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11 Sept 2011

Spanish warship rescues French hostage from pirates

 

Troops from a Spanish warship stormed a pirate skiff in the Gulf of Aden Saturday and rescued a French hostage missing from her yacht but found no trace of her husband, the EU anti-piracy mission said. As a helicopter kept watch overhead, naval commandos in a fast launch fired on the skiff to disable its engine. The boat sank, but the hostage was rescued and seven pirates were arrested unharmed, the Spanish defence ministry said. "She was the only hostage on board the skiff. Her husband was not on board," EU naval spokesman Captain Paul Gelly told AFP, confirming the rescued hostage was Evelyne Colombo, wife and crewmate of missing sailor Christian Colombo. "She is safe and sound," he said, explaining that Colombo and the detained pirates are now on board the Spanish ship. A German warship, the FGS Bayern, found the couple's catamaran the Tribal Kat, adrift in waters off Yemen on Thursday. There was no-one on board and the EU Atalanta naval command launched an air and sea search for the attackers. French officials said there were signs of a struggle on board the yacht, which was towed to Djibouti to be studied by agents from the DGSE spy agency. "It was like searching for a needle in a haystack," Gelly said. "Our priority was to search for any vessel that might have been leaving the area and heading for the coast of Somalia." The French frigate Surcouf detected a suspect vessel and on Saturday the Spanish warship SPS Galicia chased it down. The Spanish defence ministry said when the skiff ignored an order to stop, the commander of the Galicia ordered his men to open fire. "At that time, it was discovered that they had a hostage on board, who was a woman," it said. "The amphibious ship proceeded to intercept the pirate vessel. The operation involved a helicopter and naval warfare team, who fired on the engine of the boat, to disable it." Christian Colombo is a former French navy crewman and the couple were experienced sailors who wanted to see the world and were passing through the Gulf of Aden en route for the Indian Ocean and eventually Thailand. "They knew they were taking a risk and everyone advised them not to go," a relative told AFP. One of the couple's daughters, Emilie, posted a message of concern on the blog they were keeping of their high seas adventure. "The last I heard from Christian was around a month ago. He was south of Egypt and heading for Malaysia," said the skipper's friend Gerard Navarin, who once helped him set a catamaran speed record off Toulon. The waters between Yemen and Somalia are notorious for attacks by pirate gangs, and French yachts have been among the vessels seized in the past. A second yacht went missing at around the same time as the Tribal Kat. Somali pirates frequently seize crew from merchant ships and pleasure craft in the dangerous waters off the conflict-ravaged Horn of Africa and have taken millions of dollars in ransom for their release. According to the watchdog Ecoterra, at least 50 vessels and at least 528 hostages are being held by Somali pirates, despite constant patrols by warships from several world powers. A French couple was kidnapped from a yacht in September 2008 as it headed through the Gulf of Aden. A ransom was paid, but French commandos later ambushed the pirates, killed one, captured six more and recovered the cash. In April 2009, another French yacht was seized. This time special forces troops intervened when the boat was still at sea. In the ensuing gunbattle a French bullet accidentally killed the hostage skipper. In addition, a French DGSE agent is thought to have been held hostage by Islamist militants in the Somali capital since July 2009

10 Sept 2011

Police today said they have smashed the biggest gang of drug dealers targeting British revellers on the party island of Ibiza.


Nine Britons were among 13 suspects held in a series of dawn raids by armed officers in a massive operation backed by Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency.

Among the drugs seized were 3,600 ecstasy pills from the same batch believed to have killed British holidaymaker Jodie Nieman, 20, on the Spanish island in July.

Arrests: Nine Britons were among 13 suspected drug dealers held in a series of dawn raids by armed officers in Ibiza

Arrests: Nine Britons were among 13 suspected drug dealers (pictured here) held in a series of dawn raids by armed officers in Ibiza

Officers also confiscated 4 kilos of cocaine, 5 kilos of MDMA powder, 53 grams of cannabis resin, 300 doses of anabolic steroids, 69,000 euros (£60,000) in cash and scales for weighing drugs.

The operation, codenamed Rula, was run by the Civil Guard's Organised Crime Squad.

The force released photographs of some of suspects, handcuffed behind their backs, following the raids.

 

 


 

The Civil Guard said in a statement: 'The majority of the pills seized are known as Pink Rock Stars, similar in appearance, colour and design to those thought to have caused the death of a young British woman and the poisoning of eight other people in July in Ibiza.'

The suspects appeared before an investigating magistrate and most were remanded in custody while the probe continues. They have not yet been charged with any offence.

The Civil Guard statement continued: 'This operation has completely dismantled the most active group of British drug dealers in Ibiza.

Jodie Nieman
Seized: The drugs

Suspected: Among the drugs seized (right) were ecstasy pills from the same batch believed to have killed Jodie Nieman in July 

'Those under arrest are members of the most active organisation on the island, the principal supplier of cocaine and other designer drugs around nightclubs.

'The investigation started with information obtained through the dismantling of other groups, mostly British, dedicated to dealing drugs on the island.

'The now dismantled group came to Ibiza during the summer to cater for the high demand for drugs that exists during the holiday period.'

On July 22 police arrested an alleged member of the gang carrying one kg of MDMA powder as he stepped off a flight from the UK at Ibiza airport.

Five of the raids took place on August 28 around the popular party resort of San Antonio. 

Evidence: Police arrested nine Brits - from Liverpool, Manchester, Plymouth and Croydon, south London - as well as three Irishmen and one Polish man

Evidence: Police arrested nine Brits - from Liverpool, Manchester, Plymouth and Croydon, south London - as well as three Irishmen and one Polish man

The other three happened on the same day near Sant Josep, on the south west of the island.

Police arrested nine Brits - from Liverpool, Manchester, Plymouth and Croydon, south London - as well as three Irishmen and one Polish man.

Magistrate Maria Risueno took statements from the suspects at the Court of Investigation number 1 in Ibiza.

She bailed one man and remanded the other 12 in custody on Monday night.

Three were told they would be released if they could raise 10,000 euros (£8,700) each for bail.

The magistrate imposed a secrecy order on the case and the court refused to reveal the names of those arrested.

Nail technician Jodie Nieman, from Croydon, collapsed at Space nightclub while on holiday with friends on July 13.

She died after being rushed to the island's Can Misses hospital. Her friends told police she had taken one pink ecstasy tablet mixed with alcohol.

Toxicology tests are still being carried out. Eight other clubbers were treated in the same hospital that night.

Counting out: 69,000 euros in cash was found during the raids

Counting out: 69,000 euros in cash was found during the raids



9 Sept 2011

Marbella Casino board face charges of document falsification

 

TWELVE of the Marbella Casino’s 14-strong board face charges of document falsification. The Casino, one of the town’s oldest but with no links to the Casino de Marbella in Nueva Andalucia, has been at the centre of internal conflict for several years. Differences over renting out of part of its La Alameda installation to a restaurant business resulted in the sacking of the Casino’s former president Antonio Ric and ex-secretary Manuel Porras in April 2010. Both started legal proceedings against the remaining board members, claiming that their rights had been violated and they were excluded from the meeting which decided to remove them. After examining the dismissal document, the judge from Marbella’s Number Two Court decided there were grounds for suspecting forgery. He has now summonsed 12 board members, including the current president, Agustín de la Fuente Perucho, for questioning on September 19.

8 Sept 2011

Spanish site crashes as lawmakers reveal worth

 

In a country with 21 percent unemployment, learning the net worth of lawmakers plugging austerity right and left is turning out to be irresistible. Spanish parliament released such numbers for the first time and its website immediately crashed. Hours later access was still spotty. Highlights of Thursday's revelations: Mariano Rajoy, the conservative likely to be the next prime minister, reports having nearly euro600,000 ($843,000) in bank accounts and shares, plus properties in Madrid, the Canary Islands and his native Galicia. His Socialist opponent Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba reports having about euro1 million ($1.4 million), a Madrid apartment, a parking place and no debts. This transparency stems from a reform approved July 10.

Malaga beaches are now accessible to blind people thanks to technology

 

The capital of the Costa del Sol is the second Spanish city to implement an electronic device that enables blind people to enjoy a swim at the beach. The two beaches of Malaga capital where these devices are installed are El Dedo and La Misericordia. These two beaches are as well adapted for the disabled and have amphibious chairs and specialized staff. Devices for the blind consisting of a wristwatch with an audio system that provides the swimmer at all times information about the depth and with an alert button through which rescuers come to help them out of the sea. This service is available to swimmers during the beach season, from June 15 to September 15, from 11 am to 8 pm.

7 Sept 2011

Puerto Banus Saturday market Marbella shopping

 

The Puerto Banus street market in Marbella is on every Saturday from 9am to 2-3pm. It’s next to the Plaza de Toros (bullring), 10 minute walk from the port.

Pilots complain of laser lights at Málaga airport

 

The Spanish Air Safety Agency has called on the local authorities in Alhaurín de la Torre, Málaga to control the lights coming from discotheques on the Costa del Sol. The high powered spotlights and laser lights fired up into the sky to draw attention to their venues are bothering pilots trying to land and take off at Málaga airport. The pilots say the problem is worse in the summer and obviously on night time flights. There is a body in Spain, The Department of Operative Coordination of Airspace, which can inform the discos about the conditions which are attached to using such lights, limiting the bother to pilots and allowing the normal development of services at the airport. The Department is requesting that they are allowed to control new opening licences on such establishments to ensure correct use near airports. Alhaurín de la Torre Town Hall commented that they have already sent a local policeman to patrol the airport area, to stop anybody pointing laser lights at the planes.

Marbella Town Hall debt continues to increase

 

Despite paying off a million € every month to Hacienda and Social Security, the debt at Marbella Town Hall is continuing to increase. The million € payment is only covering the interest generated on the debt amassed in the 15 years of the GIL administration in the town when the Mayor was the late Jesús Gil y Gil. The debt which remains is put at some 300 million €, and the administration led by the PP Mayor, Ángeles Muñoz, says the Town Hall is suffocated. Three moratoria and different agreements reached between the Town Hall and Central Government have not solved the matter. Hacienda and Personal coordinator, Carlos Rubio, has said that there are already judicial sentences in favour of the Town Hall worth some 400 million €, and he told La Opinión de Málaga that this should be taken into account. The Mayor travelled to Madrid on Monday to meet with the PP Economy Spokesman in Congress, Cristóbal Montoro to discuss the matter. They agreed to present Congress with the proposal to allow debt payments to be linked to the judicial processes which are open, investigating the differet corruption cases which have emptied the public purse in Marbella. The PP notes however that the PSOE does not want to get implicated in the problem.

5 Sept 2011

Surgeons repair Spanish king's ruptured tendon

 

Spanish surgeons successfully repaired 73-year-old King Juan Carlos's ruptured Achilles tendon on Monday, medical and palace officials said. The popular monarch had surgery to the Achilles tendon of his left foot at the private USP San Jose hospital in Madrid and has returned to his Zarzuela palace on the outskirts of the capital, they said. "The procedure was carried out successfully under epidural anaesthetic," the hospital said in a statement. Surgeons repaired the tendon through open reconstruction surgery, strengthening it with a transplant from the king's own body and with plasma rich in growth factor, it said. In typical open surgery, a surgeon makes a long incision along the back of the leg and sews the broken tendon back together. The ankle is often immobilized for up to three months afterwards. "His majesty is feeling well at the Zarzuela palace, where he will continue his recovery," said the statement, signed by operating surgeon Angel Villamor and the palace's chief physician, Avelino Barros. The king underwent surgery by the same team on June 3 to place an artificial joint in his right knee and he has since been seen in public relying on a crutch. He will now embark on a "long programme of rehabilitation" and the heel will be temporarily immobilised, the palace had said earlier. The king had a benign tumour removed from a lung in May 2010 when he was kept four days in hospital and then had 10 days' rest at a private Barcelona clinic. In September last year the royal household said he had completely recovered from the lung operation and would not require further tests. Born January 5, 1938, in Rome, Juan Carlos was proclaimed king November 22, 1975, two days after the death of General Francisco Franco who had designated him as his successor since 1969. After Franco's death, the king promised to rule for all Spaniards, signing a new constitution three years later and defending parliamentary democracy from an attempted right-wing military coup in 1981.

The Wine Museum (Museo del Vino), Ojen, Marbella

 

You’ll need a car to reach Ojen. It was made famous by a local liqueur and Julio Iglesias has a home here. It’s heaven for nature lovers, set in the mountains just above Marbella and is definitely worth a detour, not just for a taste of some fine Spanish wines, but for a feel for the quieter side of Marbella, where birdsong and the whizz of mopeds are the soundtrack in spring and summer. This is Malaga’s “spiritual” home, but it’s not just wines that are on display or for tasting. Resident guide Antonio will tell you it’s Ojen’s own special Eau-de-Vie (a concoction of aniseed and aromatic herbs that packs quite a punch) that originally put the Ojen on the worldwide map. In 1840 a man called Pedro Morales started distilling the special liqueur but he kept the recipe a secret. Soon, visitors were asking for a “copita de Ojen” in bars around Spain and it was exported all over the world. Picasso probbly enjoyed a swig or two – he immortalised a bottle of the anisette liqueur in his work “Bodegon Espanol”. But after being passed down from father to eldest son over four generations, one father died suddenly before he had the chance to pass the formula on, so the recipe remains a mystery. Also worth visiting: The local 16th-century church with its square minaret-style Mudejar tower; the Caves of Ojen; the Los Chorros fountain; and Juanar Palace, a very old hunting lodge (game is still shot here) that is now a hotel and restaurant, set in the hiker’s and rider’s paradise in the Sierra Blanca mountains.

 

3 Sept 2011

Two tons of cannabis recovered in the Gulf of Cádiz

Eight people were arrested after a Customs aircraft spotted the cargo being loaded from a mother boat onto four smaller vessels

A previous haul of cannabis - EFE archiveA previous haul of cannabis - EFE archive
enlarge photo

 

Officers from the Customs Authority have recovered two tons of cannabis resin after four small boats were captured in the Gulf of Cádiz on Tuesday afternoon after unloading their cargo of drugs from a mother ship out at sea, some 10 kilometres from shore.

The transfer was spotted by a Customs aircraft which was on surveillance in the area, and the alert went out to capture the team of drug smugglers. Eight people were taken into custody.

La Voz de Cádiz notes that the boats were not the semi rigid fast boats which are typically used by drug smugglers, but were fibre glass boats, some 6 metres long, of the type which is used for recreational fishing.


 

 

40,000 people and 120,000 kilos of ripe tomatoes left the streets of Buñol awash in a sea of red

40,000 people took part in the annual tomato battle

La Tomatina 2011 - EFELa Tomatina 2011 - EFE
enlarge photo
 

40,000 people and 120,000 kilos of ripe tomatoes left the streets of Buñol awash in a sea of red for another year this Wednesday, in the annual world famous tomato fight, La Tomatina.

The battle has been held there for more than half a century, taking place on the last Wednesday of every August, as locals and visitors from around the world pelt each other with the juicy tomatoes.

La Tomatina has featured in Bollywood, and an extra edition of the tomato fight was held in Buñol for the Bollywood cameras in February.

El Mundo notes that some of the revellers were seen protecting their heads this year with colanders and even watermelon rind fashioned as a helmet. Others wore diving goggles to protect their eyes as they dove into the sea of red.

It’s understood that the local Town Hall is to study reducing the number of participants for next year’s La Tomatina.


El Vaporcito' sinks in Cádiz

The small ferry boat covered the route between El Puerto de Santa María and Cádiz

El Adriano III - EFEEl Adriano III - EFE
enlarge photo

 

Visitors to El Puerto de Santa María will know the small ferryboat, known as El Vaporcito, which crosses the Guadalete and Cádiz Bay on a 45 minute route to Cádiz. Well the boat, El Adriano III, sunk on Tuesday, going down in just seven minutes after hitting the Reina Victoria quay. It appears a hole was opened near the bow by the collision.
There was time to safely evacuate the 40 passengers and three crew on board at the time. 

However 15 of the passengers have decided to place a denuncia, claiming that the captain had fallen asleep, and it was the passengers who had to advise of the coming collision.

The boat was well loved, and politicians from the PSOE and the PP 
have lamented the sinking. A Facebook group calling for the vessel to be refloated has already reached 2,000.

The ‘Vaporcito’ started its service in 1929 with the first vessel ‘Adriano 1’ to coincide with the Iberoamerican Exhibition which was held in Sevilla that year. A second boat, ‘Adriano II’ ran between 1932 and 1982, and the boat which went down on Tuesday, ‘Adriano III’ was built in Vigo in 1955.

 

 

27 Aug 2011

Spain's Zara begins selling clothes online in U.S.

Spain-based Inditex, owner of the Zara chain, may be the planet's largest clothing retailer, yet it's no world-beater when it comes to online commerce. Inditex Chief Executive Officer Pablo Isla, who has overseen a big store expansion in Asia since taking over six years ago, is out to change that.

Last September, Inditex launched a shopping site for Zara in Spain, the United Kingdom, Portugal, Germany, Italy and France. On Sept. 7, it will start accepting online orders in the United States, featuring such items as $79.90 super-skinny jeans aimed at Zara's target market of teens and young women.

Inditex has long used purely promotional websites to draw attention to its Zara product lineup as well as other company-owned chains such as Bershka and Massimo Dutti. Its Facebook page has nearly 10 million fans, and Inditex introduced a smart-phone app more than 18 months ago that allows consumers to browse new clothing arrivals.

However, selling goods online, something San Francisco's Gap has been doing for more than a decade, is only now becoming a key part of its strategy to expand sales in the United States. Inditex has about 50 Zara stores versus the 200-odd outlets Swedish rival Hennes & Mauritz (better known as H&M) has opened in the States so far.

"Zara's move online in the U.S. is overdue - it's the largest online apparel market in the world," says Sucharita Mulpuru, an e-commerce shopping analyst at Forrester Research. The "Web is a great strategy for them. It's much cheaper with their nationally recognized (Zara) brand to launch a Web store than to invest in real estate in 50 more malls in the U.S."

While the Inditex store network may be modest, the Zara brand is well regarded among the core 25- to 35-year-old consumers the company hopes to reach online. At the same time, Isla continues to chase growth in fast-growing developing markets. Inditex, which overtook H&M as Europe's largest retailer in early 2006, has opened 150 stores in China over the past five years. The company's sales have grown 53 percent since early 2007. Last year, it generated 89 percent of its sales in Europe and Asia and the remainder in the Americas.

Some analysts think Inditex's expertise in distribution and inventory management will serve the company well as it pushes online in the United States. Inditex's biggest brand, Zara, refreshes collections twice a week, despatching products quickly from distribution centers throughout Spain. The company encourages store managers to share shoppers' comments and fashion suggestions with designers rather than letting biannual fashion shows determine the trends for the next year.

The Spanish retailer's online business is likely to be more profitable than H&M's, according to Simon Irwin, an analyst at Liberum Capital in London, who estimates Inditex's annual online sales will be $2 billion, or 7 percent of group sales by January 2014. Inditex can deliver products from its distribution centers in Spain to the United States within 48 hours and will use existing facilities. By contrast, Irwin says, H&M will have to invest in distribution in the United States, since it doesn't make its own clothing and relies exclusively on suppliers.

For the moment, Inditex is not planning to expand aggressively its network of stores.

"In developed markets there is no need to rush expansion," says spokesman Jesús Echevarría. "We think it is the right time for us to expand online in the U.S."

 

39-year-old's heavily pregnant girlfriend Brada Hint uploaded the snap of herself outside the Nikki Beach Club Restaurant in Marbella, Spain.

The 39-year-old's heavily pregnant girlfriend Brada Hint uploaded the snap of herself outside the Nikki Beach Club Restaurant in Marbella, Spain.

This Facebook snap of Brada Hint got reported mobster Salvatore D'Avino arrested. (Image: Facebook)This Facebook snap of Brada Hint got reported mobster Salvatore D'Avino arrested. (Image: Facebook)

However, the photo was seen by Spanish police, who tipped off their Italian counterparts as to the couple's whereabouts.

The cops worked together to trace the reputed mobster, and arrested a stunned D'Avino as he filled his car with petrol.

Marshall Angelo Mazzagatti of Naples police explained: 'He couldn't believe it when police arrived and arrested him. He thought after nearly a decade on the run he was home free.

'When we saw the pictures on Facebook we could not believe his girlfriend had been so stupid. It was very easy to track them down as she was stood in front of a restaurant sign in Marbella.'

Marshall Mazzagatti added that D'Avino was 'not at all happy' with his Moroccan-born girlfriend.

D'Avino is believed to be a member of the Giuliano clan of the Comorra, the mafia that runs organised crime in Naples, and has been on the run for ten years after making Italy's list of the 100 most wanted fugitives.

Earlier this year, alleged mobster Donato Fratto was arrested by Italian police after he used Facebook to publicise the fact he was travelling to a biker's rally, allowing cops to trace him.




19 Aug 2011

Katie Price: I'm not going into Big Brother house - I'm on holiday with Leandro Penna and my kids

Katie Price won't be entering the Celebrity Big Brother house tonight.

Instead, the glamour girl's jetted off to Marbella with boyfriend Leandro Penna and her 3 kids Harvey, 9, Junior, 6, and Princess, 4.

'Although ill enjoy watching bb when I'm home I'm currently away with my children on a long summer holiday which is what's important to me,' Katie, 33, Tweeted yesterday.

Katie's already been snapped at the Spanish resort wearing a striped maxi dress on a shopping trip with Princess, while model Leandro, 26, went for a jog in the heat.

The holiday's set to get busier for the couple as they'll soon be joined by the Argentian hunk's relatives.

'Not long till leos family arrive to share our holiday woo hoo,' Katie Tweeted.

 

13 Aug 2011

Spanish authorities do not pay their suppliers

Suppliers go under while waiting for there payment. Spanish Public administrations have a total accounts payable of 35 billion Euros. According to self-employed National Association ATA has 250.000 small businesses gone bankrupt because of the difficulties in getting paid by the authorities. The self-employed have an accumulated debt of the public administrations of 13.3 billion Euros, of the total 35 billion that the authorities are owed to suppliers. The economic burden is double for the smallest businesses, which not only has no payment for their services but also to pay out more than 1.6 million Euros in VAT that they have not yet recovered. Despite promises by the Spanish authorities on legislative changes to improve payment terms, the average waiting time for payment of an invoice for over a year.

 

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