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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Alan Murphy

About Alan Murphy

Alan has lived in Barcelona since 1990. He has worked as a journalist for What's On in London, Elle and Time Out and at the press relations office of the Barcelona Olympic Games in 1992. More recently, he has worked as a teacher, translator and linguistic consultant.

Madrid 2020 and the cult of the mega-event

June 25, 2013 by Alan Murphy 4 Comments

Madrid 2020

On September 7 this year, when the delegates from Madrid, Tokyo and Istanbul gather at the International Olympic Committee headquarters (IOCHQ) in Lausanne to hear the name of the city chosen to host the 2020 Games, the scenes will play out as they always have. The “winners” will cheer wildly in the Swiss auditorium and on the chosen city's streets, and the “losers” will shrug and take it like sportsmen, choking back tears and grinning stoically. But you have to wonder... Will the “losers” be secretly relieved at avoiding the massive financial burden of hosting global events like the Olympics or the FIFA World Cup and will the “winners” be quietly counting the number of schools, hospitals … [Read more...] about Madrid 2020 and the cult of the mega-event

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: doping, LINK, Madrid 2020, Naoki Inose

The tragic struggle of the loser on the Vespa

May 14, 2013 by Alan Murphy 3 Comments

Alfredo Landa

Alfredo Landa, who died last week, was iconic in the world of Spanish cinema as a comic Everyman, lending his name to a style of popular comedy - landismo. Like Norman Wisdom in the UK or Jerry Lewis in the US, Landa played the common man, who, for all his follies and petty obsessions, remains true to himself (and the leading lady). He rebels against authority not because he is a rebel by nature but because only by rebelling can he retain integrity, and he gets the girl in the final reel. However Landa, like Wisdom or Lewis, also showed his talents as a serious dramatic actor. In 1984 he was chosen by Mario Camus to play the lead role of Los santos inocentes, a peasant farmer whose innate … [Read more...] about The tragic struggle of the loser on the Vespa

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, Spain News Tagged With: El Pa, Franco, La Vaquilla, Torrente

The Catalan spy game

February 21, 2013 by Alan Murphy 3 Comments

La Camarga restaurant in Barcelona.

Earlier this week police took action on a political scandal that had broken several days before, when Catalan newspaper El Periódico published a recording and transcripts of a conversation between Catalan Partido Popular leader Alicia Sánchez-Camacho and María Victoria Álvarez, ex-girlfriend of Jordi Pujol Ferrusola, a Catalan businessman and son of former Catalan premier Jordi Pujol. The Pujol clan, an historic dynasty in the leading Catalan party Convergència Democrática de Catalunya, is presently caught up in a maelstrom of accusations of financial wrongdoing. Jordi Jr’s brother, CiU parliamentary leader Oriol Pujol, is embroiled in his own personal scandal, over alleged kickbacks in … [Read more...] about The Catalan spy game

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: business, Jordi Jr, Jordi Pujol, PP, spain, spain news, spain spying, spanish news

The next Spain

January 23, 2013 by Alan Murphy 12 Comments

Spanish flag.

There’s an overwhelming consensus all across Spain that “we can’t go on like this”. Yet there’s an equally determined belief within the Rajoy government that we can, and in fact will, go on like this until it somehow gets better. Which means that someone – either the government with its faith that everything will come out well, or the entire population of the country, who believe that it won’t – has got it wrong. In this article I will take it as an assumption that the existing state of Spain will not be able to survive long enough to hold general elections again in 2015, and that therefore Rajoy’s Partido Popular government will be the last of the 1978-model Kingdom of Spain. How will … [Read more...] about The next Spain

Filed Under: Featured, Politics Tagged With: bailout, Balkan Breakup, protest, spain, spain crisis, spain economy, spain news

Life and trials of the rebel colonel

January 10, 2013 by Alan Murphy 1 Comment

Amadeo Martínez Inglés

Seventy-four-year-old Colonel Amadeo Martínez Inglés certainly looks every bit the retired military officer as he marches in his uniform towards the little crowd outside the court. But he doesn’t sound like a typical army colonel. “The Third Republic will soon be born in Spain!” he declaims to the applause of his gathered supporters before entering the Audiencia Nacional, the high court that deals with terrorists, international gangsters and drugs traffickers, to face a 15-month prison sentence for his insults against the king. It’s April 2012 and he is accused of “Calumnies and Injuries Against the Crown” under Penal Code Article 490.3, a law which has already been quashed by the … [Read more...] about Life and trials of the rebel colonel

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: amadeo martínez inglés, spain, spain news, spanish news

The ‘Spanishization’ crusade of José Ignacio Wert

December 17, 2012 by Alan Murphy 8 Comments

If we take a quick look around Spain today we see a number of issues that are clearly in need of urgent action: the judicial system is facing the rebellion of judges who are sick of the political manipulation of justice; thousands of tax-dodgers enjoy the protection of the state while tax-haven whistleblower Hervé Falciani languishes in a Spanish prison; the police are exposed as criminally complicit in a number of cases of financial scandal and political dirty tricks, as well as grossly incompetent in investigating serious crimes; the wave of suicides caused by mortgage repossession continues unabated; and leading figures from all political parties and even the royal family are on trial as … [Read more...] about The ‘Spanishization’ crusade of José Ignacio Wert

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: catalan independence, catalonia, human rights, language, spain, spain news, spanish news, The Economist

Spain’s evictions push the defenceless over the edge

November 14, 2012 by Alan Murphy Leave a Comment

Amaia Egaña with her husband.

On November 9, as the police and bailiffs opened the door of a flat in Barakaldo, Gipuzkoa, to execute a mortgage repossession, 53-year-old Amaia Egaña climbed up onto a chair on her fourth-floor balcony and leapt to her death. Hers was the third suicide in as many weeks shortly before the moment of eviction, and it has apparently triggered a dramatic response on the part of Mariano Rajoy’s government, which announced its intention to suspend all evictions of “vulnerable families”, pending a reform of the mortgage law. It may surprise the more than 300 households evicted every day in Spain that their constitutional rights are being violated, but among the many promises of social justice … [Read more...] about Spain’s evictions push the defenceless over the edge

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: banks, La Vanguardia, PP, spain

Gibraltar: Fish, football and frontiers

October 18, 2012 by Alan Murphy 8 Comments

A Gibraltar ape at play.

On September 25, Mariano Rajoy took the podium at the UN General Assembly in New York, where Spain was hoping to win a rotating seat on the Security Council. The Spanish prime minister chose the moment to press for joint talks with the UK about the sovereignty of Gibraltar. He called on London to “reinitiate bilateral dialogue on the decolonisation of Gibraltar… We have now lost too many years.” Unsurprisingly, Spain failed to secure a seat on the Security Council, and London issued a waspish response, denying that decolonisation was even an appropriate concept: “The 2006 Gibraltar Constitution provides for a modern and mature relationship between Gibraltar and the UK. This description … [Read more...] about Gibraltar: Fish, football and frontiers

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: football, Gibraltar, military, spain, spain news, spanish news

Socialism and the future of Catalonia

September 28, 2012 by Alan Murphy Leave a Comment

The Catalan Socialists faces some stiff challenges.

Snap elections in Catalonia will be held on the November 25; the key issue is what Catalonia will be in the future and how it will relate to Spain and the European Union. Artur Mas’s CiU, the party which governs Catalonia (with 38 percent of the vote in the 2010 election), will present a platform in favour of the “Estat Propi”. This formula, roughly translated as “Free State”, avoids the term “independence” which for Mas would signal not only a break in relations with Spain but also with the EU. Mas, who fully understands that isolation of Catalonia from Europe would be financially and politically catastrophic, is anxious to avoid the rhetoric of rebellion. Radical separatist party ERC … [Read more...] about Socialism and the future of Catalonia

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: catalan independence, catalonia, spain, spain news

The Pep Paradox

September 21, 2012 by Alan Murphy 2 Comments

The Catalan football team. Photo: FCB.

August 2016: The newly-proclaimed state of Catalonia has separated completely from Spain, whose flags no longer fly anywhere in the city of Barcelona except on the flagstaff of the Spanish Embassy. The sports press is full of news about the recent “friendly” international between the Catalan and Spanish national teams, the first in history, which despite a few ugly incidents outside the stadium passed off without a hitch. A goalless draw was seen by many as a fitting result to symbolise the relations between Spain and the nascent Catalan Republic. And of course the main story for sportswriters, as always, is FC Barcelona – Barça – as they prepare for a new season… playing against Real … [Read more...] about The Pep Paradox

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, catalan independence, Laporta, Pep Guardiola, spain, spain news, spanish football, Spanish soccer

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