Soltalk June 2017 | Page 34

News BSE detected Five cattle have been slaughtered following an outbreak of BSE, better known as mad cow disease, in Cantabria. The virus was detected during a routine check on an animal born in Camargo in 2002. Regional minister Jesús Oria says that rigorous test procedures mean that there is no danger to the public and nobody has to stop eating beef or drinking milk. Silent protest Spanish flags have appeared throughout Barcelona last month and are being interpreted as a silent protest against Catalan independence. Police caught seven youths sticking flags on public fixtures in the early hours and they have been fined for vandalism. Social media has been full of photos of Spanish flags stuck to road signs, in bus shelters and on post boxes. Suicide risk Google, Twitter and Yahoo have distanced themselves from some of the 15 websites, YouTube uploads, Tweets and blogs which reportedly incite suicide. The list was presented to the prosecutor in Cataluña on May 5 by the region’s Audiovisual Council. Its analysis recorded 89,000 hits on YouTube for a search on “suicido,” of which it says 58 per cent included “risk content.” Drunk driver A bus driver who left Granada en route for Valencia was found to be six times over the legal alcohol limit for professional drivers when he was stopped by police on the A-7 in Murcia last month. The vehicle was carrying 40 Chinese tourists at the time. The alarm was raised by a service station worker who called police to report the driver’s inebriated appearance. Plan to withdraw Francoist honour is unnecessary A retired history professor has told Nerja Town Hall that there is no need to revoke an honour bestowed by the municipality, because such action was taken 38 years ago. It concerns the former government minister and vice president during the Franco era, José Utrera Molina, who lived in the town until his death last month at the age of 91. A lawyer, Eduardo Ranz, called on the town to withdraw all “honour and awards” granted during the dictator’s life, which include the title “Adopted Son” bestowed on Utrera by the town council in October, 1969. Such annulments are covered by the Law of Historical Memory passed by the Zapatero government in 2007. As the town began planning a session of the council to approve the move, Francisco Capilla took to Facebook to explain that a debate is unnecessary. The historian confirmed that the title Adopted Son was given to Utrera on October 9, 1969, but added that it was withdrawn on May 10, 1979. He said that the same meeting 38 years ago also withdrew the same courtesy title from Francisco Giménez-Reyna who was a lieutenant in Nerja’s Guardia Civil in the late 1940s. It further agreed to rename a number of streets whose names had Francoist connections. While mayor Rosa Arrabal can now remove the debate from her to-do list, she has been asked by the government delegate in Madrid to investigate the circumstances surrounding Utrera’s funeral which was held at the Church of San Miguel, close to the Balcón de Europa, almost last month. Reports say that around a dozen people were heard singing the Falangist hymn “Cara al sol” at the church doors. This is understood to be in violation of article 32 of the Law of Democratic Memory, recently approved by the Junta de Andalucía, which bans, “praise of the Franco regime.” Three more detained following fatal shooting Bus fire Three more people have been arrested by National Police in Málaga who are investigating a shooting incident in the Los Asperones district of the city in February. A 32-year-old man died while another aged 44 was injured and six people have now been detained for questioning. One municipal worker required medical attention after a Málaga bus caught fire in Alameda Principal on Sunday evening. The vehicle was parked and empty when the alarm was raised and staff attempted to extinguish the flames until fire crews arrived. The employee, who was treated at the scene, had inhaled some of the powder dispersed by hand-held fire extinguishers. When the emergency services arrived at the scene shortly after midnight on February 3 they found it deserted. However, it was then discovered that the fatal victim had already been taken to the Hospital Clinico by his family. He is reported to have been admitted in a critical condition with around six bullet wounds to the chest and leg, and, despite desperate attempts to revive him, he died shortly afterwards. 32 The injured man was treated for a gunshot wound to the shoulder and was admitted to Carlos Haya Hospital where he was formally arrested. Two other men who accompanied him are reported to be members of the same family and, following their detention after the incident, were ordered by a judge be held in custody. The search for three other suspects then continued and eventually lead to simultaneous raids in Granada, where two men were detained, and in Málaga, where the third was found. The reason for the dispute remains unclear although police now think it was connected to the alleged theft of some livestock, rather than being drugs related.