are based at Swansea Airport.

San Javier council has billed it as one of the ‘biggest air shows on the planet’ and there will be displays each day over the beaches of Santiago de la Ribera between 10.30am and 3pm.

The plans are to make it an annual event during the first weekend of May with the three days expected to attract 150,000 visitors.

SEARCH GOES ON

Justice for Robert

A BRITISH expat has died after being run off the road by a driver in Spain and suffering catastrophic injuries.

Robert Paterson, a fatherof-three and keen scuba diver, had been in hospital for months since the crash in Alicante in November last year. He suffered extensive injuries, including multiple bleeds on the brain, hip and spinal fractures.

Fellow Brits had started a GoFundMe page to help

A BUST of a Welsh hero who saved 2,638 people fleeing General Franco's forces at the end of the Spanish Civil War has been smeared with fascist graffiti. Archibald Dickson, was captain of the SS Stanbrook and allowed the passengers safe refuge on his ship at Alicante port in March 1939. But last week, the plinth marking the historic rescue, installed in 2014, was daubed in black paint and accompanied by a Nazi swastika.

HOTEL’S RETURN

Robert’s family, who have lived in Spain for 20 years, cover the costs of his rehabilitation.

However a friend told the Olive Press that Robert, affectionately known as Bert, tragically passed away last week. He said: “Bert was a former colleague at Scottish Television in Glasgow... He was one of this world’s real good guys and will be

Hero vandalised

Its plaque was previously torn off in 2017 and was also targeted by fascist graffiti in 2019.

Dickson defied orders to ferry the passengers on what ended up being a dangerous journey to the port of Oran in Algeria. The SS Stanbrook dodged the German air force that bombed Alicante, and avoided the Francoist ship Canarias, which tried to sink it.

British expat is killed after being run off the road by a Spanish driver

much missed.” He added that the person behind the accident is now being investigated for manslaughter.

Another friend, Kevin Beaumont, told the Olive Press: “Bert will be sadly missed, he was taken from us far too soon. It’s such a tragic loss.”

Friend David Jeffries previously described the horror accident, which occurred on November 22 last year.

He wrote: “Another driver was tailgating him and as Bert indicated to pull over, the other driver accelerated to undertake the

car and in the process hit the back of the car sending it out of control and leaving it wrapped around a very large lamp post ,bringing it down. “The other driver did not stop immediately but did eventually pull over further down the road. Two witnesses corroborated that this is what happened. The Guardia Civil took over the investigation as a suspected ‘Road Rage Incident’.”

THE family of a British man who went missing in Valencia province five years ago have made a fresh appeal for information about his whereabouts. Mark Palmer, 32 and originally from Dunstable, moved to Ontinyent towards the end of 2018.

He was last spotted in the town on April 27, 2019. He was described as feeling distressed and expressing suicidal thoughts.

Mark's sister, Claire Elek, said: “Marky, if you're reading this, we miss you immensely.

“There isn't a day that goes by when we don't think about you. Please come home. We love you!”

At the time of his disappearance, Mark was described as 5’11” (178cm) with a slim build. He had short red/ginger hair with a red/ginger beard and hazel eyes.

Anyone with any information about Mark can contact the Missing Persons charity on +44 208 392 4521 or email 116000@missingpeople.org. uk or contact the Spanish police on 112.

New look prom

MAJOR improvements to the Los Alcazares promenade will start this year thanks to EU funding worth €3 million. The promenade will get a five kilometre cycleway which will be shared with pedestrians in some of the narrowest spots despite objections from a residents’ group. There have been complaints over the years from pedestrians having to dodge cyclists, skateboarders, and scooter riders on the promenade.

PLANS for a €16 million beach-front hotel for Arenales del Sol have been submitted to Elche City Council.

It would be built on Calle Albacete opposite Carabassi beach on land that was originally going to be a large car park and then a caravan and motorhome park.

The proposal is for a 200-bedroom hotel with six swimming pools, green areas, restaurants, an underground car park and a spa.

The complex will consist of six three-storey high blocks consisting of one and two bedroom apartments. It will be built on the site of the Hotel de Arenales del Sol, which was in business between 1963 and 1979, and eventually demolished in 2021.

The structure had become a target for squatters, drug addicts and rats, as well as becoming a major eyesore.

TRAGIC: The other driver is being investigated for manslaughter

Answers wanted

PEOPLE displaced by February’s Valencia apartment block fire have demanded that inquiries be restarted into what caused the blaze and if anybody is criminally responsible.

Ten people died in the Campanar district building on February 22, with the blaze destroying the 14-storey residential complex consisting of 138 apartments.

Four of the victims were a husband, wife, and their two children.

The husband’s grandfather has launched an appeal against a Valencia investigating court decision to provisionally shelve its probe into the cause of the fire. Reports in early March suggested that Policia Nacional experts discovered that the blaze was accidentally started by a faulty kitchen appliance.

The Campanar building’s Community of Owners has now joined in the man’s case which seeks to find out what legal basis was used to form a conclusion of non-criminality.

Mayor Mario Perez Cervera said: “It doesn't make sense to ban bicycles, because it is the most beautiful area of the municipality and people want to enjoy it in this sustainable environment.”

A residents group says it will oppose the cycleway because their ‘rights for a peaceful walk’ will be violated.

NEWS www.theolivepress.es May 2nd - May 15th 2024 4
MISSED: Robert was a keen scuba diver
NEWS www.theolivepress.es May 2nd - May 15th 2024 5 952 147 834 Promotion valid until 30/06/24. *Subject to conditions and underwriting terms. TheOlivePress-256x342-ocupacionilegal.indd 1 2/4/24 9:16

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

OPINION

RIP Robert

OUR sincerest condolences go out to the family of Robert Paterson, who last week died from his injuries after being run off the road in Spain.

The Scotsman and keen scuba diver was clearly very well liked among his expat community in Alicante, where he had been living for more than 20 years with his wife Lynn.

He had been valiantly fi ghting his catastrophic injuries in hospital, after being admitted following the horror incident on November 22 last year.

Maniac

According to friends, Robert was run off the road by a maniac driver, who practically rammed into the back of the expat and caused him to veer off the road and into a lamppost.

The scene is not hard to imagine, just ask any expat who drives in Spain how safe the roads are - and they’ll likely laugh in your face.

And it does not matter how safe of a driver you are, it’s the lunatics who tend to cause the crashes.

Hardly anyone indicates in Spain while the roads are often awash with drunken tourists, at least in the high season.

So if you are getting behind the wheel in this country, ALWAYS be on guard for dangerous drivers.

We are glad the man who allegedly caused Robert’s fatal crash is now facing charges of manslaughter.

It’s the least he deserves after taking the life of Robert, who leaves behind a devastated wife and children.

PUBLISHER / EDITOR

Jon Clarke, jon@theolivepress.es

Dilip Kuner dilip@theolivepress.es

Walter Finch walter@theolivepress.es

Yzabelle Bostyn yzabelle@theolivepress.es

(+34) 951 154 841 admin@theolivepress.es

Simon Hunter simon@theolivepress.es

Alex Trelinski alex@theolivepress.es

Ben Pawlowski ben@theolivepress.es

Santaella

accounts@ theolivepress.es

We’ll drink to that!

Former deputy Prime Minister Pablo Iglesias has fallen foul of anarchists who object to his new bar serving a Durruti cocktail, named after the legendary revolutionary. Cole Sinanian digs deeper…

TO understand the anarchist daubings scrawled on the new bar of ex-Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias, in Madrid, last month, we need to go back to July 1936. It’s the so-called ‘Summer of Anarchy’ in Barcelona, and the air is thick with the smell of revolution.

The rich had fled, forcing its luxury restaurants to convert to communal dining halls, patronised by working class comrades in boots and overalls. Revolutionary songs blared from speakers in Las Ramblas, red-and-black anarchist flags hung from balconies.

theolivepress.es

DTrade unions controlled nearly every aspect of industry, with around 70% of companies effectively collectivised by the workers.

But the revolutionary dream was in danger.

the fascists in Barcelona and Madrid, the two main cities which resolutely refused to cede to Franco.

Just a few hundred kilometres west in Zaragoza, an army of fascists loyal to Nazi-friendly General Franco were hell-bent on laying siege to the Catalan capital.

Born in 1896 in Leon, Durruti was a railway mechanic, who quickly became involved in local labour movements.

Formal ways of speaking had fallen out of use; everyone was ‘comrade’ now.

Since the Nationalists rebelled against Spain’s Government, rogue army generals had begun their assault on dozens of towns and cities.

But many iconic Spanish figures stood firm against the terrifying Nationalist advance.

One of these was Jose Buenaventura Durruti, who remains a symbol of anarchism today.

And, appropriately, with his legendary Durutti Column of irregular troops helping to fight

He played a part in a series of violent and disruptive strikes starting in 1910, organised by the increasingly powerful unions, the socialist Union General de Trabajadores (UGT), and the anarchist Confederacion Nacional de Trabajo (CNT).

After participating in the famous General Strike of 1917 - which saw the arrest of anarchist leaders en masse - Durruti was forced to flee to France. Upon his return in 1920, he encountered a violent society plagued by espionage and

DRIVEN TO DISTRACTION

The little-known reasons you can get a fine while driving in Spain: Avoid doing these five things to swerve a ‘multa’ of up to €3,000

RIVING on some of Spain’s roads can be a stressful experience at the best of times. Having made it home safely in one piece, the last thing you want is to have your day ruined by a letter from the DGT, Spain’s traffic enforcement agency.

If running out of fuel hadn’t already ruined your day, being fined under Spain’s rarely-used ‘Improper Parking’ legislation would really tip you over the edge. Make sure to get your fuel from legitimate sources too, as improperly transporting fuel results in a fine of up to €3,000. Ouch!

A new introduction to Spanish law, it is now illegal to drive in some Low Emission Zones (LEZs) without a relevant permit. With LEZs (known as ZBEs in Spanish) becoming more common throughout the country, drivers will have to keep up to date - while each LEZ is run by its own municipal authority, a baseline fi ne of €200 has been set by the DGT.

If you decorate your car with unauthorised items, it’s not just your mates who will be laughing at your expense - the DGT will too, having pocketed 500 of your hard-earned euros. These decorations include anything that changes the measurements of your car without having notified the DGT beforehand. Decoration could also lead to problems with passing your MOT. Additionally, placing items like ‘dream catchers’ on your rear view mirror, can land you a fine of up to €200 as they can partially block your view.

While fines for common transgressions, such as speeding, are known, the Spanish highway code has a long list of other offences that could leave authorities. Here are six lesser-known things to avoid in order to ensure you don’t receive an unwelcome fine.

The different categories are:

● Zero Label: corresponds to electric cars, plug-in hybrids with a battery range of at least 40 km and fuel cell vehicles.

● Eco Label: plug-in hybrid vehicles that cannot travel more than 40 km in electric mode, non-plug-in hybrids and natural gas vehicles.

● Label C: Petrol cars and light vans registered from 2006 onwards, and diesel cars and vans registered from September 2015.

● Label B: Petrol cars and vans registered between January 2001 to 2005 and diesel vans and cars registered between from 2006 to August 2015.

You can get a windscreen label at the Correos post offi ce by taking in your registration documents and ID. In Andalucia LEZs are in place in parts of Almeria, La Linea de la Concepcion,

Cordoba, Estepona, Sevilla and Torremolinos . In Valencia it is only the city itself that is affected, with no other towns covered so far. Over in Murcia just Cartagena has an LEZ, while there are none in the Balearics. But an LEZ is sure to come to town near you soon - all municipalities with more than 50,000 inhabitants are legally obliged to introduce them. Where each category can drive in individual LEZs will depend on local authorities - so keep an eye open for the signs if you want to avoid a fine. Those with no category will find their way barred in many town centres at pain of a fine.

NEWS FEATURE www.theolivepress.es 6 NEWSDESK: 0034 951 154 841 For all sales and advertising enquiries please contact 951 15 48 41
expat
Voted top
paper in Spain
month. AWARDS Best expat paper in Spain 2016 - 2020 2020 Best English language publication in Andalucia 2012 - 2023 Google News Initiative gives the Olive Press a substantial grant. Deposito Legal MA: 1650-2019 ADMIN Victoria Humenyuk Makarova
OFFICE MANAGER Héctor
424
DISTRIBUTION ENQUIRIES (+34) 951 154 841 distribution@
people a
(+34) 658 750
PIMPING YOUR RIDE EMPTY TANK 1 3
By Ben Pawlowski LOW EMISSION ZONES
2
you in hot water with the
view you as
TOAST: To Durruti (left) and his brave column of male and female soldiers

political assassinations, an era of Spanish history that would come to be known as pistolerismo

Bombs exploded in Barcelona cafes, union leaders were shot dead in the street, and government-sympathetic businessmen hired anti-union thugs to murder CNT and UGT associates.

Durruti and fellow prominent anarchists Francisco Acaso and Joan Garcia Oliver formed the anarchist militia Los Solidarios to defend the unions.

The group became a formidable force, robbing

banks to fund the anarchist cause and carrying out high-profile assassinations, including that of Cardinal Juan Soldevila y Romero.

By the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, Durruti was immensely popular among Catalan anarchists and well suited to recruit a local army to defend Barcelona from the Fascists.

On July 18, Durruti and his troops rode through the city brandishing machine guns.

As his former colleague Garcia Oliver wrote in his autobiography, he led ‘trucks full of militants, rifles raised, red-and-

become known as the Durutti Column, with the unit including a mix of men and women, as well as foreign fighters such as French philosopher Simone Weil.

The Durutti Column successfully defended the city from the first wave of fascist attackers, but in Zaragoza, Francoist General Emilio Mola was amassing his forces.

On July 24, the unit left Barcelona with 2,000 anarchists to take back Zaragoza.

Traversing the rugged Aragonese countryside, Durruti and his comrades recruited hundreds of local peasants working the land, gathering strength in each town with the fire of revolution.

PASSENGER PROBLEMS 4

It’s not just the person in the driver’s seat who should keep a keen eye on traffic lawspassengers should, too. Infractions, whether kissing the driver or not doing up your seatbelt, are a significant cause of accidents and also a way to lose a chunk of cash. Kissing or arguing heavily while driving can bring fines of €80 if police believe they caused a significant enough distraction behind the wheel.

By the time the column reached Zaragoza’s outskirts, the militia’s numbers had reached 6,000 - among the largest anarchist military units fighting in the war.

But before the seemingly inevitable confrontation, Franco had changed plans and gathered a vast army of troops for an assault on Madrid. The capital had been left defenceless after the government had moved itself and the Republican army bosses to Valencia.

Ritz

With the leftist troops in Madrid in desperate need of reinforcement, Durruti turned 1,800 of his strongest fighters around and told them to march to the capital.

Some 1,000 of them were to die in the mission.

Durruti himself was killed at the age of 40 in Madrid in November 1936, shot in the chest while leading a counterattack in the Casa de Campo area, west of the city.

He died on a makeshift operating table set up in the Ritz Hotel, during the course of the war.

He maintains a legendary status today, having come to symbolise the anarchist struggle towards an egalitarian, classless society.

Even the most benign, everyday actions could lead to a telling off from the cops. Eating whilst driving is not considered to be conducive to safe driving and could result in a hefty fine, so make sure your hunger is satisfied before starting your journey.

In fact if a driver is caught eating or drinking they could be fined €80, which jumps to €200 if traffic police believe other passengers or road

Penalties for the most common driving infringements - failure to wear a seatbelt and using a mobile phone - have recently been strengthened. These offences will now see four points docked off your licence, on top of a fine, so make sure to take care on the roads.

Over a half million people filled the streets during his funeral cortege to Barcelona’s Montjuic Cemetery and popular academic Hugh Thomas wrote that his death ‘marked the end of the classic age of Spanish anarchism’

His ‘nobility’, he wrote, would lead to ‘a legion of Durrutis’ to spring up behind him.

There are still some of them in that legion today, nearly a century on as former professor Pablo Iglesias has just discovered at his new bar in Madrid’s working class district of Lavapies.

Don’t cash in on a legend, they insisted in their graffitti. Now that’s truly revolutionary.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION!

Thousands of readers are signing up to the OP website since its relaunch last month

THE Olive Press website has soared to new heights following its relaunch last month.

It is now receiving up to 65,000 visitors a day from all around the world, including the UK, US, Spain, Australia and Canada.

In case you didn’t know, registering an account is extremely easy and allows you to access an extra free article.

It also lets you comment on stories so you can join the conversation on everything happening in Spain.

We are also seeing more and more people registering, with almost 2,000 new members in the last week alone.

So what are you waiting for? Scan the QR code on this page to join the conversation and stay informed on everything happening in Spain.

Plus, you’ll receive weekly newsletters directly to your inbox. For those who want unlimited access, we are currently offering a fantastic deal of three months for the price of one. For just €4.99, you will be able to read all our content for 12 weeks, while receiving weekly newsletters on travel, health and property - plus a personalised missive from the digital editor each Saturday. Subscribers also have exclusive access to the digital editions of our five fortnightly print newspapers, covering Gibraltar, Andalucia, Costa Blanca south, Costa Blanca north and Mallorca.

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

1- Tourist drops dead at Malaga Airport: 64-year-old suffers heart attack in arrivals

2- Missing expat teens latest: Residents in Benidorm are told 'do not approach' two boys

3- Warning: Town on Spain’s Costa del Sol will cut off water and issue fines of up to €600,000 to people who disobey drought measures

4- A Place In The Sun visits Almeria: Jasmine Harman, 48, celebrates after closing deal in an idyllic expat hotspot

5- Urgent appeal for two missing expat teens who disappeared in Spain 10 days ago: Latest sighting places them in Benidorm

May 2nd - May 15th 2024 7 Get in touch today at sales@theolivepress.es or call us at 00 34 951273575 for more info
HUNGER WOES black flags flying in the wind’. It had soon
5
TOUGHENED UP 6
placed in danger.
users were
Trucks full of militants, rifles raised, redand-black flags flying
ANGER: Anarchists scrawled on Iglesia’s new bar for disrespecting Durruti (in poster, above) DEATHBED: Durruti and family

WATER PLEDGE

THE Generalitat de Catalunya will install a floating desalination plant in the port of Barcelona to help the fight against the region’s drought.

David Mascort, the regional government’s climate action minister, revealed that the plan would come into action if a Level 2 drought emergency is announced - Catalunya is currently under a Level 1 drought emergency.

Desalination

The plant will provide 14hm3 of water per year, equivalent to 6% of the consumption of the Barcelona metropolitan area.

In addition, the government will install 12 small mobile desalination plants on the northern Costa Brava.

These facilities, which will cost €10million, will provide 35% of the water needed for over a dozen municipalities, including tourist towns such as Roses, Cadaques and Llanca.

SEVILLANOS can now hop on hundreds of electric mopeds dotted throughout the city as Cabify launches its new service.

The 200 electric mopeds give locals an emission free mode of transport. It is part of a partnership with Cooltra, a motorcycle hire company, which ex-

POLLUTION BATTLE BOOST

THE Spanish government will pump in an extra €190 million to fight pollution in the Mar Menor lagoon. It’s a 40% increase in the budget and takes the total to €675 million.

Visiting San Pedro del Pinatar (Murcia) , the Ecological Transition Minister, Tere-

Doñana recovers

Satellite images taken a year apart show dramatic tree and plant growth thanks to rainfall

THE Doñana wetlands have regained their splendour after heavy rainfall with satellite images showing a dramatic change.

The photos, released by the EU Earth Observation Programme, Copernicus, show

Wheely green

ploded in Spain last year. The bikes are available to hire by the minute, saving locals both time and money. According to Cabify, people prefer motorbikes as they are faster than travelling by car and easier to park.

OP QUICK CROSSWORD

lakes filled alongside blooming plants and trees.

This is in stark contrast to the images taken a year earlier in April 2023.

According to Corpernicus: “If we compare 2023 and 2024 we see how recent rain has softened the damaging effects of drought.

“The situation has improved and vegetation has started to flourish again.”

In the past few years, the park has suffered intense drought, leaving large swathes with no water.

However, thanks to downpours starting in November

sa Ribera, appealed to everybody to continue the current levels of collaboration to recover the Mar Menor because ‘our credibility as a society is at stake’.

2023, the situation has improved, leading many species to return to their natural habitat.

The biggest lakes in the park, like Santa Olalla, el Sopeton and la Dulce, are almost completely full.

“The rain has been coming late for winter, but it is still useful for aquatic birds to breed,” explained experts from the

Teresa Ribera said: “There is a real commitment to recover a precious ecosystem that mirrors on a small scale what is happening in the Mediterranean.”

“We have a floor, not a ceiling: and we cannot go back. You can’t take your foot off the gas,” she added.

A lot of the pollution was caused by farmers and agricultural companies installing illegal drainage systems at the Campo de Cartagena which discharged nitrates into Europe’s largest lagoon that poisoned its flora and fauna.

Biological Station.

The park is known for its birds, including coots, terns, grebes, storks and herons.

According to data from the Doñana Biological Station, March alone saw 145 l/m2. Since September, some 404.4 l/m2 has fallen in the area.

“This figure is the highest seen in four years, but it is still not the seasonal average, 500l/m2.”

Heat relief

EXPERTS have given their verdict on how hot Spain could be this summer after last year’s record breaking heat across the country.

Despite higher than normal temperatures in January, February and March, this summer is set to be cooler than in 2023. “It’s very probable that June, July and August won’t be hotter than the average European temperatures,” confirmed Copernicus, the EU’s Earth Observation arm.

According to experts, temperatures won’t be as hot this summer thanks to the absence of the weather phenomenon, El Niño which was present in 2023.

It will be replaced by La Niña, known for cold spells.

“We know that large parts of the world are no longer under the effects of El Niño, which reached its peak in December or January. Now El Niño is retiring and forecasts suggest we reach a neutral state or return to what it was like before,” said Copernicus.

However, the EU entity highlighted more data is needed before a thorough prediction can be made.

HOP ON A BUS!

contributor to CO2 pollution, particularly in Spain where it ranks as the most polluting sector.

To mitigate these emissions, utilising public transportation whenever possible is highly recommended.

Public transit is more environmentally friendly than private cars, as it can transport a larger number of individuals while emitting fewer greenhouse gases. A single bus can carry 50 people or more - potentially taking 49 cars off the road.

By encouraging the shift from cars to public transit, we can make a significant impact on reducing global greenhouse gas emissions. Additionally, public transportation helps decrease other pollutants such as gas, emis-

sions, and microplastics from car wheels, leading to cleaner cities and reduced noise pollution.

The EU’s initiative to transition to electric cars by 2035 aims to address emission concerns. Although electric cars come with their own set of challenges, such as battery production issues, they offer a cleaner alternative when powered by renewable energy sources.

Some people complain that their range is not big enough. But people’s average travel distance per day is 27 kilometres compared to the fact that a full charge gives most electric cars a range of 300 km or more. So, if you have your own house, you could easily charge your car every night. And imagine: you will never have to stop at dirty petrol stations. And if you have your own rooftop solar panel it is almost free to refuel (charge) your car! So, aren’t you convinced? I am!

GREEN May 2nd - May 15th 2024 8 17 YEARS OF ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS Scan to find out more All solutions are on page 14 Across 6 Rebellious Duke (8) 8 Mucho (1,3) 9 Endlessly (5,3,5) 10 Weld and woad (4) 11 They’re stuffed in the kitchen (7) 14 Software release (7) 16 Yield (4) 19 Swirling spirits act shy for some doctors (13) 21 Baby beds (4) 22 Water (8) Down 1 Ran in the park (6) 2 Middle Eastern spice (5) 3 Element emerges when humidor is smashed (7) 4 Chill out (4) 5 Inform (6) 7 Racehorses yet to win (7) 12 Storing (7) 13 Proposition (7) 15 Singer Sheena (6) 17 Living thing (6) 18 Tale (5) 20 Zodiacal divider (4) OP SUDOKU
Shift to public transportation if you want to reduce your CO2 emissions, says Christin Hagemeier Please send your questions or comments on how to be greener to Christin@theolivepress.es W E all know we need to reduce our CO2 emissions if we are to avoid the most extreme climate change. Transportation emissions are a significant
Doñana SPLENDOUR: Satellite images taken a year apart

LA CULTURA

A BRITISH dark comedy is topping the Spanish Netflix charts as Baby Reindeer, a show about a female stalker, goes viral.

The series tells showrunner and actor Richard Gadd’s first-hand experience as the victim of a female stalker.

A dark comedy, the show explores Gadd’s ‘warped’ relationship with

Gone viral

his stalker, Martha as she forces him to confront deep seated trauma. It was released on streaming platform, Netflix, on April 11 and has shot to the top of the global charts holding a firm first place on the streaming platform.

STILL GOT IT!

Michael Caine scoops

top

MICHAEL Caine has been awarded Best Actor at the Barcelona Film Festival at 91-years-old for his film, The Great Escaper.

Based on a true story, the film follows a World War

Two veteran, Bernard Jordan, as he escapes his retirement home.

The 89-year-old wanted to go to France to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Normandy landing and reunite with his brothers in arms.

Influencer control

THE Spanish government has just approved a royal decree that will define exactly what an online ‘influencer’ is.

Among the criteria are income of at least €300,000 a year, more than a million followers on a video platform (or two million across all platforms used), and at least 24 videos published each year.

The new law is already in force, and will also require influencers to follow a series of regulations. These include specifying the age range for consumers of their content, as well as clearly labelling paid-for content – i.e. when posts are being used to advertise products in exchange for payment.

The regulations also set out time frames for when certain products can be promoted. These include alcohol, tobacco and electronic smoking products such as vapes, medication and gambling sites.

award at the Barcelona film festival

played his wife Irene. The ‘legendary’ pair have been praised for their performances, which give ‘a huge amount to

VETERAN: Michael Caine gives yet another legendary performance

He was joined by the late Glenda Jackson, who enjoy,’ according to a Guardian review.

Another foreign picture was also praised as the Finnish title, Maya’s Destiny, won best film.

The historical drama follows 17-year-old Maya as she is forced to marry a fisherman, dealing with long absences and the burden of childcare alone.

Based on a five-book series by Anni Bloqvist, the film was a ‘surprising’ success.

For the Spaniards, Birth was awarded Best Directing.

About a young girl who unexpectedly becomes pregnant in 1980s Spain, the female cast were jointly given the Best Actress award.

Another winner was Phantom Youth, which tells the story of the lost innocence of young people during the independence of Kosovo.

More than 20,000 people attended this year’s festival, watching 69 films.

Almost 50 of the pictures shown were premieres, including 15 from around the world.

Alongside the showings there were 63 talks, events

Women only

AFTER the success of its first edition, a women-only ‘queer’ LGTBIQA music festival is returning to Fuengirola. It is the first of its kind in Europe and will feature international names like Amaral, Belen Aguilera, Ladilla Rusa and Samurai. On May 25, the Marenostrum outdoor concert venue will be filled by music, colour and good vibes as the festival kicks off. Tickets start at €32 and are available here.

and activities, among them a talk with Oscar nominee and Society of Snow director, J.A. Bayona.

May
9 May 2nd -
15th 2024
mandy

AN Alicante hospital is making use of a new method to treat cancerous tumours.

Vinalopo University Hospital, uses special needles to freeze the cancerous cells to -40ºC to destroy them.

Medical teams use ultrasound scans to locate the tumours, and the process can be carried out without general anaesthetic and avoids the need for the patient to stay overnight.

The procedure has been successfully used on a breast cancer patient.

“If [the patient] has hormone receptors in the tumour, they start hormone therapy treatment and, as soon as the response is evaluated, a decision is made as to whether cryoablation is necessary,” explains Lucía Hernández, head of breast radiodiagnosis at the Vinalopó Hospital.

New hope LONG WAITS

OPERATION waiting lists in Spain’s public hospital system reached a record high of 849,535 as of December 31, 2023.

highest levels of sunshine hours, a widespread use of high factor blocks to stop

Mozzie solutions

How to keep the little biters at bay

MOSQUITOES have arrived extra early in southern Spain this year and here’s how to prevent the pests attacking you while you sleep.

Residents of southern Spain are searching for solutions after a little boy died of West Nile virus recently.

Two cases of the disease have been reported in Sevilla, but in the past few years, plagues have been identified all over the southern coast.

So, how can you keep them away?

Chemical options

Deet is a very reliable and highly effective insect repellent that has been in use since 1957.

It is sold under many different brand names and in many different forms, including lotion and spray.

Concentrations of Deet range from around 5% all the way up to 100%, with a stronger percentage in general meaning the insects will be repelled for longer. But any concentration higher than about

DOS AND DON’TS FOR DEET

DEET DO:

 Use sprays to treat skin and clothing, for an even application

 Use liquids, creams and sticks for precision applications

 Wash Deet-covered skin with soap and water

 Keep insect repellents out of reach of children

 Apply suncream first and then Deet

DEET DON’T:

 Apply to eyes, lips or mouths, or over cuts, wounds or irritated skin

 Over-apply to skin, or saturate clothing

50% doesn’t offer significantly more protection, and 10 to 30% will provide sufficient protection for almost every scenario. It is generally recommended to use less than 10% concentration on children, and never on children under five.

There have been complaints of minor skin and eye irritation, but as long as you use it in moderate concentrations and according to directions, it is considered safe.

Permethrin is another effective repellent but is meant for clothing rather than skin.

It can last for at least two weeks – even through washes

Alternatively, if you prefer not to apply Deet to your skin overnight, you could try a plug in chemical repellent or trap.

However, there have been reports the chemicals omitted could be harmful to human health.

Natural solutions

If you don’t like the idea of chemical repellents, there are plenty of natural products which can be just as effective.

Try diffusing lemon, eucalyptus, tea tree oil, lavender, mint, geranium or citronella oil, all of which have shown to repel mosquitoes.

Lemon eucalyptus is especially effective, providing the same protection as lower percentage Deet products.

You may also apply oil directly to the skin, but dilute it with a carrier oil like coconut, jojoba or olive oil first to avoid irritation.

This method can also be a great way to combine bite prevention and a deep moisture boost in the summer months.

in

However, please note that oil should not be used on children under five.

Prepare your space

skin cancer (but reduce Vitamin D absorption) and a sedentary lifestyle are behind the problem identified in Alicante.

A lack of vitamin D can lead to heart attacks and cancer, according to studies.

Dr. Mari Angeles Medina, president of the Valencian Society of Family and Community Medicine, said: “Having very low values of this nutrient is related to cardiovascular disease and with oncological pathology.

“Adequate sun exposure and a daily intake of healthy foods is recommended as low Vitamin D levels can cause colon, breast, or prostate cancer,” she added.

Dr. Medina says that 'we

have to make the population aware of the situation without alarm because it is a disorder of modern life'.

As for recommended levels of sun exposure, Dr. Medina make this recommendation:

“In adults, being in the sun for 10 or 15 minutes between 10am and 5pm is enough.

“Older people should be exposed for at least 30 or 40 minutes, but almost no one does that, because despite the fact that we have a lot of sun, we actually spend many hours inside homes, offices, and factories.

“We have to try to live outside, let the sun shine on us, without overdoing it,” she added.

Twice-yearly figures are released by the Ministry of Health, and show a 30,000 increase compared to last summer. It's the fifth successive report to show rising operation waiting times, and the only worst modern figure was in June 2020 when nearly all routine procedures were postponed due to the Covid pandemic. Average delays from when a doctor or consultant believes an operation is needed has risen from 112 to 128 days between last July and December. Those who have had to wait more than six months has reached one in four patients, compared to the first half of 2023 which stood at 17.4%. By specialisms, traumatology has the most patients on the waiting list (206,000), followed by ophthalmology (178,000) and general surgery and the digestive system (156,000).

 Apply to skin beneath clothing, or skin that isn’t exposed

 Apply more often than recommended on the product level

Experts recommend using fans at night, as keeping the air moving will prevent mosquitoes from landing on you. They also advise removing any standing water as this is where mosquitoes like to breed.

At night, make sure to shut your curtains or persianas properly as the bugs are attracted to light.

If it comes to it, you may also want to invest in a mosquito net to stop the insects coming near you.

HEALTH May 2nd - May 15th 2024 11 LOOKING FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES? Scan to visit our website ASK FOR OUR WEEKLY SPECIALS easywheelsrentacar.com CALL: (mobile/whatsapp ) +34 711 075 474 EMAIL: easywheelsrentacar@gmail.com Avenida Rio Nalon, 8, 30710, Los Alcazares, Murcia. 1. No nonsense car hire at affordable prices 2. Fully insured and legal 3. We won’t block your card 4. No large deposits 5. Very quick service FOUR
three
of 10
in a sunshine
region suffer from Vitamin
ficiency. Despite
Spain's GETTING
out of 10 adults and
out
children
Spanish
D de-
some of
EXPOSED
Avoiding the sun and sunblock leading to vitamin D deficiencies
mint,

Trapped in the cycle

Our brains are always subtly scanning

“I REALLY think I can’t see the positive even though I know that I have good things in my life. My brain just goes to the negative and I think about problems that may be coming up. It seems that I am in a cycle.”

This was a client that I worked with some six months ago who voiced an issue that many people have. She was not clinically diagnosed with any condition and she was not on any medication. However, she said that at points she had low moods though they lifted the next day and she ‘got on with life’.

Having asked about her medical and past social history of experiences, it was clear that this was an issue that was not impeding her life, but it was affecting her quality of life. Many people sadly experience this type of thought process – a form of mental filtering towards the negative. It is nothing to be ashamed about and it is important to be able to voice

for risk while

we remain in the conscious world during the day

such concerns with loved ones, or with counsellors and therapists, since shame, guilt and self-blame simply compound the issue and also add to low moods.

It is important to remember that our minds work in a certain way. They work from experiences that have happened to us, perceptions that we form over time, things that key people have said to us when we were growing up and patterns of behaviours that we exhibited early in our life as a way of ‘surviving’ or ‘fitting in’.

In other words, our brains work on a daily basis through patterns that reflect these past events which have been tried and tested over time.

The problem is that some of these thoughts and behaviours that we have become used and accustomed to, may not be helpful in later points in our lives. Allied to this is the fact that the limbic system which manages

our long term memory, emotional and stress responses, is a key and integral ‘older’ part of our brain and

has developed over millions of years to keep us safe. This also means that in keeping us safe, our brains naturally work in the background, much like an automatic virus checker in a computer, ensuring that we remain safe in a potentially unsafe world, where today there are different types of stressors.

Obstacles

Additionally, if we take on this perspective, our brains are therefore always subtly scanning for risk whilst we remain in the conscious world during the day.

Therefore, if someone has been through life experiences which may

Are you depressed? Suffering from anxiety?

Worried about the year ahead? Are your kids having social issues? PERHAPS YOU NEED SOMEONE PROFESSIONAL TO TALK TO I HOPE I CAN HELP.

Call me, Fijaz Mughal, in confidence. I’m fully-accredited and professionally-trained in London and recently moved to Spain.

I understand the issues many expats feel in Spain. Change through relocation abroad can really add to mental health pressures and these life changes are never easy. Counselling and therapy has changed the lives of many. Getting in touch is the first step. Recognising that there is an issue is the first step on the road to recovery.

Help is available through my confidential counselling

CONTACT: Fijaz Mughal OBE FCMI MBACP on info@counselling4anxiety.com www.counselling4anxiety.com

was also understandable that in thinking and feeling that there were obstacles that could come up and with these thoughts recurring in her mind, that her mood was affected. This form of mental filtering towards the negative, sometimes with catastrophising, is called a ‘cognitive distortion’.

There are a number of ways of reducing these cognitive distortions though they need time and a commitment from the individual who is affected. They need a form of positive mental and emotional self-investment, a realisation that a change in mindset can happen, is possible and achievable; that just because difficult situations happen, they do not need to be viewed as a catalogue of problems, or ‘another thing that goes bad in my life’.

are blessed with. By doing so, this is also a form of acceptance, of resetting what is important to individuals and in raising their capacity to see joy and goodness in the world.

Difficult things happen, but life also throws up many joys in the day, with sometimes the smallest of things that can bring joy to us.

It is about recognising this, embracing it, and really holding those small positive

have been difficult or troubling, their brain may well have become hyper-sensitised to risk and thereby slants the individual towards looking at life through the lens of having to overcome obstacles or of another problem potentially coming round the corner.

So what are the things that can help to reduce cognitive distortions like negative mental filtering? Firstly, stress reduction can really help. Anything that adds significant stress, such as smoking, drinking high quantities of coffee or caffeinated colas need to be reduced or ideally, removed from their lifestyle. Things like meditation and mindfulness can really help, by allowing the individual to have the space to realise that the brain is going through an old pattern that can be changed over time and that the person has ultimate control over this. Sometimes this basic awareness can help to reduce the strength of the emotions that may be thrown up by the negative thoughts, especially if they are self-deprecating.

moments of joy, colour, vibrancy or company that we

It is therefore understandable that my client had started to view life through that lens. It

Chip away

Other things that can help include taking up exercise, building a circle of friends and ensuring that there is regular communication with them. This person-to-person connectivity is important for us as a species. Also, listing the pattern of negative thoughts and reasons and facts that challenge the negative thoughts and which resonate well with the individual, are another way of helping to chip away and reframe thinking over time. This also needs to be practised regularly.

to

Positive visualisation can also help and this involves taking some 10-20 minutes out of the day to find a quiet space in which someone can close their eyes, and visualise a safe, warm and comfortable place that they have been to. It could be anywhere in the world that they have visited. Visualisation is another technique that helps in giving positive meaning and in strengthening positive feelings. Lastly, therapy and counselling can really help and depending on commitment, people can see real benefits in a short period of time. Finally, it is important to remember that we are the drivers of change. This means that we can also change the way that we see the world externally, whilst also changing the way that we experience negative thoughts or feelings.

We may not be able to wholly erase the latter, but therapy can certainly reduce the impact of them on daily life.

Fiyaz Mughal is a qualified therapist and is registered with the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy in the U.K. He practises in person and online in Spain and the U.K.

HEALTH May 2nd - May 15th 2024 12 LOOKING FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES? Scan to visit our website
PATTERNS: Our brains can filter for the negative, known as a ‘cognitive distortion’ BREAK OUT: Meditation, mindfulness and a strong circle of friends can help you break negative thought patterns

Travelodge swoops

BRITISH hotel group Travelodge has doubled its presence in Spain by taking over the Campanile brand owned by Louvre Hotels. The deal gives the operator outlets in Alicante, Barcelona, Madrid, Murcia, and Malaga to add to its current portfolio.

Travelodge instantly gains an extra 773 rooms 20 years after opening its first hotel in Spain.

CEO, Jo Boydell, said the country is an important market for the company with ‘significant’ expansion opportunities.

Last year, Travelodge identified the top 20 key markets in Spain for openings where it says there’s a lack of value-for-money accommodation to meet the needs of business and leisure guests.

Scan to visit our website

Power up!

Biggest battery recycling plant will slash costs by 80%

ALICANTE is set to have Europe's largest electric car battery recycling plant in operation by the end of the year.

GDV Mobility has received backing from the Valencian government and the factory will be located in the Llano de los Espartales industrial estate, covering an area of over 3,000 m2.

The company’s current premises are able to recover electric batteries to 90% of their initial capacity and 80%

PEOPLE in Spain work an average of 32.1 hours per week according to BBVA Research.

It analysed figures from 2022, and in terms of regions, the Balearic Islands came top with 33.33 hours, followed by the Madrid region on 32.88 hours and the Canaries on 32.68 hours.

Andalucia clocked in 32.08 hours, while the Basque Country is bottom on 30.25 followed by 31.03 hours for Asturias region workers.

Economics professor, Manuel Hidalgo,

of battery life, using a proprietary patented process.

The firm restored around 200,000 lithium batteries in 2023. The process allows it to prevent between 0.6 and

Clocking in

said the extra hours in tourist areas like the Balerics and Canaries is down to the greater presence of 'labour-intensive activities where there is little or no flexibility in the services provided'.

That is the case for a restaurant, or a hotel, where Hidalgo believes that reducing the working day means hiring more people or having shorter opening hours, which impacts the business.

1.2 tons of lithium being crushed per day and its plan will see the battery recycling process take a maximum of 72 hours. It also will reduce battery costs by up to 80% in what is normally one of the most expensive repairs and replacements faced by electric car owners.

GDV Mobility says that production capacity will be increased five-fold with an approximate capacity of 4,000 tons due to improvements in the battery treatment process. Besides becoming the largest electric car battery repair plant in Europe, it will become the only hazardous waste management plant in the Valencian Community.

STIRRING IT UP

TWO young entrepreneurs have won praise across Spain for their edible cutlery business.

Malaga-based Ivan Marmolejo, 19, and best friend Jose Robles, now 20, are the founders of Plash, a company which makes 100% edible, vegan and gluten-free coffee stirrers.

The lads have known each other since high school and have spent years trying to bring their product to market.

Ivan said: “At school we started doing our first tests, and we opened a few online stores that didn’t go very well.”

They both decided to study a degree in Entrepreneurial Leadership and Innovation at the University of Mondragon – during which they enjoyed a trip to the University of Costa Rica, where they fell in love with coffee.

Ivan added: “In Costa Rica we researched and learned a lot about coffee, we became complete geeks, and we decided that we wanted to start in this sector… “We already knew about edible cutlery… and we decided to make stirrers edible for coffee, which are like wooden sticks that are thrown away, but that can be eaten.”

Thrown away

Currently, the coffee stirrers by Plash taste like vanilla, but more flavours are in the works.

They planned their business during their trip to Costa Rica and by the time they returned to Malaga they were receiving samples from suppliers.

In March they began selling their stirrers to cafes and bars across Malaga, with at least six now stocking them. The lads next want to expand to hotels, resorts and catering events such as weddings of baptisms.

GOLD OR GOLD BONDS?

GOLD is no different to any other commodity, in that its price fl uctuates on a minute by minute basis.

Its price can be determined by many outside events, but even so, like stock markets, it goes down as well as up.

The graph right shows this from 2010 until today (fi gures correct as of 22.04.24).

So how do Gold Bonds overcome the risk of their gold value going down as well?

The award winning firm, THG Capital Savings, can answer this for you: its Gold Bond uses the process of ‘gold-streaming’.

Gold streaming is buying Gold Dore (unrefined gold) and refining the gold into 24 Karat Bullion. THG’s traders source Gold Dore direct from mines globally and have

a team that travels to these locations to assess the gold content, weight and then agree a fixed purchase price.

Once a purchase price has been agreed, they will then negotiate the sale price directly to the refi nery.

Once the purchase price and the sale price is agreed, they will calculate the cost of insurance, shipping and all other associated costs to see if the total deal is profi table.

As long as the trade is profi table, the purchase and sale contracts will be written and the trade will take place providing a fi xed return on their clients capital.

The risk is therefore mitigated for all parties and a ‘known profi t’ for the trade is locked in.

With this happening continually, the Bond is able to offer a yearly fixed rate to its savers.

Currently THG’s Fixed Rate Gold Bond is offering 9% p.a. and has delivered the quoted returns faultlessly.

To add in further peace of mind for customers, THG has employed the services of a UK FCA Registered Trustee, City Partnership Ltd, to oversee the dealings.

This firm also holds 100% of the Bond’s assets; this is either the gold and/or cash. Apart from offering 9% p.a. interest

rates, THG states its Bond is 100% asset-backed by the two most historical currencies known to man, gold and cash.

So back to the question, Gold or Gold Bonds?

Well if you want double the bank interest rates on your savings, in a secure and proven UK-based gold product with the risk mitigated, it’s surely Gold Bonds all the way!

13
BUSINESS May 2nd - May 15th 2024
LOOKING FOR THE LATEST MONEY RELATED STORIES?
EVOLUTION: of gold prices since 2010 show an upward trend For more information and to discuss THG Capitals’ 9% Fixed Rate Gold Bond, call its team on 0044 (0)1243 767664 – or visit www.thgcapitalsavings.com and complete the enquiry form.
With Gold bullion prices at a nearly all-time high, is it the place for savers who want more than bank interest rates? NB – THG Capital Savings 9% Gold Bond is available globally and to Expatriates living abroad. THG Capital Savings is part of The Hinton Group, including mybestbuysavings. Any contact from an enquiry will be answered by the mybestbuysavings Team.
PRAISE: Ivan and Jose with a supplier in Costa Rica

FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL

May 2nd - May 15th 2024

SHOW COOKING

ASQUADRON of Spain’s top chefs including one from Calpe have led their whisks into the annual battle to teach youngsters how to cook healthily.

The 35 culinary geniuses came from all over Spain to support the Chefs for Children event in Benahavis.

The majority of them with Michelin stars, they generously imparted their knowledge to the group of 150 children, many of them autistic.

Sandoval, of Coque, told the Olive Press: “Any one of these kids could be inspired to become the next top chef.

“It’s great to bring Spain’s leading chefs together in this way for such a good cause.”

Little stars outshine their three dozen Michelinstarred teachers at annual Chefs for Children bash

The event also included Nacho Manzano, with three stars, from Asturias and Fina Puigdevall and her two daughters Martina and Carlota Puigvert, whose famous Les Cols joint in Olot, has two stars.

Setting up on a shady terrace at the five star Anantara Villa Padierna hotel, they taught the youngsters how to use knives, grind up a guacamole and make delicious mini fruit tarts, among other dishes.

pecially important to teach youngsters both how to cook well and healthily,” he explained.

Málaga cook José Carlos Garcia added:

“It’s a brilliant way to promote the best of Malaga, a city which is completely on fire these days!”

Now in its sixth year, the chefs included Madrid’s trio of Michelin legends, Mario Sandoval, Ramon Freixa and Paco Roncero, all with two stars.

“It’s great to be down here again, particularly with my two daughters,” she said. “There is so much going on down in Andalucia these days. It’s a genuinely exciting place and the gastronomic scene is developing so fast.”

Leading the charge locally were Malaga’s finest, including Diego Gallegos, lo, David Olivas, Back, and Dani Carnero, from Kaleja.

One visitor, very impressed with his visit was Rafa Soler, whose restaurant Audrey’s has a star in Calpe, on the Costa Blanca.

“It is really important for us chefs to put something back and it doesn’t get more positive than a day like this.

The 44-year-old continued: “Valencia, like Malaga, is now developing so fast. Both regions are heavily influenced by the flavours of the Mediterranean and both are seeing huge growth from gourmet tourists.

The province’s top chef, Benito Gomez, from Ronda’s two Michelin star Bardal, told the Olive Press he was ‘really proud’ to be representing the region again.

“It’s always an amazing event and es-

“In fact I would say that around 70% of my clients are now coming from abroad to enjoy Spain’s amazing food. Events like this accentuate what we do well.”

This year, 55 of the country’s top chefs have been involved in the Chefs for Children events.

Under the banner ‘Eating healthy is fun’, this year it is supporting the charity Autismo Espana and raising awareness of the condition.

The event was jointly-funded by Malaga Diputacion’s Sabor a Malaga and Benahavis town hall, with its Tourism chief, Scott Marshall, telling the Olive Press: “We are extremely proud to be involved.”

A menu degustation was prepared by the group of local Malaga chefs at a later gala.

Sponsored by Porsche in Marbella, wine was provided by Bodegas Emilio Moro, while the ham came from Joselito.

EYES PEELED: If you can get a hat that fits (top) and kids’ participation is key 1 2 3

OP Puzzle solutions

Quick Crossword

Across: 6 Monmouth, 8 A ton, 9 Again and again, 10 Dyes, 11 Turkeys, 14 Version, 16 Cede, 19 Psychiatrists, 21 Cots, 22 Irrigate.

Down: 1 Jogged, 2 Sumac, 3 Rhodium, 4 Hang, 5 Notify, 7 Maidens, 12 Keeping, 13 Solicit, 15 Easton, 17 Entity, 18 Story, 20 Cusp.

READY: Chopping boards and pinafores at the ready STEADY: An army of chefs arrives
were from
GO: One of the chefs gets stuck in

sonably priced and wide-ranging’. But where are these pioneering producers hiding?

From the central plain of ‘forgotten Spain’ to the southern reaches of Tenerife, these are the up and coming wine regions to look out for.

RIBEIRA SACRA

ARRIBES

In the heart of Galicia lies the Ribeira Sacra wine region.

Marked roughly by the flows of the Mino and Sil rivers, the name roughly translates to ‘Sacred Shore’. Here winemaking is an art dating back to the Roman era and was continued by monks in the area’s various monasteries. With gradients of 85% in some vineyards, in Ribeira Sacra wine making is considered ‘heroic’.

MENTRIDA

Found near historic Toledo (Castilla La Mancha) is Mentrida.

This wine region mostly uses the Garnacha grape, providing robust, rannic and ageworthy red wines.

Though known for its reds, the region also produces fresh and fruity rose wines. Here, winemaking dates back to the 12th century but the area only achieved DO status in 1976.

The area was given DO status in 1996 for its speciality dry reds using the Mencia grape.

This variety thrives in the long ripening season and temperature variability.

Other important varieties include the red Brancellao and Merenzao, alongside the white Godello and Treixadura.

The Ribeira Sacra is divided into five sub-regions including Amandi, Chantada, Quiroga-Bibei, Ribeiras do Mino and Ribeiras do Sil.

According to critics, the best Ribeira wine is the Dominio do Bibei Tinto, a cherry red wine, which is full-bodied with a great length.

Arribes in Castilla y Leon only gained its DO title in 2007.

its fruity reds using

Along the banks of the Duero River, the region is known for its fruity reds using Rufete, Tempranillo, Garnacha and Mencia grapes. However, they also produce great whites and roses using Malvasia, Verdejo and Albillo varieties.

One of the smallest and most isolated wine regions in Spain, there are just 20 bodegas in the area and count-

Many young people have returned to Arribes to start wineries alongside expats, enamoured by the dramatic landscapes. Arribes best wine is El Hato y el Garabato’s ‘Sin Blanca’, produced using Juan Garcia grapes.

Cebrero (also Castilla y Leon) is found in the Sierra de Gredos region, a pioneer in the ‘new wave’ of Spanish wine.

by the dramatic land-

A powerful red, it has a powerful palate with hints of ripe fruit, spice and round tannins.

At just €20, this wine is accessible to even those on a strict budget.

Awarded DO status just five years ago, it is particularly known for its old-vine Garacha reds.

With vineyards lying on mountain slopes, the granite-based soils and well established vines give Cebrero wine a marked mineral content.

Though known for its reds, Albillo Real is the main white grape variety, with a dense, well-structured wine that matures perfectly in the barrel.

Although little-known today, praise for Cebrero wines has

been found in written sources as early as the 14th century, beginning their modern renaissance in the 1970s.

Around 18 wineries produce under the Cebreros DO banner but the best is Telmo Rodriguez’s ‘Pegaso Arrebatacapas’, at €50 a bottle.

The ‘unique’ wine is aged in the barrel for 18 months in French oak, giving it a strong and smooth flavour.

Although many only know Tenerife for its winter sun, the island is home to many delicious wines, including the Valle de la Orotava variety.

Despite being one of the oldest grape regions on the island, dating back to the 15th century, the valley only received its DO status in 1995.

Overlooking the vineyards is the Pico del Teide volcano and the volcanic soils give the wine its vibrant acidity, mineral flavour and distinct smoky touch.

Although small, the industry in Mentrida is slowly gaining momentum, with producers focussed on quality.

cussed on quality.

Fusing modern and traditional

Fusing modern and traditional techniques, the region produces barrel-aged reds alongside fresher, younger wines fermented in stainless steel.

One of the best wineries in the area is Dominio de Valdepusa, the first property to gain single-vineyard Vino de Pago status.

This award is given only to vineyards deemed equal to those in top-level DOCa regions.

The ‘best’ Mentrida wine is a €28 red, using Grenache grapes.

‘La Vina Escondida’ from Bodegas Canopy is a characterful wine with balsamic flavours and fruity hints.

Though red wines are produced, the area is predominantly known for its sweet white wines such as Malmsey, which uses the Malvasia grape.

The Valle de la Orotava is also known for its unique vine training technique, el cordon trenzado wherein vines are plaited so that they can be easily moved to grow essential crops.

Only 30% of wines from the region are bottled and are mainly consumed within Tenerife, however, this will change as the region continues to grow.

According to winesearcher. com, the best Valle de la Orotava wine is the Suertes del Marques 'Los Pasitos' Baboso Negro.

Just €29 a bottle, this 2015 vintage is described as ‘spicy and herby with fine bitter notes’.

SOMMELIER Se s
EADING British wine guru Jancis Robinson recently declared (above) Spain was undergoing a ‘wine revolution’. She claimed the country is seeing ‘so many exciting new-wave producers’, which are not only high quality but ‘reaAs a UK wine guru salutes Spain’s ‘wine revolution’ with so many new producers, we take a look at five obscure regions FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL April 17th April 30th 2024 32 November 29th - LOOKING FOR MORE TRAVEL STORIES? Scan to visit our website The seasoned writer was particularly impressed with the ‘great whites’ and also that only 13 producers came from Rioja and Ribera del The rest from a range of frequently denominations (DOs) including Cebreros, Valle la Orotava, Arribes, Ribeira Sacra Mentrida. “You see how difficult it is for to map the wine regions of Spain satisfactorily now as they are scattered all country and as far as the Canaries,” she wrote in her column in Financial Times. “For used to against Spain’s dependence on just one grape variety, Tempranillo, the dominant grape of Ribera and Rioja. But at the event this year there were 80!” She particularly raved about one wine, Guix Vermell, from Montsant as well as Albafrom Galicia. “These albarinos are far more interesting today than they were when they became fashionable or 20 years ago,” she wrote. “White Rioja is also now taken seriously and there is host of deep-flavoured whites based on grapes such as Albilllo, Verdejo and Xarel-lo.” Location The vinateros (who are ‘wine growers’ as opposed to ‘winemakers’) believe that great wine is ‘made in the vineyard’ and the location is more important than the winemaking technique. The event was attended by over UK importers well as the Spanish ambassador. There will American version event in the next year. Wine revolution Spanish wines have seen a ‘significant’ increase in quality over the last 20 years, insists UK wine expert Jancis Robinson Jon Clarke DOYENNE: Jancis praised the wide variety of grapes DELUXE: But also not cheap on Al-Andalus tour writ SPAIN going through a revolution’ believes leading UK wine guru Jancis Robinson. Just as the country has seen a massive shift in itsrant scene, the wine sector is also booming. “There is a Spanish wine revolution there is revolution in vineyards all over the country,” believes Robinson. “There are so many exciting new-wave producers…And the best thing is most of wines are reasonably priced and so Evidencewide-ranging.” of this, she insists, was clear from the 500 wines onfer at recent London event for Spanish wine. Called Vinateros were wines from over 80 grape varieties produced by 92 winemakers from all around counEVER fancied journey on the Orient Express? Well you can do just that or rather sample its equivalent right here in Spain. RENFE has just launched this year's luxury Al-AndalustrainserviceacrossAndalucia,takinginJaen, Malaga, Cordoba, Granada, Cadiz and Sevilla. The Al-Andalus is formed of carriages, five which are authentic from the 1920s. They were built in France and were originally used bymembersoftheBritishroyalfamilyto onholiday in the French Riviera. The carriages have common areas, restaurant cars, kitchen seven bedrooms. You choose between Suite Deluxe the Gran Clase rooms. But beware, as prices can go as high as €6,700. Royal treat Junta has criticised for considering tax the millions visitors who stream to the region each year. Malaga Tourism Councillor Arturo Bernal (below) warned of risks that such a tax would entail, calling ‘a tax against tourism.’ He said: “We are killing the goose that lays the golden eggs, we have to be careful with certain apocalyptic plans.” Bernal claimed thatpact of such move would ripple out far beyond the hospitality sector to hit as many as 76 other industries that underpin the Andalucian economy. Instead he called better management of existing taxation, like the VAT from tourism, which generates €2.5 billion in revenue, suggesting a more equitable distribution of current levies could be solution. Tax blasted Scan to visit our website
FOOD,DRINK & TRAVEL
L
the Ribeira Sacra wine
ing.
to’s
Teide volcano and the volcanic soils give the wine its vibrant acidity, , wherein vines are plaited so within the region continues to grow. According to winesearcher.
as
Vino de Pago CEBRERO VALLE DE LA OROTAVA

O P LIVE RESS

Incredible bulk

BRAWLING 127kg England rugby star Billy Vunipola was filmed laughing as nine police officers had to taser him twice in order to eject him from a Mallorca nightclub.

Stag cops

A THIEF thought he had gotten away with robbing a Barcelona restaurant, until a group of off-duty British police officers on a stag do took chase and tackled him 50 metres up the road.

Bad parking

A MAN has been fined €5,000 in Palma de Mallorca for using his relative’s disabled parking badge. He had been using it since the relative died in 2011.

A SPANISH nun has become a social media star after racking up 35,800 followers on TikTok alone.

The self-described ‘ YouTuber and nun’, Sor Marta has gained over 270,000 likes on the platform, where she

RACKING UP NUN-BERS!

Nun becomes social media influencer discussing sex, tattoos and piercings

shares her experience and answers questions.

Unafraid of taboos, she broaches topics often unheard of in the Catholic religion, such as the gender pay gap in the church.

In the short video, Marta ex-

Big ham con

POLICE have busted a giant swindle involving ham sales which netted a company over €17 million in five years.

Six people have been arrested by the Policia Nacional in the Madrid region towns of Leganes and Sesena.

plains that while priests are given a salary, sometimes of thousands of euros, decided by the bishop, nuns receive no money at all.

They all held positions in a meat-cutting firm where they stole the identity of a genuine company by using their seals and labelling on their products. The firm that owned the legal seal was totally unaware of the long-standing fraud, as the bogus-labelled ham - that had not passed stringent health checks - was sold to customers at home and abroad.

Any ‘salary’ they earn comes from working as teachers, managing religious museums and churches or selling cosmetics or sweets. They also have to manage their tax declarations as ‘freelance’ workers. According to

latest figures, some 11,000 people part of religious orders declared tax in 2019.

“We have to do it so we have a retirement fund,” she said.

When not mounting small businesses or doing their tax returns, the nuns focus on prayer, contemplation and community work.

This has pushed religious orders into the 21st century, resorting to the digital realm to earn some cash whether through online shops, AirBnB or, in Sor Marta’s case, social media.

In other videos, Marta explores topics such as sex, tattoos, using phones in the nunnery, piercings, doing exercise as a nun and blasphemy.

‘Dragons are real!’

A VIDEO has gone viral on Nigerian Facebook claiming to show a ‘real life’ dragon. Filmed in Anambra, Eastern Nigeria, the video shows a ‘dragon’ laying on the ground while a man narrates his ‘find’ in Igbo, the local language.

The caption reads: “Real Life Dragon in Anambra State. I have never seen a dragon before. I used to think that dragons stories were just fairy tales. I never knew they existed in real life.”

No fairy tale

But it turns out that dragons really are just fairy tales. Africa Check, an independent fact-checking organisation, has confirmed the ‘dragon’ is actually a model made for a Spanish TV programme. It was made by Juan Villa Herrero who makes props for popular TV and film projects. He produced the dragon for the TV programme, Cuatro Milenio before online pranksters hijacked a clip.

FINAL WORDS
MODEL: Was made for Spanish television
We use recycled paper
FREE Vol. 5 Issue 114 www.theolivepress.es May 2nd - May 15th 2024
REuse REduce REcycle
COSTA BLANCA SUR / MURCIA here for the latest news SCAN
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.