Saturday, October 28, 2006

Jerez Airport to Increase Flights from Spring 2007

Jerez de la Frontera's international airport (La Parra) is planning to expand its flight programme from March next year. The airport is making the most of the current battle between Spain's airlines as well as the growing interest shown by foreign tour operators in the Costa de la Luz. New destinations include Manchester in the UK, and Scandinavian cities and there will also be more flights direct from Jerez to Madrid, Barcelona and Bilbao. The new direct link between Jerez and Manchester is due to the expansion of Monarch Airlines into the province of Cadiz. The firm is already selling tickets for the service which will start to operate on March 25th. There will be four flights a week.

Meanwhile the volume of domestic flights from Jerez is also expected to increase significantly over the next year. After operating a link to Madrid from the terminal for the last year and a half, the company Spanair plans to start running two return flights a day between Jerez and Barcelona from May 2007 and Spanair has also announced a daily flight from Jerez to Bilbao. Furthermore both Iberia and Spanair face new competition on the Jerez-Madrid route with the introduction of the company Vueling, which has announced that its flights between La Parra and the capital will start next year. Currently an average of 1,200 passengers fly between Jerez and Madrid every day.

Useful vocabulary when buying property in Spain

If you are considering buying an apartment, townhouse, villa or other type of property in Spain, the following words and phrases can be useful to learn in advance:


Apartment, condominium or flat
- apartmento, piso. Of interest, further north, piso means a floor of a building.
Holiday - vacacion
Holidays - vacaciones
Floor of a building - planta
Floor of an apartment, house or villa - suelo
Marble - marmol
House - casa
Two floors - duplex
Size - Tamano
Bedroom - in an apartment, dormitorio, in a hotel, habitacion
Bathroom - cuarto de bano
Shower - ducha
Kitchen - cocina
Penthouse - atico
Top floor - invariably referred to as atico, or penthouse. Does not mean that there is even a terrace. If an agent uses the expression "atico", ask if they merely mean "top floor" or does the apartment have a huge terrace.
Elevator or lift - ascensor
Swimming pool - piscina
Garden - jardin
Building - Edificio
Porter or concierge - Portero
Furniture - Muebles
Furnished - Amueblado
Community - la comunidad
City hall taxes - IBI
Rubbish taxes - basura
Electricity - corriente or la luz
Built area, of property - construido. Floor area is measured in square meters
Sq.M. - metros cuadrados or metro cuadrao
Legal document of ownership - escritura
Legal guy that checks legality - Notario

Are Mortgages a Risky Business?

by: Jenny Barclay

A bank or mortgage company is nothing more than a box in which to keep money. The owner of the box has to do a few calculations. Firstly, how much is he going to offer those people who deposit cash in his box, in return for such a deposit? Secondly, how much of that money should he keep as cash in case the owners of that cash want it back? Maybe 5%, maybe 10%, what are the regulations in his jurisdiction? Thirdly, how much is he going to charge those people who wish to borrow the money of others, previously deposited in his box?

The person who owns the box then sets out to find lots of other people to put their spare cash in the box, in return for which he promises to give them their money back plus interest. In the eyes of some economists, these people are lenders and not investors. This terminology is based on the fact that the capital investment of lenders does not change, whereas the capital value of investors, in stocks or property for example, can go up or down. The owner of the box then has to find other people who do not have spare cash, but in fact wish to borrow it.

Fixed or variable?

Both the lenders and the borrowers can sometimes be bewildered by the variety of terms offered by such institutions. The easiest terms to understand are those that are based on a current rate that will vary according to the market for interest rates, which alters daily, although the companies will try to even out such daily fluctuations with only periodic changes in the rate. Fixed rates, for a given period, are more difficult for the average lender or borrower to understand, a fact that has given rise in the past to greedy companies being able to reap huge benefits from such lack of knowledge. The reason for an institution wanting to attract deposits at a fixed rate could be based on the fact that their advisors calculate that interest rates are going to rise. Should they find it possible to attract deposits at e.g. 3% over 3 years, and then find that current rates are 5%, they will be somewhat pleased. In the case of a borrower finding that they are in this situation they should be congratulated for being better at guessing than the companys advisors. On the other hand, a borrower tied in to a contract at say 10% for several years who then finds that rates have dropped to 5%, will not exactly be celebrating. In my short experience since I started at university fourteen years ago, I have seen deposit rates vary from 14.5% down to 1.5%.

Is a bank safe?

There is also a common belief among lenders that their capital is safe. In the absence of a government or similar state authority providing such a guarantee, this can be far from the case. At university one of the cases we studied, was that of a particular savings bank. A rumour went around the city that the bank was in trouble. A great number of people went to the bank to withdraw their savings. Those that represented the first few % of the total deposit had no problem. When the percentage rose to 6%, which in this case was the amount decided by the owner of the box, the rumour became fact in that there was no cash to pay out to depositors. As this was in a country in which the owners of all the boxes were members of a club, the aim of which was to protect the undeserved, but perceived, reputation of said members, the members sent round security vans with sufficient cash to pay out all those who people who had taken notice of an unfounded rumour. Things quietened down after a while, and the government decided to introduce legislation to create a minimum liquidity level.

Another case we studied was that of one of the worlds largest banks, the board of which was mainly composed of greedy souls. They had decided that the stock market was a good place to keep the liquidity margin, so that in the event of a bear market, they could create more profit for the shareholders. A sudden bear market wiped out the liquidity margin, and the bank came within a hairs breadth of going belly up.

Once the bank has reached a substantial size, the liquidity should be sufficiently large to cater for all such panic withdrawals, unless of course the panic is as great as 1929.

For the borrower it provides a necessary service, and apart from penal conditions imposed on borrowers, is a vital service to our society. From the investors point of view, it depends firstly on the mentality of the treasury function within the bank, and secondly the legislation that governs their actions and accountancy practices. From the investors point of view, considering investing in the stock of such an organisation, it depends entirely on an analysis of the banks net worth and profitability. Both the examples mentioned above have since gone from strength to strength, and have since been bought for more billions that most of us can count.

© Jenny Barclay

About The Author

Jenny Barclay majored in math. and economics, and obtained a masters in viability of banking institutions. She is currently studying Spanish in Andalucia, Spain. This article may be reproduced on websites subject to credit being given to the author, and a link to her website.

http://www.regent-estates-group.com/s/apartments-for-sale-fuengirola/index.cfm

Málaga village holds general strike against real estate development

From Typically Spanish

The village of Cuevas del Becerro, in the Serrania de Ronda, held a General Strike yesterday, in protest at plans to build two hotels and new housing in the village.

The locals feel that their village life is under threat, and so all businesses and shops closed for the day and a march was held.

The locals say they are particularly concerned about the water supply and they are calling on the Junta de Andalucia to stop the plans to build 800 homes, two golf courses and two luxury hotels in the Merinos Norte project.

Local IU mayor, Isabel Teresa Rosado, was among the protestors and described the day as 'a landmark in the history of democracy'.

Rain in Spain doesn't end drought

From www.iol.co.za

Madrid - Even after 10 days of rainstorms across the country, four regions of Spain are still suffering a severe drought, the government said on Friday, after ministers approved an emergency transfer of water to some of them.

Reservoirs at the head of the Tagus river, which are themselves low, will send 12 cubic hectometres of water to the Segura basin in the southeast, which is even worse off, to provide drinking water for towns there.

A cubic hectometre - a cube with 100 metre sides - is roughly the size of a football stadium.

Two years of drought, the first of them the worst ever recorded, have left many of Spain's autonomous regions short of water and bickering about any transfers the central government tries to impose.

Farming regions in central Spain, like Castilla-La Mancha, are increasingly unwilling to send water to the southeast coast to cover the needs of new homes, golf courses or fruit farmers.

The Castilla-La Mancha government this week won agreement from the two main political parties to stop transfers from the Tagus to the Segura river for good in 2015.

The government said it had invested more than €600-million euros since the drought began in emergency measures to avoid water restrictions to homes.

The Socialists threw out the previous government's plan to divert water from the Ebro river to the dry southeast and is instead building desalination plants all along the Mediterranean and investing heavily in improvements to farm irrigation systems.

"Despite the recent rain, the situation is still very different from one basin to another. While some areas are suffering from flooding, the drought is still concentrated in the Jucar and Segura basins," it said in a statement.

Those rivers run through the regions of Valencia and Murcia.

Climate change models show Spain is likely to get less rain overall in the future and that what does fall will be more unevenly distributed.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Spain and Morocco: Failure to protect the rights of migrants

Amnesty International today releases a report criticising Spain’s failure, one year on, to conclude investigations on the deaths of 13 migrants and hundreds wounded in Ceuta and Melilla in September/October 2005. (Available below)

The new report, based on victim’s testimonies and contacts with Spanish and Moroccan authorities, concludes that there has been no progress in terms of independent investigations, preventive measures and disciplinary action.

Amnesty International remains seriously concerned about allegations of excessive use of force by the Spanish civil guard, including use of firearms when confronting migrants and asylum seekers.

As recently as July 2006, three more people have been killed as they attempted to enter Spain from Morocco. The Spanish Minister of the Interior has failed to provide promised information on these as well as previous deaths.

In a letter, (see below) Amnesty International urged the EU to ensure that Spain conducts an independent investigation into the excessive use of force by law enforcement officials and that adequate human rights provisions are inserted in any EU-Morocco readmission agreement

Document Links:

For further comment/background and interviews:
Amnesty International EU Office (Brussels)
Tel: +32-2-5021499
Fax: +32-2-5025686
Email:
AmnestyIntl@aieu.be

Junta lifts restrictions on construction in Marbella old town

From the SUR in English

The measure brings an end to a 20 year ban and should revive the area

Some 85 buildings are to be protected


Marbella’s Urban Planning office has approved a modification to the 1986 PGOU (town development plan) which lifts the restrictions on construction in the old part of the town. The measure, due to be published in the official provincial bulletin next week, will allow the Town Hall caretaking committee to award planning permission to around a hundred local residents, and comes in answer to a request from the Association of Traders and Professionals in the old town centre.

The office, set up by the Junta de Andalucía for the drawing up of the new PGOU after the power over planning was taken from the Town Hall, has decided to modify an article in the current plan, which established that until a “special plan” had been drawn up for the old part of the town, no construction would be allowed except for work to preserve existing buildings or the demolition of declared ruins.

This ruling was passed 20 years ago, however the “special plan” it refers to was not commissioned until 2004 when Marisol Yagüe was Mayor. Nevertheless the architects abandoned the job when the Town Hall failed to pay them for their work.

Poor condition

Both local traders and the Cilniana association for the defence of local heritage had criticised,on a number of occasions, the fragile condition of the old part of the town and the need to intervene to preserve its life and to turn it back into a social centre.

The absence of new building work in two decades had caused the severe deterioration of a number of the buildings and the consequent reduction in habitability.Now the Town Hall caretaking committee will be able to grant planning permission for building work affecting a hundred houses or business premises.

The Urban Planning Office, managed by José María Ruiz Povedano, has justified the measure by saying that “it will help to solve the problem of buildings being in a bad state of repair and the consequent loss of habitability, resulting in an improvement in the quality of life of the local residents”.

Nevertheless the Junta has laid down strict conditions governing new building projects undertaken in the old part of the town. Licences will only be granted to projects which comply with the 1986 PGOU as far as the type and height of the construction are concerned. Furthermore the pattern of land division must not be altered.

Protected buildings

The ruling establishes preventative measures to protect some of the buildings: 13 have been listed as being subjected to “singular protection” which gives them a similar status to that of buildings classed by the Junta de Andalucía as an asset of cultural interest (Bien de Interés Cultural). A further 72 buildings have been listed in the “general protection” category.

Restrictions have also been established governing the use of business premises in the area. Within the walled zone premises cannot be used for recreational purposes although a commercial and hotel and catering use is permitted and the occupation of pavements is limited.

Strict measures have also been introduced to protect any archaeological heritage and a survey must be carried out before any construction work takes place. Special protection

Buildings listed in the resolution approved by the Urban Planning Office.

Castle: Declared as a monument.

Hospital Bazán: Declared as a monument. C/ Hospital Bazán, 5.

Encarnación church: Plaza de la Caridad, 1.

Santo Cristo church: Plaza Santo Cristo, 80.

Capilla de la Caridad: Chapel. Calle Caridad, 7.

Town Hall: Plaza de los Naranjos, 1.

Ermita de Santiago: Shrine. Plaza de los Naranjos, 8.

Trinidad Convent: Calle Viento, 1.

Antigua Casa del Regidor Cosme Fernández Altamirano: Calle Altamirano, 1.

Antigua Casa del Corregidor: Plaza de los Naranjos, 6.

Casa Correa: Calle Ancha, 18.

Antigua Fonda: Old tavern. Calle Santo Cristo, 8 & 10.

Fountain: Plaza de los Naranjos.

Heavy rainfall claims another life in Andalucía

From Typically Spanish

The heavy rainfall which hit Marbella on Wednesday has claimed the life of a local resident. She died at her home in Los Naranjos Urbanisation, in Nueva Andalucía, when she was crushed beneath a wall which was knocked down by the force of one metre of water of the other side.

It happened at 3am, when she and three members of her family were trying to sweep the water away from their patio.
Reports say that she was 43 years old and was from Russia.

She was the second victim of flash flooding in Andalucía this week: a Swiss woman was found dead on Monday after her car was swept away by a raging torrent in Huelva. One occupant of the car remains missing.

New Ryanair routes from East Midlands

from Travelbite.co.uk

Ten new routes from East Midlands airport have been announced for February 2007 by low-cost airline Ryanair.


The airport, located close to Nottingham, will be serving three new Italian routes to Alghero in Sardinia, Pisa in Tuscany and Italy's fashion capital Milan.

There are also three new routes to Spain from the airport - Granada in Andalucia, Santiago in Galicia and Valencia on Spain's east coast.

Further east, flights from East Midlands will be landing at the Slovakian capital Bratislava and the Polish capital Krakow from next year.

Closer to home the low-cost airline will be flying to Inverness in northern Scotland and Knock in County Mayo in Ireland from East Midlands.

All prices start from £1.99 each way, not including taxes and any additional charges. All the new routes start between February 12th and 27th 2007.

The routes represent a five-fold increase of Ryanair flights from East Midlands airport.

One of every four new pupils is an immigrant

from the SUR in English

England, Argentina, Morocco and Ecuador are the principal countries of origin of the foreign pupils

They receive Spanish classes outside normal school hours

The increase in the immigrant population of Malaga province is clearly reflected in its education system. A total of 271,000 pupils began the new school year this month, and almost eight per cent of them, amounting to 21,500, are foreigners. Furthermore, of the 4,000 new places in schools this year, almost a thousand are taken up by foreign pupils, which means that one in four of all new pupils are not Spanish, according to figures released by the Provincial Delegation for Education in the Junta de Andalucía.

Of all the foreign primary and secondary pupils in Malaga province, 10,000 are South Americans, most of these from Argentina and Ecuador. The rest, more than 11,000 of them, do not speak Spanish and are mainly British, Moroccan or Rumanian. The language barrier can be a great problem for many of them in integrating into Spanish society. For this reason, 78 temporary language adaptation classes have been initiated, with 81 new classes outside normal school hours and 81 more which provide special foreign culture classes, to help foreign pupils keep in touch with their roots. This multi-cultural phenomenon is ever more present in Spanish schools, not only because of the large number of foreigners attending Spanish schools but also the foreign languages being learned by Spanish children.

The Multi-lingual Plan was initiated last year without very much success, but this year 17 new centres have been added, and the plan has been put into action in nine primary schools and seven secondary schools in the province. This makes a total of 45 schools in which 22,700 pupils can study English, German and French, this last language being in more demand over recent years. Malaga will also be the only Andalucía province offering Chinese in a post-obligatory school, this being in Antequera.

Other new aspects of the new school year include two plans to encourage reading and sports among the youngsters of Malaga province. The first plan is to convert the school library in a favourite meeting place for the pupils, thereby stimulating their desire to read more, and the second plan is to create the biggest multi-sporting federation in the province, with more than 22,000 young people practising sports of all kinds, we are told by José Nieto, the provincial education delegate.

The so-called Education Data Transmission Network will be present in 123 primary and secondary schools this year, incorporating two new computer systems: the new Helvia free software platform and Bartic, the digital resources data bank.

Free books

Parents will also be facing the new school year with more enthusiasm. This year, all children attending primary school in the province will be given free text books, a measure that will extend to the rest of the obligatory educational system next year, thanks to a new book loan system that was instigated last year in Andalucía. Having a child in the primary or secondary school system means paying out between 175 and 280 euros each year in text books and other necessary school materials, we are told by the Andalusian Federation of Consumers and Al-Andalus Housewives. Last year, 30,000 children in Malaga benefited from this system, and this year the figure will rise to 90,000. Besides, some 41,000 children aged between three and four will also receive free books.

Another worry for many parents is finding a place for their children in the school of their choice. José Nieto said some weeks ago that 99 per cent of all requests would be accepted, although there are areas such as the Guadalhorce Valley and the N-340 from Manilva to Rincón de la Victoria where it would be difficult to plan places, due to the unchecked population increase in recent years.

With regard to this problem, he accuses some of the Town Halls of setting aside the worst land for the building of new schools, and demands that they decide instead on more adequate urban planning policies, as he puts it. He was, in turn, accused of speaking without having any basis for his accusations.

School year 2006-07

Pupils: 271,000 pupils, of whom 209,409 attend public schools, 47,587 attend semi-private schools and 13,814 attend private schools. Of the full number of pupils, almost eight per cent (21,500) are foreign. Of these, 10,000 are South American, mostly from Argentina (2,913) and Ecuador (1,034) and the rest are from countries like England (3,541), Morocco (1,844) and Rumania (573).

Teachers: 18,309 teachers, of whom 223 are new.

Schools: 762 schools, with seven new infant and primary schools and two secondary schools. The Junta plans to invest 131 million euros over the next five years. The plan includes the building of 21 new schools, 11 amplification projects, 83 modernisation projects and 23 re-construction projects.

Dates: Infant, primary, obligatory secondary and Special Education pupils began the school year on 15 September. Post-obligatory secondary, Special Regimen and Adult Education pupils began on 22 September.

Most relevant changes: The Reading and Library Plan, aimed at encouraging reading, involves the establishment of a Schools and Reading projects, and a Sports Programme for Schools over the next four years, in which 22,000 pupils from 132 federated schools will participate.

Legislation: The Living Together decree will be provisionally approved this year, and the first Andalusian Education Law next year.

Beating the bullies

The new Living Together Decree for schools, still awaiting approval by the Andalusian regional parliament, will include the initiation of a computer and telephone assessment service. This will be a telephone number for parents whose children are being bullied by other children in the school.

The service also takes into account possible threats to and ill-treatment of teachers.

Bullying in Spanish schools is on the increase in recent years, and the new system to fight it could be up and running this year.

The idea is to tackle the problem in a pacific manner before it becomes too serious to deal with at this level. Experts in this area will be on hand to advise parents, children and teachers on how best to deal with bullying in the schools.

Each school will put together its own plan of action, adapted to the particular requirements of the school and assisted by a wide network of school mediators and provincial commissions.

All will have their own vigilance systems, as well as rules of behaviour and protocols for dealing with individual cases of bullying.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Ton Of Cocaine Washes Ashore In Portugal And Spain

More than a ton of cocaine has washed ashore in Portugal and northwestern Spain, press reports said Wednesday.

The drug was divided into watertight packages of 25 kilos, which were discovered on the Iberian coast Monday and Tuesday.

Portuguese police said drug traffickers may have thrown their cargo into the sea on being approached by a police vessel.

Spanish police said the drug may have been hidden in the water to be picked up. The net containing the cargo then ripped, allowing the packages to rise to the surface, police sources suggested.

Ashes from summer forest fires threaten shellfish banks in Spain

MADRID, Spain Fishermen struggled Wednesday to clean a thick layer of ash-laden mud from beaches in northwest Spain, as mucky runoff from summer forest fires threatens rich shellfish banks.
A 20-centimeter (8-inch) coat of mud and ash caused by torrential weekend rains in the Galicia region has flowed down from coastal hills, covering several beaches, contaminating sea inlets and suffocating cockles and clams, fishermen said.
"The situation is very serious," said Ramon Portela, head of the fishermen's association in the town of Combarro, one of the most affected areas in southern Galicia, said in a telephone interview.
"Everywhere you look there is mud, which is very heavy and is asphyxiating all the shellfish. It's worse than if it were oil," he said.
Portela said that in Combarro alone 500 families make their living from shellfish, mostly women. On an average day 100 people work on the beach and mouth of the rivers and catch up to 400 kilograms (882 pounds).
Crews are using shovels and mechanical diggers to clean the beaches, and Portela said it could take days.
The regional government of Galicia said biologists were taking samples to assess the situation and did not have figures of the amount of shellfish that may have died.
The newspaper El Pais said that on the beach of A Seca, in the province of Pontevedra, some 20,000 clams had suffocated due to ash from the forest fires in August.
The mess is yet another blow for the environment in Galicia, which the hub of Spain's fish and shellfish industry. In Nov. 2002 it suffered a huge oil spill along its coastline from an aging oil tanker, the Prestige, which broke in two in a storm and sank.
More than 2,000 forest fires, most deliberately lit, ravaged Galicia in just a two-week span this summer, giving the region its worst fire season in 20 years. Police arrested 52 people.

Gran Plaza staff fight to save their jobs

Business owners and staff at the Gran Plaza commercial centre in Roquetas de Mar are hoping to collect up to 50,000 signatures for a petition which they plan to present to the Junta de Andalucía to support their plea that the centre be allowed to remain open.

The Andaluz Supreme Court recently confirmed an administrative court ruling revoking the opening licence which was granted to Gran Plaza by the Partido Popular Mayor of the town, Gabriel Amat. The sentence described the mayoral decree which approved it as ‘an outright rejection of the Junta’s wishes.’ The ruling followed an administrative appeal against the licence presented by the Junta and the Poniente business association Copo.

More than 450 of the people who would be affected by its closure met on Tuesday night to set up the ‘ Pro Gran Plaza Platform.’

They say they will call on unions and politicians from all parties to work with them to try and save the more than 3,000 jobs which would be lost if Gran Plaza is forced to close.

Spanish Photographer released after kidnapping in Gaza

The Spanish photographer who was reported as kidnapped in Gaza yesterday morning has been released.

37 year old Emilio Fernández Morenatti, from Jerez, in Andalucía, is expected to fly back to Spain later today. He had been covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for the Associated Press Agency for the past year, and it seems he was taken by a gang of common criminals.

Morenatti was kidnapped by four armed men at 6am yesterday morning and the release came after 15 hours. Speaking this morning to Radio Nacional in Spain, Emilio said he was happy but tired and all that he wanted to do now was rest. His brother reported that he has now been taken to a hotel in Gaza.

Gazi Hamad, a spokesman for the Palestinian government, has issued an apology to Spain, and said in a statement before the release that ‘the Palestinian government will do everything in its power to secure the photographer’s release.’ ‘It’s an action which all the people of Palestine join our government in condemning,’ he said.
A spokesman for Hamas said the kidnapping went against ‘our culture, our morals and our religion.’

Spain’s Foreign Minister, Miguel Ángel Moratinos, also had a number of conversations with the Palestinian President, Abu Mazen, and sent two consular staff from Jerusalem to coordinate with authorities in Gaza.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Halifax: Spain not just for retiring buyers

The Spanish arm of Halifax's property lending arm, Banco Halifax Hispania, claims that buying property abroad, particularly in Spain, is no longer the preserve of the older generation as they approach retirement.

Around five per cent of Britons surveyed owned a home abroad and half of these respondents were under the age of 35.

One in every five owners of property abroad was under 25, while only four per cent were above retirement age.

Ian Smith, head of European operations at Halifax, said: "It has long been assumed that only the older generation is buying property in Spain, but this is far from the case, as it is also proving to be a popular location amongst younger age groups.

"Spain is an ideal destination to set up a second home as British people can benefit from shorter, more frequent trips to their property at affordable prices."

Spain begins crackdown on municipal corruption

Spain's ruling Socialists are to propose a zero-tolerance pact on municipal corruption just days after Russian President Vladimir Putin used a wave of Spanish town hall scandals to rebut accusations that he was not living up to European standards of democracy.

With fresh municipal corruption cases involving all parties emerging almost daily, Socialist party organizer Jose Blanco said that he would seek a cross-party agreement that officials implicated in corruption scandals should be sacked immediately.

Negotiations on a pact were scheduled to start yesterday, according to Spanish media reports.

Sarcastic

Putin's sarcastic anti-Spanish outburst at a dinner on Friday with EU leaders in Lahti, Finland, was accompanied by criticisms of Italy's Mafia problems.

His comments made the front page of Spain's El Pais newspaper on Sunday.

Putin pointed to the southern resort town of Marbella -- where the mayor and former mayor have been jailed and thousands of illegal homes face demolition -- as well as other Spanish corruption cases.

El Pais said Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero had been "perplexed" by the comments.

Italy's Prime Minister Romano Prodi had been left "without words" when Putin pointed out that his country had invented the Mafia concept, the newspaper said.

Scandals

Corruption scandals, some involving housing developments finished years ago, have erupted in Spain in recent weeks.

In the Madrid region alone, one in 12 town halls are embroiled in some kind of construction or corruption scandal, the newspaper Abc reported yesterday.

The Madrid region's planning chief, from the People's Party, and the Socialist mayor of the Madrid suburb of Ciempozuelos have lost their jobs as a result in the past two weeks.

Corruption allegations are even more frequent in areas where foreigners buy second homes.
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Spain asks France for information about reported theft of 200 pistols

MADRID, Spain Spain has asked France for information about reports that suspected members of the Basque separatist group ETA stole more than 200 pistols in southeast France, the Interior Ministry said Tuesday.
If confirmed the robbery would be the first such act by ETA since March 22, when ETA called what it described as a permanent cease-fire.
Three people robbed a gun-import company Monday night near the city of Nimes, tying up several employees, Spanish radio station Cadena Ser said.
French investigators said they suspected ETA because the robbers used handcuffs stolen on March 5 from two French gendarmes in the town of Figeat in a raid blamed on an ETA commando, the radio station reported.
The Spanish Interior Ministry would not comment on the reports, saying only that it had asked France for information.

Costa health centres under pressure

from Typicall Spanish

Health centres along the Costa del Sol are among those with the busiest accident and emergency departments in Andalucia.

Doctors see as many as 600,000 people each year, both in the health centres and in home visits, and now the CCOO union is demanding more personnel.

The busiest centre is in Las Lagunas in Mijas Costa where as many as 450 emergency cases are seen each day.

The SAS Andalucian Health Service say that resources will be increased in the area. They are promising that the coast will see nine new doctors and nine new nurses, together with the purchase of three new ambulances to be used for emergency calls.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Huelva flash flood victim found dead

from Typically Spanish

Rescue teams have recovered the body of one of the three occupants of a car which was swept away by a flash flood in Huelva, Andalucía, on Monday morning. Reports say she was from Switzerland, and was around 40 years old. Her body was found at kilometre 12 of the N-479 road in Huelva at 2.30 pm.

The other woman who was in the car with her when it was hit by the flash flood remains missing. The third occupant, a man, was found safe and sound at midday on Monday.

Andalucía was one of 7 autonomous communities which remained on severe weather alert on Monday.

Monday, October 23, 2006

Government approves more investment for Nerja-La Herradura motorway

Central government has approved a further 67.8 million € for the Autovía del Mediterráneo in next year’s State Budget, which will fund construction work on the stretch between Nerja and La Herradura.

Newspaper La Opinión reported on Sunday that sources at the Eastern Andalucía Roads Authority say building work on the section will be completed during 2007.

Its 9.5 kms make up one of the most technically complex sections of the motorway, and has cost the government more per kilometre than any other motorway in Spain: the total is more than 103 million €.

Luxury geriatric residence to be built in El Torcal

The Junta de Andalucía has given the go-ahead for a project which plans to build a luxury geriatric residence in the southern part of El Torcal, Antequera.

The company which is developing the project, Gruindesa SL, says the centre will be built on a 10,500 square metre plot near Villanueva de la Concepción and will take around a year to complete.

Facilities for the 90 residents will include a pool, a physiotherapy treatment area, and a gymnasium.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

The Vulture Restaurant

The threat of Mad Cow disease threatened them too. But they survived, thanks to a a chain of feeding points established by the Junta de Andalucía, which has become a true restaurant chain for the vultures of the region

THE Mad Cow disease indirectly seriously affected an entire species in Andalucía. As a result of the scare, the Delegation of Agriculture in the Junta de Andalucía decreed that all dead farm animals should be removed from the fields immediately, thereby removing a large part of the staple diet of the vultures of Andalucía. Tipheads, another valuable source of food for vultures, were also sealed. The situation became very serious for these magnificent birds in a very short period of time, and something had to be done to save them. The Environment Delegation came up with the answer, which was a network of feeding points (tipheads) throughout the region, just like the one set up by Icona, the body in charge of mountain regions in those times, had done in El Chorro 25 years ago. That experiment in feeding had been very successful in maintaining the Griffon vulture population alive, in serious danger of extinction in the region at that time.

The El Chorro experiment was followed by another feeding point in Ronda and Casares, and then the Junta de Andalucía decided to extend the network to Sedella and El Torcal. Another was deemed necessary in Cañete, and today this network of feeding points has become the best restaurant chain for vultures in the province. The present head of the Carrion Bird Recuperation Centre (CRAC), El Boticaro, is Chelo Atencia, who, with her husband Saturnino Moreno, also acts as guide for visitors wishing to see these magnificent creatures at their feeding points.

One of the best of these tipheads is in Ronda, on a piece of private land. It stinks, which is a measure of its worth. The owners of the land are a Dutch couple, the Mesdags, who know that a tiphead for most people is a source of essential food for other species. Their love for the Griffon vultures prompted them to allow a hilltop on their land to be used as a feeding point.

Genuine gourmets

The sun is beating down on the visiting party, now sheltering in the shade of a large oak tree. The Griffon vultures, apparently oblivious to the heat, are flying majestically overhead. Here in El Lagarín, the vultures enjoy a wide area of land with no telephone poles or overhead electrical cables. Here too they can eat at leisure.

The few oak trees in the region are bare, which means they have been taken over by the vultures, who weigh about eight kilos and have a wing-span of three metres. Their peaks are strong, and very useful in tearing the dead meat they find apart. Their heads are light grey coloured, contrasting with the dark brown of the wings. They are gregarious birds who like to live in colonies, and in recent years, their numbers have risen to acceptable levels in this part of the world, currently estimated to be 65 pairs in the province of Malaga.

“The setting up of the network of tipheads has allowed the Griffon vulture population to grow quite a lot, and we have also improved the situation of the Egyptian vulture population, with four pairs now nesting in the area. We are now heavily committed to seeking out those people who lay poison traps. All hunting organisations and farmers involved in this will lose any grants they may be getting from the state,” says the Environment Delegate, Juan Ignacio Trillo.

One of the curious facts about this species is that they mate for life and have their young every year. In order to care for their young, they have to have a plentiful supply of meat, which they have always obtained from scavenging. They normally nest close to feeding grounds, and since their new feeding grounds are now those set up by the Environment Delegation of the Junta de Andalucía, these areas are where they now tend to nest. One of them is close to the tiphead in Casares. “Here they are forced to compete with the wind generators, and they usually lose,” we are told by Chelo. “We have had seven deaths in this area in the past few years, all caused by wind generators,” he says, adding that he is very nervous of these giant blades and expects more vultures to be killed by them in the future.

Another vulture restaurant is the tiphead in El Torcal, at the foot of the Sedella mountain. It was set up five years ago, and has been working very successfully since then. This is a beautiful part of the Tejeda-Almijara nature park, and here more than 300 vultures feed. A female vulture was taken to the park from the Jerez zoo in the hope that she might nest and lay eggs here, but the experiment failed when the chick vulture died. In fact, no vultures have nested in this park for the past 40 years, although the CRAC personnel are hoping that the female brought from the zoo will lay more fertile eggs in the near future. nesting might begin here in the near future.

The top vulture restaurant, nevertheless, is the one in Cañete la Real. The bulk of the food served here comes from a pig slaughter-house run by Zamudio, who ensure that all the leftovers are placed regularly in position for the vultures. The location of the slaughter-house means that a large colony of vultures have taken position on the Padrastro peak, more than a kilometre from the town. The area is also attracting tourists these days, all anxious to catch a glimpse of the vultures. “Pig meat is a real delicacy for the vultures,” says Chelo. “It also come chopped into convenient pieces, which makes it easier for them to consume. They find it easier to separate the meat from the skin, making it easier to get at than horse meat, and best of all, the area has been a traditional home to the vulture for many years past. More than 700 vultures have been seen feeding here.” Meanwhile, Saturnino focuses his telescope on the peak, where about 50 Griffon vultures appear to be basking in the hot sunshine.

“Some researchers are studying the vultures’ immune system, which is truly amazing. They can eat anything, and are capable of putting up with the cold of winter and the heat of summer, and they still survive. I’d love to have an immune system like theirs,” he says while preparing his telescope for us to see the vultures. But our visit is cut short by a call from the Carrion Bird Recuperation Centre informing us that the Local Police have rescued a vulture in trouble.

A lost vulture

Now on to Manilva, at the other end of the province of Malaga. Mari Carmen, the cleaning woman at the police station in Manilva, was left in charge of the vulture until our arrival, and the big bird is now perched on the station rooftop. The bird had drunk four glasses of water, the young woman reported. Chelo suggests taking some food out for the vulture, but in the end it is the head of the Local Police in Manilva, Francisco Luque, who goes out on the roof to get the bird back to safety.

“This vulture had probably strayed from a nest in the Crestellina mountains, and became disorientated, finding its way here,” says Chelo. Meanwhile Saturnino is trying to put the bird in a box, for its journey to Malaga. The visitors, without knowing it, will be sharing the back seat of the car with the vulture. We decide, on the way, to name the bird: Moses, because the last four that came out of the Crestellina mountains died, and this one survived.

Chelo and Saturnio have dedicated a large part of their lives to the care of these vultures. The Delegation for the Environment trusts them to do this work, paying the cost of food for the vultures, veterinarian fees and other costs, such as travel. They provide love for the vultures, and dedication to their well-being. Their only desire is to ensure that the vultures will continue to fly free through the mountains, as they have always done.