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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Featured

Forget police brutality, this was verbal brutality

September 26, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

September 25 protest in Madrid.

Whether or not the police in Madrid during the September 25  “Surround/Occupy Congress” protest acted with wanton brutality depends on whom you listen to. If it’s Interior Minister Jorge Fernández, then you’ll believe that the forces of order acted “magnificently” and “extraordinarily well” in the face of violent provocation. Likewise, the government’s delegate for Madrid, Cristina Cifuentes, deemed their behaviour “very professional”. Leaders of the protest itself and some opposition parties have seen it rather differently, accusing the police of using disproportionate force. A look at some of the day’s video footage reflects badly on both sides in the sense that some protesters and … [Read more...] about Forget police brutality, this was verbal brutality

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 25-S, Ocupar Congreso, protest, spain, spain news, Surround Congress

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

Santiago Carrillo: the nearly man

September 19, 2012 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

Santiago Carrillo.

Santiago Carrillo, who has died at the age of 97, belonged to another time, or perhaps more accurately, and depending on one’s age, to a number of other times: the Civil War; the decades of exile during the Franco regime; the first years after the death of the dictator; but above all to a time when people still took Communism seriously. Despite his failure to secure a lasting place for the Spanish Communist Party (PCE) in Spanish political life, he managed to reinvent himself as one of the guardians of that most revered institution, the transition to democracy. While still in his teens, as a member of the Socialist Youth, Carrillo took part in the uprising in Asturias in 1934, and was … [Read more...] about Santiago Carrillo: the nearly man

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: Franco, Mundo Obrero, PCE, Santiago Carrillo, spain, spain news

José Luis Garci’s Sherlock Holmes is out to rescue Spain

September 17, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Holmes and Watson. Madrid Days.

It’s now 30 years since José Luis Garci won Spain its first Oscar for Begin the Beguine. In the interim, he has made another 14 films, the latest of which, now on general release, is Holmes & Watson. Madrid Days. That 1982 Oscar gave a much-need boost to the Spanish film industry — even though the film had been panned by the critics and was a commercial flop — and, along with hosting the World Cup and Felipe González’s election win the same year, ushered in a lengthy period of national self-confidence now in tatters after the implosion of the economy. For Garci himself, winning an Academy Award must have been especially gratifying: this is a man for whom Hollywood, and particularly … [Read more...] about José Luis Garci’s Sherlock Holmes is out to rescue Spain

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: film, Holmes Watson, Madrid Days, spain

Portuguese take to streets against austerity

September 16, 2012 by João Vasco Almeida Leave a Comment

Black flag.

It was a demonstration born on Facebook, on Saturday, September 8 - 24 hours after Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho announced a new tax on all workers. Exactly a week later it was reality - never since the revolution of 1974 had so many taken the streets to express their anger at the government. More than 1.5 million people hit the streets, according to state news agency LUSA. The hub of the protest was Lisbon, where 350,000 people walked two miles from Praça Jose Fontana Square to Praça de Espanha Square. In Porto, the same: more than 100,000 came out to Praça da Liberdade for more than four hours, to show their anger at the conditions resulting from the country's bailout … [Read more...] about Portuguese take to streets against austerity

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Portugal News Tagged With: protest, security, social security, tax

Disability and Spain’s low-key Paralympics

September 13, 2012 by Olwen Mears 1 Comment

The London 2012 Paralympics

On September 9, London bid a fond farewell to this year's Paralympic Games. A fact which, if you live in Spain, may well have escaped your notice. As fireworks exploded over the Olympic Stadium in Stratford, the closing ceremony of this major international sporting event was not covered by any of Spain's major TV stations. In a departure from previous years the 2012 Games did, however, receive comprehensive coverage on Teledeportes (although Spain's national sports channel, aimed at broadcasting news across the country, changed frequency in June 2011, and I doubt ours is the only household which still does not receive it.) A quick search for Paralympic news in the national and local … [Read more...] about Disability and Spain’s low-key Paralympics

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: ABC, London 2012, ONCE, paralympics, spain, spain London 2012, spain news, sports

Madrid’s Olympic bid: third time lucky?

September 11, 2012 by Alan Murphy Leave a Comment

Madrid's 2020 logo.

On February 14 this year, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti pulled the plug on Rome’s bid for the 2020 Olympics. “The government doesn't feel that it would be a responsible gesture, taking into consideration Italy's current financial state”, he said. “If we find ourselves today in such a difficult financial position it is because similar decisions were made by previous governments without having considered the resulting impact in the following years.” But despite Spain’s dire economic problems, Madrid has pushed ahead with its own bid. According to La Razón, Madrid’s bid for the 2012 Olympics cost €60 million. The bid for the 2016 games cost €44 million. This time the process will … [Read more...] about Madrid’s Olympic bid: third time lucky?

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: London 2012, Madrid 2020, spain, spain news, Spain Olympics

EU praise can’t hide Rajoy’s bailout jitters

September 10, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Mario Draghi.

Much was made of the apparent chemistry between Mariano Rajoy and Angela Merkel when the two leaders met in Madrid last week. The German Chancellor’s comment that she was “impressed with Spain’s reforms” was indeed music to the ears of the Spanish prime minister. Similar praise from European Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn over the weekend, along with IMF managing director Christine Lagarde’s statement that measures taken by Italy and Spain were “adequate in and of themselves” was also welcome from Rajoy’s point of view. The Spanish leader is closely gauging these appraisals of his reform program because, as he almost certainly prepares to request some form of bailout from the … [Read more...] about EU praise can’t hide Rajoy’s bailout jitters

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: bailout, draghi, elections, EU, rajoy, spain, spain bailout

Clemency for ETA?

September 7, 2012 by Olwen Mears 3 Comments

Iosu Uribetxebarria.

As early Basque elections loom, there is one issue that rages on despite efforts by the central government to let it lie: that of the controversial release of convicted ETA killer and kidnapper Iosu Uribetxebarria Bolinaga. On September 5, the Public Prosecutor's Office exercised its right to appeal against a ruling in favour of his conditional release. With a regional election scheduled for October 21, it is no surprise that even those in the Basque Partido Popular (PP) have been keen to nip the Uribetxebarria issue in the bud. Even Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy hoped to silence those in his party – most prominently Basque MEP Jaime Mayor Oreja and Madrid premier Esperanza Aguirre – who … [Read more...] about Clemency for ETA?

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: Basque, ETA, Iosu Uribetxebarria, izquierda abertzale, spain, spain news

Schrödinger’s Catalonia

September 5, 2012 by Candide 18 Comments

Artur Mas.

“The rushing Pequod, freighted with savages, laden with fire, […] seemed the material counterpart of her monomaniac commander's soul.” (Herman Melville, 'Moby Dick', 1851) ”We want the great majority of the people of Catalonia to embark with us on this voyage to Ithaca.” (Artur Mas, March 24, 2012)   What does Catalan premier Artur Mas really want? Is it a fiscal pact with Madrid that leaves this region in control of its own taxation system? Or is it independence, the threat of which he is using to try to wrestle the fiscal pact from the central government? It is as if his real intentions were inside a closed box. The uncertainty he fosters allows for all kinds of … [Read more...] about Schrödinger’s Catalonia

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: Artur Mas, Herman Melville, Moby Dick, us

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