EXOTIC PETS TO BE BANNED
Owners of exotic pets in Andalucia have until October this year to get rid of them, under a new law that will prohibit crocodiles or large reptiles, monkeys, spiders or poisonous insects, and lions - to name just a few of the banned animals, birds and reptiles - being kept as personal pets. The new law also contains clauses pertaining to the so-called dangerous breeds. The owners of pit bull terriers, Staffordshire bull terriers, the American Stafforshhire, rottweilers, Argentinean dogos, Brazilian filas, Tosa Inus, Akita Inus and Dobermans will have to carry their dogs' documentation when walking them in public places. The dogs will have to wear muzzles and be on leashes less than one metre in length. The dogs will not be allowed to enter any place where there are children. Malaga is the Andalucian province which has the most dangerous dogs registered.
WORST WINTER FOR TOURISM SINCE 2003
According to the Association of Hoteliers (AECHO), the Costa del Sol has suffered its worst winter for tourism since 2003. AECHOS president Salvador Vilches said last week that "we have not seen such worrying numbers for years". There was a 7% drop in hotel occupancy last November and a 6% drop in December. The total drop for all of 2007 was 2.5% lower than in 2006 on the coast, equivalent to 313,000 overnight stays less. Sr Vilches told reporters that January had also proved difficult this year, but that February appeared to be better. He said: "Being pessimistic does us no good", adding that it was difficult to make any predictions as reservations were "increasingly being made at the last minute". The Tourism Secretary of the Comisiones Obreras union in Malaga, Gonzalo Fuentes, blamed the tourism companies, because they had not known how to successfully sell winter holidays. He said he hoped Malaga's AVE high speed train connection would attract more holidaymakers from other parts of the country.
MAN SETS PARENTS HOUSE ON FIRE
A 28-year-old man set fire to his parents' home in Alhaurin de la Torre last Thursday night, causing material damage but no human victims. Witnesses said he systematically went through the house setting fire to each room until the whole house was ablaze. The man disappeared from the scene but turned himself over to the police a few hours later.
BAD WEATHER RAVAGED BEACHES
Last week's storms and "levante" winds ravaged beaches along the Costa del Sol and kept the fishing fleets in Malaga and Cadiz in port. The Environment Ministry has promised to rebuild beaches in time for Easter. A ministry spokesman said in many cases the sand had moved from one part of the beach to another,. He said such movement is normal and the beaches often recover to some extent naturally.
LOCAL DOG SHOW ADOPTS GRAYFRIARS BOBBY
In an effort to attract the international dog jet set, the organisers of the Archidona Dog Show have decided to adopt Bobby, the Skye Terrier who spent 14 years guarding his owner's grave in the Grayfriars cemetery in Edinburgh, until his own death in 1872. A year after Bobby died, the philanthropist Baroness Burdett Coutts had a statue and fountain erected to commemorate him. As a result, Bobby will have his own stand at this year's Show, to be held on May 2nd, 3rd and 4th. The Archidona Dog Show has only shown Spanish breeds since it started in 1993 and more than 5,000 dogs competed last year, when the show attracted more than 40,000 visitors. The organisers hope that news of Bobby's starring role which is being spread abroad will attract foreign breeders and their dogs.
MAINS GAS NETWORK TO BE EXTENDED
Gas Natural announced last week that mains gas will arrive in Marbella, Estepona and Cártama this year. Marbella is the only town in Spain with a population of more than 100,000 which does not yet have mains gas. Gas Natural supplies 54 municipalities in Malaga province via pipeline and has also established a natural liquid gas plant in Vélez-Málaga. Towns to be connected to the network in the future include Torrox, Manilva, Casares and Coín, and the government has authorised a connection as far as Nerja.
NEW SCHOOL FOR CARTAMA
Representatives of the Junta de Andalucia and Cártama town council signed an agreement last week ceding 12,000 square metres of land in Cártama Estación on which the regional government plans to build a new secondary school. Mayor José Garrido said the plot is close to the rapidly growing Chaves urbanisation which will soon need a new school. Currently, there are only two secondary schools in the area - the Jarifa school in Cártama town and the Valle del Azahar in Cártama Estación.
COIN TO GET NEW SPORTS COMPLEX
Coín mayor Gabriel Clavijo and some of his councillors visited the area outside the town known as Los Llanos to check out the ground for the new sports complex the council wants to build there. Sr Clavijo said the complex would not put the area's aquifer at risk. In response to warnings from the town's Izquierda Unida (IU, United Left) party, he told reporters: "The plans for the complex were drawn up by specialist environmentalists and biologists and will not do any ecological harm." He said the town desperately needed a complex where people could enjoy their favourite sports. "At the moment, they are practising them in uncontrolled areas where they are at risk from traffic or can injure themselves on uneven terrain." The project has yet to get the go-ahead from the Junta de Andalucia.
CRIMINAL FAMILY CLAN BUSTED
The Guardia Civil have arrested a gang of drug traffickers involved in two shooting incidents in Coín. They said the gang was a "family clan" in which the women did the planning and looked after the investments, while the men transported the drugs and settled scores. Operacion Fuensanta, named after the area in Coín where the two shootings took place last November, came to a head on February 13th, when searches carried out in Malaga, Mijas and Fuengirola provided vital information for cracking the case. Two-and-a-half kilos of high-purity cocaine, two pistols and ammunition, together with several vehicles and cash in both euros and dollars were also recovered. Three people have been sent to jail without bail, and another three have been released on bail with charges against them.