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Bienvenida caliente y amable
Comida deliciosa - carne y pescado barbacoa una especialidad - selección excelente de vino
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Beautiful setting and superb decor
Warm and friendly welcome
Delicious cuisine charcol grilled meat and fish a speciality
Excellent selection of wines
Bright and relaxing bar area
Watch the world go by from the front patio or savour the magnificent mountain views from the balcony at the back.
Open Every Day exept Monday

BOOKINGS PHONE 952869848

Telefono 952869848


Tuesday, 29 July 2008

Málaga waiter stabbed

waiter in a Málaga restaurant was stabbed after he asked a beggar to stop bothering his customers. The vagrant smashed plates on the floor before picking up a table knife and attacking the 26-year-old waiter who was not seriously injured. Catering workers have complained that city centre beggars constitute an on-going problem but that complaints to the town hall bring no solution.

Wave of arrests investigation into taxfraud involving a bank in Liechtenstein. Costa arrests were in Marbella, Fuengirola, Torremolinos

70 Spanish nationals have been arrested in a major investigation into tax and fiscal fraud involving a bank in Liechtenstein. Four of the detentions were in Marbella, Fuengirola, Torremolinos and Benalmádena and officers have also visited a private bank located in Nueva Andalucía.
According to official sources some 200 million euros is thought to have been involved in the fraud. The 'Jade-Limusina' investigation started in April when the Tax Agency presented the anti-corruption prosecutor with a report indicating that 198 people could be involved in tax evasion. These were all resident in Spain and are thought to have had dealings with the Liechtenstein Global Trust (LGT).
This is an international case and started off in Germany where some 1,000 people are though to be involved. As it developed it saw the tax authorities in Spain working with colleagues in Australia, Canada, France, Italy, New Zealand, Sweden, the UK and USA. All these countries had instances of their nationals using the same bank to allegedly avoid paying tax to the authorities.
The case in Spain was placed under the wing of the Audiencia Nacional judge Santiago Pedraz who ordered investigations by the tax authority's own team and the anti-corruption squad of the Guardia Civil. This led to raids on around 20 companies and business advisors in Madrid, Barcelona, Málaga and Zaragoza.
The situation of the Nueva Andalucía private bank is not clear. It is believed that the Guardia Civil were at the bank interviewing officials for an hour but no arrests appear to have been made. It is also understood that the same bank could be involved in the German arm of this investigation.
LGT is not only caught up in this fraud investigation. Last week in the USA a hearing of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI) of the US Senate also cast doubt on the bank's operations. In a statement LGT Group asserted that: ''it has always conducted its business in accordance with the applicable legal and regulatory provisions. The data under investigation by the PSI - which is based on the data stolen from LGT Treuhand in 2002 and goes back to the 1970s - is from a time when different regulations applied and when there was no Qualified Intermediary (QI) agreement in place. The specific cases mentioned in the subcommittee's report are dated and do not in any way reflect LGT's current business practices.'' Obviously following the wave of arrests in Spain and the parallel investigations in the USA the bank will once again be under the spotlight.

Sunday, 27 July 2008

Civil Guard is looking for the thieves who broke into the home belonging to their Civil Guard Chief Captain in San Vicente del Raspeig, in Alicante.

Civil Guard is looking for the thieves who broke into the home belonging to their Civil Guard Chief Captain in San Vicente del Raspeig, in Alicante.The chief was asleep with his family in his home in the old Guardia Civil barracks in Babel, where some 20 civil guard families now reside, while the thieves obtained access through a balcony window. The embarrassing theft took place a month ago, but news of it has only just been released. A bag and other items were taken.

Saturday, 26 July 2008

Prices falling, buyers are disappearing and developers, starved of loans by Spanish banks nervous about international financial instability

prices are falling, buyers are disappearing and developers, starved of loans by Spanish banks nervous about international financial instability, are going bust. Along the Costas, developments lie half-finished, without water and electricity, and without any prospect of being sold.
For Spain's notoriously corrupt and capricious planning regime, which gave birth to the developments now disfiguring virtually all the country's Mediterranean coastline, the chickens are coming home to roost. Houses built on the nod of corrupt mayors are being refused retrospective planning permission by regional administrations under pressure from the green lobby. Many properties, new and not-so-new, are blighted by illegality and are the effectively worthless; others have simply been demolished. Scan the websites used by current or potential British expatriates and you will find people desperate for advice about how to reclaim deposits that they will, in many cases, never see again – and all at the wrong end of life, when lost savings cannot be recouped.
Even the biggest Spanish firms are going under. Last week, Martinsa-Fadesa, a major and respected player, filed for bankruptcy.
Gwilym Rhys-Jones is a financial investigator based on the Costa del Sol, and a longtime observer of the Spanish property scene. He says that even large, well-known builders were accepting deposits for off-plan developments that had no planning permission. "These things are no more than pipe dreams, but there was such a ready supply of British and north European buyers that all they had to do was show them a pretty drawing and they were falling over themselves to buy them."
Drive along the coast south of Alicante and the results of the Spanish property bubble are there to see: serried ranks of exquisitely tasteless, often empty, villas advancing in close order up isolated, parched hillsides. Many have been built in locations totally unsuitable for housing: by the sides of dual carriageways, away from shops and amenities – anywhere that developers could find a landowner willing to sell. Property has driven the Spanish economy like no other in the European Union. Last year, housing investment accounted for a tenth of GDP and 13 per cent of private sector jobs. More than four million dwellings have been built in the last decade, a boom fuelled partly by an influx of British retirees (some three-quarters of a million Britons now reside in Spain). Britain's Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors says the number of homes built last year would be excessive even given steady market conditions, never mind a downturn.
But it's on the Costas where the developers are really hurting. La Axarquia is part of Malaga province, a constellation of 29 coastal and inland councils. Ask about the number of illegally built properties in La Axarquia and the official figure will be about 10,000. Local environmentalists put that at more than 20,000.
"In Marbella, the local council is calling on the regional authorities to retrospectively authorise illegally built properties because otherwise mortgages cannot be raised on them," says Mr Rhys-Jones. "In other words, they want to draw a line under the old era." However, he does not believe the property industry will be cleaned up any time soon. "In my town of Estepona, the mayor was elected in May on an anti-corruption ticket. He is now awaiting trial, charged with money laundering, and influence-peddling relating to planning permission."
Housebuilding was popular with ordinary Spaniards, struggling to match the living standards of their more developed partners in the EU. Unfettered building was a vote-winner with local electorates because of the money it injected. Smallholdings, worth next to nothing as agricultural land, suddenly took on great value. Helping it all in recent years was the pound's strength against the euro, making Spain an attractive destination for elderly British couples wanting to maximise their pensions. Now, the pound has dropped and the developers are finding fewer takers from the UK. The result is an enormous glut. Prices are falling relentlessly on the Costas, destroying the hopes of Britons who bought properties as investments.
Tina Reeves, who has worked as an estate agent in Spain for the last 18 years, says tortuous planning laws are part of the problem. "Licences granted by local councils to developers are being rescinded by the regional authorities," she explains. "It's not the fault of the developers, it's the fault of local councils granting licences and not passing it by the region. Also, not many Spanish banks are lending at the moment. They are getting uptight because even they don't know whether anything is legal any more."
Drive inland, a few miles from the Costa Blanca resort of Torrevieja, and you come to the village of San Miguel. As recently as 25 years ago it was an isolated spot, accessible only by a potholed road. Now it is thriving, partly thanks to an influx of expatriates such as Margaret and her friend Melvyn, both from south Yorkshire.
Margaret moved to Spain a decade ago. She feels sorry for people like Peter, but says they are often victims of their own naivety. "People leave their brains at Gatwick. You wouldn't part with your money that easily in the UK, but when they get here, they do. Spanish people will not sign unless everything is in order.
"They bring these people out from England on short breaks and show them a new-build property or a plan and tell them, 'This is your dream' – and it is a dream. The amount of building has gone mad. There is hardly a patch of coastline not built on. When we came here, you would have detached properties with a bit of land. Now it's apartments and houses crammed together."
The value of Margaret's pension has dropped with the pound – the rising euro means she is worse off by the equivalent of a weekly shop – but she says he and her husband would never return to Britain. "I wouldn't go back. I don't think I could afford to live there, to be honest."
Melvyn, a former environmental health officer, is very pro-Spanish. However, he warns: "Corruption is commonplace. They bring you out here and show you a patch of land with a view and it looks beautiful. But when you hand over money you have saved all your life, you find they've built another house a few yards away and there's no view." A few miles away, Peter is sitting in his apartment, musing on the last few years.
"If we went back I think we would say, 'Well, we lived in Spain for two years. It was an experience. There were a lot of good things and a lot of bad.' "
His wife appears more accepting of misfortune.
"I had the image of running private keep-fit," she says wistfully. "You looked out and the mountains were right on top of you. I loved the idea of that."
As a kind of remedy, the couple have been offered an apartment being built at another site. But "it's not what we wanted", says Peter, the stress telling in his voice.
His dream of golf in the morning and a mountain view at sunset is likely to remain just that.

Tuesday, 22 July 2008

James Douglas Willson retired Des Plaines pilot convicted of international drug trafficking in Morocco

James Douglas Willson, 67, suffers from diabetes and kidney failure and has lost 35 pounds, said his daughter, Marilyn Brief.
A retired Des Plaines pilot convicted of international drug trafficking in Morocco isn't getting adequate medical care and may not survive his 7-year prison sentence, a family member says."My dad's body is shutting down," Brief said. "He's dying."
Imprisoned since early May, Willson was convicted after a Cessna 337 he reportedly was flying was seized by Moroccan police on a rural road, according to a statement from the Moroccan news agency.Willson piloted the twin-engine plane and landed it in Morocco to load drugs, according to the statement, which said two Moroccans also received prison sentences. Brief and Mouafik Anis, Willson's Moroccan attorney, said that Willson was a passenger on the plane, which took off in Spain but was forced to make an emergency landing in Morocco.A friend of Willson's recently delivered the plane to Spain and asked him to take a training flight with the pilot to make sure he could use the equipment, Brief said.
After the emergency landing, Willson was arrested, although no drugs were found on him or in the plane, Anis said during a telephone interview from Morocco."How can we charge someone with trafficking drugs when we did not find any drugs?" Anis said. "You must find drugs."Willson was sentenced June 16. The case is in the appeals process, Anis said.Willson is at a disadvantage in the Moroccan court system, according to Anis, who said he isn't always given advance notice of court dates. It is up to him, he said, to provide translations for his client.
The U.S. Embassy in Morocco referred all questions to U.S. State Department officials in Washington, D.C.Steve Royster, a State Department spokesman, said he could not say whether the embassy was involved in ensuring a translator was present at Willson's court proceedings. But he said at least one hearing was postponed because a translator was not available.Royster said the consular office in Morocco made sure Willson's U.S. health records were sent to the prison doctor.
"Whenever an American is detained overseas, we have a role to make sure he's getting access to the legal system and conditions that are humane," he said.Representatives have visited Willson twice and spoken to him on the phone several times.The consular staff also speaks to Willson's attorney almost daily and the prison doctor regularly, he said.The consular staff reported that Willson is about to be transferred to a larger prison with a better medical facility. Embassy officials also worked with Willson's attorney to make sure the family could visit him in prison in June.
"We're continuing to monitor the case," Royster said.
U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) said he has talked with Brief and helped her get in touch with government officials to assist her father.
"I just can't imagine what [she] is going through," he said.
Willson is housed in a facility without a roof or air conditioning, Brief said.
During his career, Willson flew planes for Ryan's Aviation and Atlas Air cargo carrier out of O'Hare International Airport, she said.
The Chicago native also worked as a pilot for Midway Airlines, a commercial airline that was based at Midway Airport.
"My dad has only been an upright citizen—an ordinary, working man," Brief said. "It's like they think my father is disposable, and he's not!"

Álvaro Iglesias was found guilty of sexually abusing five children between 2002 and 2004.

The Spanish paedophile known as ‘Nanysex’ has been sentenced to 58 years in prison for sexually abusing five children between the years 2002 and 2004. The name came for Álvaro Iglesias following his system of offering himself to babysit for the children who he would then go on to abuse. He also faces charges on six counts of the corruption of minors in localities in Madrid and Murcia.His friend and accomplice José G.C. was sentenced to 31 years in prison by the Madrid court, and a third defendant, Eduardo S.M. was sentenced to 14 years after he was the only one of the three to show remorse for his actions.‘Nanysex’ was arrested in May 2005 after a long police investigation into the abuser who would record his abuse on videos which he would then exchange with others on the Internet.

Martinsa-Fadesa -- which operated out of Ireland and dealt with several agents here -- preparing to declare bankruptcy in the face of debts of €5bn.

Spanish housing crisis claimed its first major victim, with property developer Martinsa-Fadesa -- which operated out of Ireland and dealt with several agents here -- preparing to declare bankruptcy in the face of debts of €5bn. It has created major shockwaves here, among customers who are still awaiting the completion of their dream home in the sun.Another announcement, which sent ripples across the industry this week, was news that Larionova, the biggest and most high profile of the Irish foreign property agents, is also to shut up shop, amid difficulties getting payment from developers.These fresh worries come on top of the triple whammy already tarnishing Irish investors' little slice of abroad, with interest rates doubling in the past 18 months, property prices in some previous 'sure thing' hotspots such as Spain, Bulgaria and even the US taking a hammering and -- the final straw -- the taxman relentlessly coming after what little of the spoils may be left.
The Revenue investigation into offshore investments is far from over, having already identified more than 2,000 Irish owners of foreign properties and with more trawls to come.Letters have been sent out to those suspected of owning assets abroad, which tells them that under EU legislation, they have been identified as being in receipt of income from an offshore bank account or accounts, informing them that while this is not illegal, the holders must pay tax on any interest earned on the account.
Where the accounts were opened in connection with the purchase or ongoing maintenance and running costs of a property abroad, Revenue asks for clarification regarding the date the property was purchased; whether it is being rented; the total costs involved; and the source of finance for the purchase.
In addition, they are also seeking the identities of intermediaries such as estate agents and lawyers who assisted in the purchase of the property.
They ask that accounts, tax with interest, and any necessary penalties owed be forwarded.Those not yet identified as possible tax defaulters are urged to come clean -- with a voluntary disclosure granting benefits such as a reduction in interest from 100pc to 10pc, non-publication for tax evasion and non-prosecution for tax evasion. Meanwhile, officials warn they are monitoring advertisements and websites, exchanging information with foreign tax administrations and continuing to seek new ways to identify the owners of offshore property.Those involved in the selling of overseas property publicly say they are confident that most people are now tax compliant -- but privately, they may not be so sure, with one industry source actually laughing at the idea that this might be the case.
He said that while anyone who purchased in the EU might be an easy target for Revenue, those who bought in the US -- the third most popular destination for Irish property investors -- will prove more difficult to catch, as will anyone who paid cash for property in any market who did not buy via an Irish agent.
Ironically, it is this last group who is the real target for Revenue, keen to know whether hot money had been used to make the purchase.One investor, who would not be named, told the Irish Independent that he and his wife had bought a classic apartment in Hungary's capital city, Budapest, almost five years ago. Rent on the property has only recently begun to cover the cost of the mortgage top-up the couple had secured on their own home. They recently received notification from Revenue that their tax affairs are under investigation, though they have made little profits from their little dabble overseas.'The profits are probably in the hundreds rather than thousands, especially when you take into account the renovation costs, which weren't cheap. What we're more worried about is that we got a top-up on our mortgage here and are claiming tax relief on that, so it could be a little bit sticky," he revealed.
"On the face of it, it might not be seen to be a particularly good investment, especially with all these new complications, but because we bought an old building in a really central location, I don't think we'll lose out in the long run."
Tom McGrath, a property lawyer specialising in overseas markets, confirmed that he is seeing increasing numbers of clients who are not tax compliant and who are in trouble.He advises them to take immediate action to deal with their tax problems, saying: "Don't sit on it. There's bound to be a solution."Other distressed clients have bought without any legal advice and got themselves into a contract with a developer who has failed to meet his commitments.
"The worst offenders are in Bulgaria," Mr McGrath revealed, where investors are asked for more money at the close of a sale or are asked to pay a certain sum under the counter."We ask clients not to participate in this activity -- they're not doing themselves any favours."With regard to the credit crunch, he does not think many Irish people have been forced to sell their property abroad yet -- but adds that he "hopes the situation is not as bad as people are predicting".In Spain, property prices have been coming down hugely, due to planning corruption and oversupply -- with corruption rife in tourist areas. However, Mr McGrath says Spain has a practical way of dealing with corrupt developers: "Forget about tribunals, they lock people up."
He finds overseas sales to have largely cooled off, but he is still seeing a steady flow of clients interested in investing overseas -- particularly in Portugal, Spain, France and Italy.Meanwhile, there are also Irish people still investing in Poland and Germany, he said.Colm Murphy, of Property Tax International, said it is vital that people are aware of their tax obligations here and in the country they bought.
Technological advances in computer software have made it a lot easier for tax officials across Europe to share information, he revealed.
In Spain, for example, new software was implemented some months ago, which alerts the tax office when there has been a change in the notary deeds of a property following a sale.Mr Murphy's company has seen an increase of around 20pc in the number of clients coming to them with tax concerns."People are coming to us and saying 'I have this property in Spain and haven't done anything about it'. Buying property overseas is hard at the best of times -- most of the time people are buying in the dark, because the estate agents are just trying to get the cash off you."

Other issues can arise, of which Irish buyers may be ignorant. "In some countries, such as France, your domestic will doesn't cover your French property and so if a couple owns a property and the wife dies, her share will be broken down among all her living relatives."

Simon Palmer, of Empire Consulting, warns that it is very short-sighted to try and dodge tax on foreign property investments.

"During the boom, the tax man wasn't clamping down, but he is now," he said.

According to Mr Palmer, some unscrupulous agents are telling would-be investors that rent will cover a certain section of the mortgage and they will "just have to put this much in" to make up the shortfall.
"But property should always wash its face -- even from the outset," he said.
He advises people to avoid emerging markets, such as Bulgaria and Turkey, and tourist resorts, because they are too risky. Wiser investments are made in the UK, a French city, or Gemany.
"Then they could take a punt at a higher-risk market," he said.

Friday, 11 July 2008

Joseph Jones was accompanied by officers from the Herts and Beds Major Crime Unit on his return from Spain

Joseph Jones, 23, of Crescent Road, New Barnet, was accompanied by officers from the Herts and Beds Major Crime Unit on his return from Spain yesterday.The headless body of father-of-four John Finney was found in Ickleford in March, weeks after he was abducted outside his home in Northaw.One of three implicated in the case, Jones and another man were arrested in Spain on murder charges in May.The third, 28-year-old Mark Curran, of Dollis Valley Way in Barnet, is on remand ahead of a further Crown Court hearing at St Albans later this month.

Wednesday, 2 July 2008

Gang of drug traffickers had six light planes for bringing drugs from Africa into Spain.

Spanish authorities have broken up a gang of drug traffickers that had six light planes for bringing drugs from Africa into Spain.The criminal organization was led by a veteran airline pilot, arrested together with 11 other gang members, who used airfields and landing strips in wooded areas in Andalucía to evade detection by security forces.Besides the six airplanes, the Civil Guard, Spain's militarized national police, seized assault rifles and other weapons plus documents and a quantity of drugs.The first phase of the operation was launched last November, when the Civil Guard was alerted to the existence of several drug traffickers suspected to bringing hashish from Africa into Spain.At the end of February three Spanish citizens and two Frenchmen were arrested in the southern province of Seville with 400 kilos (880 pounds) of hashish.A laboratory was also dismantled where the drug was ground up and mixed with chemicals to make it undetectable by any possible police inspections.After this first phase, the Civil Guard verified that some gang members were still at large.The group had acquired new fast, long-range aircraft for transporting cocaine, using routes familiar to the gang from their experience of bringing hashish into Spain.These later investigations led to the capture of one of the kingpins, a Spaniard, together with a second pilot of Colombian origin and an airfield employee who apparently aided in the operations.

Torremolinos man has been convicted and sentenced to four years in prison

Torremolinos man has been convicted and sentenced to four years in prison for attempting to murder another man over a debt. The court heard how he approached the victim in the street in the early hours of June 25, 2006, and slit his throat, severing the jugular vein. The victim survived the attack but took more than two months to recover.

Montejaque hashish plants find

19-year-old youth has been arrested in the village of Montejaque near Ronda on drugs offences. The Guardia Civil arrested him after 19 hashish plants were found growing in pots on his patio. A routine patrol had spotted the plants and the officers suspected they were cannabis. First they set about identifying them as drugs then they made the arrest.

6,000 euros cash robbery in Malaga

case of robbery of recently withdrawn cash has been recorded in Málaga. Two thieves relieved a man of 6,000 euros which he had just taken out of a city centre bank at lunchtime last Friday. The pair, reported to have South American accents, felled their victim with a blow to the legs before snatching the money and fleeing.

Brit arrested for exposure

National Police in La Línea have arrested a 54-year-old British national of Indian origin for allegedly exposing himself to a child in the town. He was reported to the police by a neighbour after he habitually appeared nude and making obscene gestures by his window while a neighbour’s five-year-old daughter was in his clear view on the balcony.

Moroccan national arrested Algeciras port

The Guardia Civil in Algeciras port have arrested a Moroccan national, described as violent and dangerous and alleged to be a member of an international drug trafficking network. At the time of his arrest at the Tangier ferry passport control it is believed he was trying to flee to Morocco after Italian police issued a warrant for his detention.

Arrested a 35-year-old Málaga man alleged to have robbed two shops in Torrox Costa.

Guardia Civil officers in Nerja have arrested a 35-year-old Málaga man alleged to have robbed two shops in Torrox Costa. He is thought to have threatened staff with a large kitchen knife and a replica firearm before making off with a total of 800 euros. His targets were a small corner shop and a bakery.

Five people have been arrested for allegedly attacking officers at the Alhaurín el Grande Guardia Civil headquarters

Five people have been arrested for allegedly attacking officers at the Alhaurín el Grande Guardia Civil headquarters. The incident occurred when relatives of a detained man saw officers restraining him after he tried to escape. From outside the facility’s fence, they hurled rocks and punched one officer who approached the fence.

Tuesday, 1 July 2008

'Fat Freddie' Thompson in Alicante and his lieutenant who shot Foley is in Malaga

'Fat Freddie' Thompson and two of his key associates have fled to Spain in fear of their lives.The trio, including the gangland figure reported to have shot Martin 'Viper' Foley, left the country at the weekend.
Thompson is thought to be in Alicante and his lieutenant who shot Foley is in Malaga.
Early Saturday, the home of another associate was ripped apart in a grenade attack.
The 2.20am explosion came horrifically close to claiming the lives of the children of the household. They had been watching television until 2am.
The grenade was rolled into the sittingroom of the house, ripping out the ceiling and attic.Gardai are convinced that the departure of Thompson and his pals will do little to calm his two feuds with the INLA and another jailed drug dealer.a consortium of criminals have pooled €40,000 to have Thompson taken out. Already €20,000 has been paid over to the INLA to carry out the contract.The INLA have brought in a hitman from the North to carry out the contract.
Meanwhile, Thompson's gang have three criminals trying to shoot the INLA's Dublin chief.The ongoing violence has left local people terrified. Locals are also furious that the gangs are tarnishing the good names of the communities in the Crumlin/Drimnagh areas and the south inner city."When our children are looking for jobs, it doesn't help them when these thugs are spoiling the reputation of the area," said one local.One of those arrested was the criminal who shot Foley earlier this year and who has now fled to Malaga.Officers seized a bulletproof 7 series BMW in the chase, along with a stolen BMW about to be fitted with false plates