Soltalk November 2019 | Page 14

News Movie Money Franco saga finally ends The final resting place of the late dictator Francisco Franco continued to make headlines in Spain throughout October. In the last days of September, the Supreme Court rejected an appeal by Franco’s family to leave his remains in the huge basilica at the Valley of the Fallen near Madrid. Fake bank notes used as film props in Spain have made their way into circulation in this country and elsewhere. Although the €5, €10, €20 and €50 movie money is clearly marked in English, “This is not legal tender. It is used for motion props only,” a number of businesses have accepted the notes in payment. National Police say that anyone receiving one of the rogue props should pass it to them because using the fakes is an offence. Powerful women The boss of Banco Santander has been named one of the three most powerful woman in the world. Fortune magazine says Ana Botín has reinforced the bank’s capital and increased customer loyalty with on-line clients now totalling over 32 million. She shares the honour with the GlaxoSmithKline CEO and the chair of Gree Electric Appliances. Women only Spain’s first women-only hotel has opened on Mallorca. Guests booking a stay at the Som Dona Hotel in Porto Cristo must be women aged 14 and over, with a “no men allowed” policy operating. Some staff are men, in line with Spanish gender discrimination laws, but the hotel says it hires female staff whenever possible. Security line The National Cyber Safety Institute has introduced a new phone number to contact them for help and advice on on-line security. Anyone can now call 017 to report bullying, threats, frauds, hacks or suspicious websites, or to get advice on security for any internet- based device. Calls do not show up on itemised bills, and the line is open 9.00am to 9.00pm every day of the year. The socialist government of acting prime minister Pedro Sánchez has made moving the remains to a more discrete location a priority, arguing the country could not “continue to glorify” the dictator who died in 1975. Plans to move them to a family tomb in June were suspended by the Supreme Court after receiving an appeal from his family. The Court ruled that the work planned by the government is constitutional, and does not infringe planning laws or local legislation. The exhumation could therefore proceed, it concluded, with Franco’s remains to be reinterred alongside those of his wife in the family tomb at Mingorrubio El Pardo, a state cemetery which lies 20 kilometres north of Madrid. Franco’s family said they planned to challenge the Supreme Court ruling, first in Spain's Constitutional Court and then in the European Court of Human Rights. In early October, the prior of the mausoleum had warned that he would prevent the remains from being exhumed, even though the courts and the Church have approved the project. Santiago Cantera, a candidate for the fascist Phalange party during Spain’s 1993 general election, invoked in his letter “moral and religious principles” and the “inviolability of places of worship.” However, he later relented and agreed to hold a special mass. The presence of Franco’s remains at the Valley of the Fallen has been an uncomfortable reality for many Spaniards over many years because the basilica was built to honour those who died in Spain’s Civil War. However, there are also those who believe that he should remain buried there. Finally, the mausoleum in the Valley of the Fallen closed to the public on October 11 to allow the exhumation to proceed a few days later. It was anticipated the remains would be reinterred, under conditions of extreme secrecy, before the end of the month. Gibraltar’s Spanish workers protest Last month, as the British parliament sat on a Saturday for the first time since 1981 to debate the UK’s exit from the EU, residents of La Linea de la Concépcion, close to the border with Gibraltar, were on the streets demanding a second Brexit referendum. An estimated 2,000 people voiced their anger about the effects Britain’s withdrawal from Europe was likely to have on southern Spain. warned that cross-border workers were likely to be stuck in six hour queues because of the already random attitude of customs officials in searching vehicles. Around 9,000 Spanish residents cross the border to work in Gibraltar every day, but choose to live in Spain because the cost of living is lower. The protest was organised by the Sociocultural Association of Spanish Workers in Gibraltar which has Spain, meanwhile, is expected to maintain its veto over Gibraltar under arrangements secured with the UK last year. Any future agreements on the relationship between the UK and the EU will only apply to Gibraltar if both London and Madrid agree to them. 12 The march was attended by the mayors of La Linea, San Roque and Los Barrios. It followed the re-election in Gibraltar a couple of days earlier of Fabian Picardo as Gibraltar’s Chief Minister, his third term of office.