Mediterranean Journal of Elegant Living.

Mediterranean Journal of Elegant Living.
Mediterranean Journal of Elegant Living.

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The Socialist ex Mayor of Estepona, David Valadez, has been accused of using 3 million € of grant money to pay the town hall wages for May, the month of the local elections. There are 1,280 employees in the town hall, a situation which has suffocated the town’s finances. Valadez has admitted, according to El País, that he took the decision to use the funding money to pay the wages, knowing full well it would generate new economic problems for the town. He also now faces a judicial complaint for spending some of the reserve funds on wages. Now the Junta de Andalucía is demanding part of the money, 240,000 € be returned by the PP team which is now running the town. New Mayor, José María García Urbano, has estimated the town’s total debt is some 300 million €, compared to the 160 million which was considered before the last local elections. He has already cut mobile phone and official car costs. Corruption in the town hall came to light with the breaking of the Astapa case in June 2008, which remains under instruction.


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The fire, which started at 8,35pm on Sunday night and affected land in Mijas, Ojén and Marbella, is now stabilised. INFOCA removed their level 1 alert at 12,39pm on Monday, noting that the evolution of the fire was favourable and that there was no further danger to inhabited areas. The Councillor for the Environment of the Junta de Andalucía, José Juan Díaz Trillo, said that there were suspicions that the fire had been started deliberately. The Guardia Civil and experts from fire-fighters INFOCA have started a full investigation. The Councillor said that we have to be prudent as to the cause or motive. He congratulated the fire services for their work and noted the coordination between Town Halls, local police in what had been a difficult night. He also thanked local residents for their ‘collaboration and patience’, and while there had been material damage, there were no reported injuries. First data indicates that some 400 hectares have been burnt by the blaze, and a total of 900 hectares have been partially affected. The fire started in the Parque de Entrerríos, Mijas Sierra and then moved rapidly on a front towards Ojén and Marbella. Residents in the Mijas area are now returning to their homes, and reports indicate that a total of only four properties have been destroyed or seriously damaged by the flames, when the possibilities were for a far greater number than that. 260 specialist firemen from across Andalucía are remaining at the scene to continue to dampen down the site. A total of 22 planes were used to fight the fire including four amphibious planes, three earth dumping planes, 11 helicopters and four coordination planes. 14 were contracted by the regional environment department and 8 came from the Ministry for the Environment. In total 200 people were evacuated in Mijas, 500 were evacuated from Marbella and 200 more from Ojén. Mayor of Marbella, Ángeles Muñoz, said all had now returned home and there were no injuries, ‘even though the flames had arrived at their doorways’.


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Monday was the seventh day with no power supply to four public areas of Coín, because of the Town Hall’s failure to pay its debt to the Endesa electricity company. El País gives the amount owed as 280,000 € and said the local Partido Popular Mayor was negotiating with Endesa to re-establish supply. This summer Mayor of Coín, Fernando Fernández, announced a total debt to suppliers of more than 27 million € which had been run up by the previous local government. One of the Town Hall’s largest monthly costs is the municipal workforce, whose wages come to around 1 million € a month. It’s understood that the 500 employees have not yet been paid their August wages, although La Opinión de Málaga indicates that part of the amount owed will be paid next week. The Hacienda tax authority has meanwhile agreed to stay its tax embargo on Coín’s monthly share of state taxes next month, which will free up just under 300,000 € towards the September wages. The remainder will come from the Town Hall’s share of local taxes and a restructuring of the municipal workforce.


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Glasgow's former WBO featherweight champion Scott Harrison has been freed from jail in Spain after spending 2½ years behind bars. Harrison, 34, was a highly decorated but much troubled boxer whose descent towards incarceration seemed sadly predictable. It will be interesting to see if he has anything left to offer the sport. The Scottish Sun newspaper snapped Harrison on his release from Botafuego prison near Algeciras and 'The Real McCoy' told them, "It's great to be a free man." The father of three was imprisoned in 2009 for attacking a policeman and a member of the public near his holiday home near Malaga. Harrison evenutally admitted attacking factory worker Jose Manuel Ortega, 39, in a rather misguided and allegedly drink-fuelled attempt to steal his car. The police officer claimed he had been left with a debilitating eye injury after the incident. Harrison's uncle, Jack McGill, was also arrested over the incident but failed to appear at a court hearing. An international warrant was issued for his arrest. McGill's body was found hanging from a tree in woods south of Glasgow in May 2008. Alcohol always appears to be at the root of Harrison's well publicised problems, which have also included a drink-driving conviction, a fight in a brothel on the Costa del Sol in 2007, and a two-month sentence for assaulting his then girlfriend (now fiancee) Stacey Gardner and a police officer in Cambuslang. On his release he met Stacey, two-year-old son Jack, mum Agnes and his father and well respected trainer, Peter.


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investigation is under way into a forest fire which destroyed four homes and 400 hectares of land on the Costa del Sol. The blaze – which affected parts of Mijas, Marbella and Ojen – saw more than 300 people evacuated from their homes after starting at around 8.30pm on Sunday evening in the Entrerrios area of Mijas. Andalucia’s Councillor for the Environment Jose Juan Diaz Trillo, suggested the fire had been started deliberately, before confirming that nobody had been injured. Around 300 firefighters from across Andalucia were hampered by high winds as they tackled the blaze, which caused the temporary closure of part of the A7 highway. Residents of La Mairena and La Bugancilla urbanisations were evacuated and parts of Calahonda were also briefly affected, although residents are now being allowed to return to their homes. Around 260 firefighters are involved in dampening down the fire, which is understood to have affected 900 hectares in total.


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Raton, Mouse, killer bull, Sueca
. Photograph: Alberto Saiz/AP

A half-tonne Spanish bull drew crowds of fans to the eastern town of Sueca on Sunday after building up a reputation as the biggest killer in the popular summer game of bull-dodging.

The bull, called Ratón, meaning mouse, was appearing for the first time since goring a man to death in the nearby town of Xátiva on 15 August.

Debate has raged in newspapers over the exact number of people killed by Ratón, who is let loose in bullrings where people are encouraged to jump in and taunt him.

He is known to have gored a 30-year-old man to death in Xátiva, and to have killed a man in Puerto de Sagunto in 2006. Reports that he had killed a third man in 2004, in the village of Benifairó de les Valls, were denied by the mayor.

Bull-dodging is popular in many summer village and town fiestas. In parts of eastern Valencia and Catalonia, bulls sometimes have flaming torches attached to their horns to enrage them further. Unlike in traditional bullfights, however, there is no matador and the animal lives on, getting wiser and more dangerous as he becomes more experienced.

Eleven-year-old Ratón's fame as the deadliest of fiesta bulls has made him one of the most expensive to hire, with prices reaching €15,000 for a single appearance.

The bull was greeted in Sueca by cheering crowds and music from the soundtrack of Sergio Leone's For a Few Dollars More.

Professional bull-dodgers and local amateurs baited the animal and ran in front of him for half an hour. The town hall delegated a group of experienced runners to stop drunks joining in, and police had to bundle off two people, according to the local Levante newspaper.

Bull games at local fiestas claim up to half a dozen lives across Spainevery summer.

"Ratón showed, once more, both exceptional agility and intelligence," Levante reported after noting that the sellout crowd of 2,700 people had witnessed no bloodshed.

But some politicians have called for Ratón to be banned and for stricter control of those who try bull-dodging under the influence of drink or drugs. "Someone must be held responsible if this happens again," said Marina Albiol, an MP for the United Left party in the regional parliament of Valencia. "The only reason the town hall at Sueca has hired this bull is to encourage cruelty and ghoulishness."

The town hall replied that it had hired Ratón because he belonged to a local farmer. "That way the bull can say a final goodbye to its hometown, as he is due to retire soon," a statement said.

The bull's owner, Gregorio de Jesús, wants Ratón to follow the example of Got, a fighting bull who was cloned recently.

The bull is due to appear at two more fiestas this summer.

Bullfights with matadors are to be banned in eastern Catalonia at the end of this year, but bull-dodging will remain legal.

Ratón's re-appearance in Sueca proved a draw for local media, with half a dozen television stations and some 40 radio and newspaper reporters in attendance.

The bull also has his own travelling fans. One of them, Manuel Martin, has Ratón's head tattooed on his right arm. "Now I'm going to have the whole animal tattooed on my leg," he told El País

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