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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

spanish news

Athletic Bilbao’s golden generation stands at the crossroads

July 4, 2011 by Dermot Corrigan Leave a Comment

It’s a pivotal week for the future of Athletic Bilbao. On Thursday, July 7th, the club holds its presidential elections, with former Athletic midfielder Josu Urrutia challenging current president Fernando García Macua for control of the Basque club. Urrutia’s candidacy started with a bang when he announced that former Argentina and Chile boss Marcelo Bielsa would be manager should he win. Bielsa, who recently rejected the chance to take over at Inter Milan, is a managerial heavyweight. A deep football thinker, he is known for sending out tactically astute, but sometimes mentally brittle, teams. While his unbalanced Argentina flopped at the 2006 World Cup, Chile were one of the stand-outs … [Read more...] about Athletic Bilbao’s golden generation stands at the crossroads

Filed Under: Featured, Sports Tagged With: Athletic Bilbao, Champions League, Fernando Llorente, football, javi martinez, la liga, Liga, muniain, soccer, Spain football, spain news, spain soccer, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer

How Spain became ‘Españistán’

July 1, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Plenty of books about the Spanish economy have been published in recent years: on the black market, multinationals, the financial system, the effect of the global recession and much, much more. Many of these are scientific studies, and most of them are on the dry side. But fortunately, if you want a punchy, fact-based look at Spain’s current mess, you can find it in the shape of a comic book called Españistán by Aleix Saló. A superb six-minute video gives a sharp summary of the book and gives us as fine a potted history of the Spanish economy’s last outrageous decade as you could hope for. “What a nice little squirrel,” we are told, as a furry mammal is shown on the screen. “Screw him!” … [Read more...] about How Spain became ‘Españistán’

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 15-m, Aleix Saló, cocaine, economy, españistán, spain, spain news, spanish economy, spanish news

Spain’s buried past

June 29, 2011 by James Blick 2 Comments

Spain's buried past

A true city of the dead, five million bodies lie buried in Madrid’s Our Lady of the Almudena Cemetery.  And bar the towering cypresses, it’s a monochrome landscape of powerful granite tombs and austere crucifixes.  Winding through the graves, half lost, I finally glimpsed a flash of colour.  Red, yellow and purple - the flag of the Spanish Republic. This year marks the 80th anniversary of the Second Spanish Republic.  A short lived affair, running from 1931 to 1939, the Republic was ring-fenced by dictators.  And for many left-wing Spaniards it represents an oasis of progressive secular government - women’s rights, civil marriage and divorce, clear Church and state separation - before … [Read more...] about Spain’s buried past

Filed Under: Featured, Politics Tagged With: civil war, Franco, guernica, spain, spain dictatorship, spain historical memory, spain news, spain politics, spanish civil war, spanish news, spanish politics

Mission: Impossible, the Valley of the Fallen

June 20, 2011 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Valle de los Caidos

Here’s a question: is the Valley of the Fallen (Valle de los Caídos) a religious shrine: a Benedictine monastery and Roman Catholic basilica that includes a memorial to the dead in the Spanish Civil War, along with the tomb of General Francisco Franco? Or is it a grotesque monument to hate, an enduring reminder, built by its victims, of a military dictatorship that murdered and imprisoned hundreds of thousands of people whose only crime was to have defended democracy? Coming up with an answer will be the task of a newly appointed 13-member commission. It’s been given five months to decide, once and for all, what to do with the Valley of the Fallen. (What do you think should be … [Read more...] about Mission: Impossible, the Valley of the Fallen

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Catholic Church, franco dictatorship, madrid, Politics, spain, spain history, spain news, spain politics, spanish civil war, spanish history, spanish news, valle de los caidos, valley of the fallen

Rajoy approaches the big job with his head down

June 16, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

As rumours that next year’s general election will be brought forward to the autumn intensify, so does the realisation that by the end of the year, Mariano Rajoy could be prime minister. The strange thing is, judging by his party’s recent behaviour, this doesn’t seem to have dawned on him. If he had fully grasped the reality of his situation, you would think he would tone down the talk of Spain being an economic basket case. But  his opposition Popular Party (PP) is determined to hint, suggest, or just plain decry, that the country is in real trouble. Since last year, the PP has been openly wondering whether Spain deserves to be in the same bracket as Greece, Portugal and Ireland. In … [Read more...] about Rajoy approaches the big job with his head down

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: austerity plan, economy, election, elections, EU, european union, greece, Partido Popular, Politics, popular party, PP, rajoy, spain, spain news, spanish economy, spanish news

Real Madrid’s ‘señor’ status at play as Mourinho takes control

June 14, 2011 by Rob Train 3 Comments

Spanish football is a peculiar beast when placed under a microscope, rather like a petri dish teeming with all the bacteria Fifa is currently trying to scrape from its gilded Zurich halls. There is no fit-and-proper-persons test in La Liga, as Racing Santander is currently being left to rue. Match-fixing was made a criminal offence just six months ago. Clubs are traditionally controlled by wildly unreliable clans like the Gil family at Atlético Madrid and the Ruiz-Mateos' at Rayo Vallecano – currently busily covering their own backsides as their Nueva Rumasa congolmerate goes under for the second time, leaving thousands of investors, and Rayo's players, on the bread line. If your club … [Read more...] about Real Madrid’s ‘señor’ status at play as Mourinho takes control

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Champions League, florentino perez, football, jorge valdano, José Mourinho, la liga, Liga, Mourinho, Real Madrid, soccer, Spain football, spain news, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer, valdano

How police brutality helped Spain’s 15-M protests

June 2, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

In recent days, music fans and political activists in Spain have been remembering Gil Scott-Heron, the singer-songwriter who died last Friday. The ongoing sit-ins and protests that started across Spain in the lead-up to May’s local elections have seen inevitable links being drawn between Scott-Heron’s anthem The Revolution Will Not Be Televised and the 15-M/Democracia Real Ya movement. But the day after Scott-Heron’s death, when the TV showed images of Catalonia’s mossos d’esquadra local police force brutally charging into a crowd of unarmed, peaceful demonstrators in Barcelona, it seemed more fitting to think of another seventies cultural touchstone: Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork … [Read more...] about How police brutality helped Spain’s 15-M protests

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 15-m, 15-m movement, 15M, barcelona, barcelona protests, Champions League, Clockwork Orange, democracia real ya, mossos, presence, Scott Heron, spain, spain economy, spain news, spain police brutality, spain politics, spain protests, spanish news

The Spanish holocaust

June 1, 2011 by Nick Lyne 3 Comments

Even to this day, when asked about the slaughter and repression carried about by General Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War and in the years that followed, the standard reply from many Spaniards is that atrocities were committed on both sides. But in this relentlessly harrowing read, British historian Paul Preston provides, page after page, factual, documentary accounts of the systematic policy introduced by Franco early on in the war to rid the country of the red menace and to install a reign of terror among the few that might still contemplate resistance. This was accomplished through disappearances, and in many cases, the murders of entire families, along with theft of young … [Read more...] about The Spanish holocaust

Filed Under: Books, Culture, Featured Tagged With: Franco, Paracuellos, paul preston, Rape, Santiago Carrillo, spain, spain history, spain news, spain politics, spanish civil war, Spanish Civil War books, spanish history, Spanish Holocaust, spanish news, The Spanish Holocaust, women

A lurch to the right that cost Zapatero dear

May 23, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Spain’s political map was redrawn on Sunday. A devastating defeat for the Socialist Party saw the Popular Party win the most votes in 11 of 13 regions and open up a two-million vote advantage in the municipal elections. However you look at it, this was an utter disaster for Zapatero. This may not have been his fight, strictly speaking, because of its local nature. But having been his party’s chief electoral asset for several years, the prime minister has now become its albatross – something he tacitly admitted several weeks ago by deciding not to run for a third term. However hard his regional barons and municipal candidates tried to distance themselves from their national leader, … [Read more...] about A lurch to the right that cost Zapatero dear

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: 22-m, elecciones autonomicas, elecciones municipales, EU, european union, spain economy, spain local elections, spain news, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, zapatero

Porto’s trophy-hungry boss insists he’s no Mourinho clone

May 17, 2011 by Dermot Corrigan Leave a Comment

The comparisons have been as predictable as they have been widespread. In Britain, the Guardian called him "Mourinho’s apprentice", while the Daily Mail anointed him as "Mourinho Mark II". The Spanish press followed a similar line - El Correo named him Mourinho’s pupil and even El País joined in, headlining their profile "Mourinho’s spy". The potential mini-Mou in question is FC Porto boss André Villas-Boas, whose achievements in his first full season in football management have been spectacular. Last month Villas-Boas's side secured the Portuguese title with five games in hand and this week he leads his team into the Europa League and Portuguese Cup finals. Records have tumbled along … [Read more...] about Porto’s trophy-hungry boss insists he’s no Mourinho clone

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: andre villas-boas, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, El Correo, Europa League, FC porto, football, José Mourinho, la liga, Mourinho, portugal, portugal football, portugal soccer, portuguese soccer, Real Madrid, soccer, spain, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer, Villas Boas

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