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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Politics

Spain’s smoking ban: stubbing out freedom

November 10, 2010 by Nick Lyne 17 Comments

Time was when the smell of Spain was a heady blend of coffee, cologne, and tobacco. The coffee is still there, and one still gets the occasional whiff of Heno de Pravia, but the Ducados are increasingly being stubbed out; and when a ban on smoking in bars and restaurants comes into force in January 2011, they will be gone forever. Yes, Spain is finally extending its smoking ban to all public places. The initial smoking ban was first introduced in 2006, and was meant to apply to all public places. But the Popular Party’s Madrid boss, Esperanza Aguirre, played the regional card, challenging the government and saying that she wouldn’t be enforcing the law in the capital’s bars and … [Read more...] about Spain’s smoking ban: stubbing out freedom

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: anti-smoking law, ley anti-tabaco, Partido Popular, popular party, Spain smoking, Spain smoking ban, Spain Socialist Party

Batasuna does legwork as ETA inches towards Basque peace

November 5, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

As ETA moves closer to what looks potentially like a full ceasefire that commits the Basque group to laying down its weapons once and for all, Spain’s politicians are offering some strictly scripted rhetoric. For most mainstream Spanish parties, scepticism and suspicion are the watchwords as they comment on ETA’s shift towards what could be lasting peace and the end of the separatist organisation’s 51-year history. The group’s September 5 announcement that it had halted all “armed offensive actions” was deemed too half-hearted and vague by the governing Socialists and the opposition Popular Party (PP). They regarded it as a ploy to ensure the legalisation of ETA’s political support, … [Read more...] about Batasuna does legwork as ETA inches towards Basque peace

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Arnaldo Otegi, Basque country, Basque peace process, basque politics, batasuna, brian currin, ETA, ETA ceasefire, ETA peace process, ETA truce, izquierda abertzale, rajoy, Spain and ETA, zapatero

Pope’s visit highlights challenges for Spanish Church

November 3, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe 7 Comments

For Pope Benedict XVI, a visit to Spain will seem like a carefree holiday after his recent tour of Britain. That trip to Scotland and England coincided with angry protests at the Vatican’s handling of child sex abuse cases, and calls for him to face legal action. The British secret service even thwarted a reported attempt on the pope’s life by Islamists. No such hostility is expected when the pontiff touches down in Santiago de Compostela on November 6, for a two-day visit that will also take him to Barcelona. Spain has been relatively unaffected by the abuse scandals that have rocked other countries with large Catholic communities. The visit will be “momentous,” the archbishop of … [Read more...] about Pope’s visit highlights challenges for Spanish Church

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Antonio María Rouco, barcelona, Benedict XVI, Benedicto XVI, Juan Rubio Vida Nueva, Legions of Christ, Opus Dei, Orgullosos de Ser Católicos, papa, Pope, pope's visit to Spain, Sagrada Familia, Santiago de Compostela, Spain's Catholic Church, visita del papa, Zapatero and the Church

Bare-faced cheek gives Spain air of election fever

October 28, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe 5 Comments

Sexist taunts, allegations of extremism and the hint of an economic plan – it must be an election campaign. That, at least, is the overwhelming suspicion in the wake of Spanish politics’ recent “cheekgate” affair, which saw the Popular Party mayor of Valladolid, Javier de la Riva, comment of newly instated Health Minister Leire Pajín that “every time I see that face and those cheeks [pun intended], I have the same thought.”  De la Riva’s curious train of thought also led him to describe Pajín as “a very well prepared girl who is able and discreet, and will dish out condoms left and right wherever she goes.” Pajín, who at 34 is the youngest member of the Cabinet, has for some time been … [Read more...] about Bare-faced cheek gives Spain air of election fever

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Javier de la Riva, Leire Pajín, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, PP, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics

Islamic feminism: the only road to modernising a faith?

October 26, 2010 by Sonia Alegre Leave a Comment

With its own complex relationship with the Muslim world over the centuries, it was perhaps fitting that Spain should host the Fourth International Congress on Islamic Feminism, in Madrid, October 21-24. Spain’s Catholic monarchs forcibly converted Muslims to Christianity in the 16th century before then expelling many of those converts. This followed the Islamic occupation of Spain, when the religion fomented major cultural and scientific developments, especially in its major centres such as Córdoba. This year’s Madrid conference, however, looked ahead, analysing the future prospects of Islamic feminism, as well as its current state. More than 400 participants from across the world … [Read more...] about Islamic feminism: the only road to modernising a faith?

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Congress on Islamic Feminism, Islam, Islamic feminism, Muslim women, Shahla Sherkat, Spain and Islam, women in Islam, Zanan

Spain’s Socialist reshuffle reaches out to left

October 21, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

If Spain’s Socialists manage to engineer an incredible turnaround in the polls and win the 2012 general election, the chances are they will look back at October 21 of this year as the day when the comeback started. Such a result still looks a long way off, but José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero’s biggest Cabinet reshuffle of his six years in power was one of the boldest moves of his career and it looks certain to invigorate a party that was limping along under a leadership with shrinking capital. Zapatero’s seventh reshuffle sees six ministers depart, four new ones arrive, with two changing portfolios and two ministries scrapped altogether. While the scale of the move is noteworthy, the … [Read more...] about Spain’s Socialist reshuffle reaches out to left

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, Spain 2012 elections, Spain Cabinet reshuffle, spain economy, spain politics, Spain reshuffle, spanish economy, spanish politics, Valeriano Gomez, zapatero

No end in sight to Zapatero’s succession dilemma

October 15, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

As José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero stood listening to the barrage of booing and shouts for him to resign while he attended the October 12 national festivities in Madrid, the idea of enduring this kind of vitriol until 2016 can hardly have been appealing. And yet, although the prime minister is going through by far his toughest spell since taking office in 2004, he has still not announced whether he will run for a third term. Even King Juan Carlos expressed his annoyance at the abuse voiced at the military parade and the government attributed it to elements of the extreme right. However, while Zapatero has heard it before, the boos ringing in his ears this year represent widespread anger at … [Read more...] about No end in sight to Zapatero’s succession dilemma

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: aznar, Barreda, elecciones 2012, Madrid primary election, PNV, Spain elections, Spain general elections, Spain general strike, spain news, Spain October 12, Spain September 29, zapatero

Venezuela’s ETA haven tests limits of soft diplomacy

October 8, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

A characteristic of the current Spanish government’s foreign policy has been a softly-softly approach to potentially explosive issues. Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez’s old nickname, ‘Bambi’, may now be out of date on the domestic front, but on the international stage, he still treads with the caution of a deer through the woods. Since angering George W. Bush by withdrawing Spanish troops from Iraq on taking office in 2004, Zapatero and his foreign minister, Miguel Ángel Moratinos, have often gone to great lengths not to upset their counterparts –in Morocco, Cuba and France, to mention just three examples– through their soft diplomacy. Lately, however, their tolerance has been … [Read more...] about Venezuela’s ETA haven tests limits of soft diplomacy

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Arturo Cubillas, Cubillas ETA, Cubillas Venezuela, ETA en Venezuela, etarras en Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, Spain foreign policy, Spanish business, Spanish companies in Venezuela, Venezuela FARC, zapatero

Improvisation, not plotting, behind Ecuador’s “coup”

October 5, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Was it a coup attempt or wasn’t it? This has been the question on the lips of those who followed events in Ecuador on September 30, when a group of rebel police officers detained President Rafael Correa in a Quito hospital before he was freed by military special forces in a siege which, along with the day's violence, left at least eight dead. For Correa’s supporters, inside the country and outside it, this was classic proof of the dark hand of the country’s elite at play, and also the imperialist meddling of Washington. Mike Gonzalez in The Guardian saw “broader forces” at work, namely the United States, but also neighbours Colombia and Peru. “Their declarations of support for Correa … [Read more...] about Improvisation, not plotting, behind Ecuador’s “coup”

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Abdalá Bucaram, CIA Latin America, Ecuador, Ecuador coup, Ecuador instability, Ecuador Mossad, Ecuador news, Ecuador police, Jamil Mahuad, Latin American coups, Lucio Gutiérrez, Rafael Correa, Rafael Correa approval rating, revuelta policial, United States Ecuador, Wayne Madsen Ecuador

Spain and Morocco’s annual spat over for another year

October 4, 2010 by James Badcock Leave a Comment

It has become a summer classic; argy-bargy across the Strait of Gibraltar. With the arrival of September’s UN gathering in New York, the Spanish prime minister and Moroccan king have drawn an apparently effortless line under several weeks of apparently simmering tensions, blazing front-page headlines and much talk of a diplomatic crisis. “The photograph is the main thing,” José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero muttered toward Mohammed VI in New York as the pair smiled amid the camera flashes, the Spaniard later explaining that there had been little in the way of details included in their discussion. There was no need, he said; that was what the upcoming summits and ministerial meetings would deal … [Read more...] about Spain and Morocco’s annual spat over for another year

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: aznar, Aznar Melilla, Ceuta, Colin Powell, Melilla, Mohammed VI, morocco, Perejil, Rabar, rajoy, Spain-Morocco, Spanish enclaves, western sahara, zapatero

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