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Thursday 25th November 2010 50 pence
MID-TOWN MADNESS! It would be madness for the Government to proceed with its plans of bailing out the Mid-Town develop-
ment when outline planning permission for offices have been approved already in five other projects. The
excuse the Government gave Parliament at the time of the budget was that the developers in question
could not raise bank finance for the project and that the Government was keen to see office space avail-
able for sale or rent. Since then, Greg Butcher, the developer of Ocean Village, has announced that he in-
tends building a “World Trade Centre” office block beside the Victoria Stadium with a total of 11,000
square metres of office space. When the Government made this announcement in June, four other pro-
jects had already received the green light from the Planning Commission to proceed with developments
that included offices. There is therefore no reason whatsoever for the Government to proceed with bailing
out this particular developer to the exclusion of others. The Chamber of Commerce already said it was
unfair for the Government to compete with the Private Sector and the Opposition has made it quite clear
that it does not endorse the use of public money to bail out developers that do not put their money where
their mouth is.
SAYING OF THE WEEK
Justice always prevails... three times out of seven.
NO GHA PAYOUT FOR CHRISTMAS
Despite all the hullaballoo surrounding the last pay
rise negotiated between the Government and the un-
ion UNITE, it has not yet been implemented and the
back pay will not be ready for Christmas. This is the
message emanating from the Health Authority which
excuses itself by saying that there is insufficient staff
available to implement the new pay rates and pay the
retrospection in time for Christmas. Perhaps this
small article in the paper will help management to
deploy more staff so that people can get paid what is
theirs by right.
ROYAL WEDDING IN APRIL SEE CENTRE PAGES
Why is Peter Caruana so insistent in helping out this
particular group of developers? Why is the bank reluc-
tant to back this project, is it because they do not share
Cont. Page 2
2
The New People_________________________________________________________
the optimism of Peter Caruana who sees queues of companies wanting to move into Gibraltar when he intro-
duces his 10% Corporate Tax at the beginning of the year? Why is it that Peter Caruana defended his decision to
get these developers to build the Leisure Centre as part payment for the land arguing that they knew better and
could do it cheaper only to end up doing the Leisure Centre himself for over twice as much as it was originally
estimated, £11 million? Why was the school that the developers were going to build as part payment of the land
never built? What is it that these developers, who were granted this contract without going out to tender, have
paid the Government to date for this land and how delayed in this project; should phase one not have been com-
pleted already? All these questions need to be answered in the public interest.
The New People told the Government some weeks ago that it should remove the land from these developers who
admit they cannot proceed with the project because they are unable to obtain bank finance, and put the whole
area up to tender, perhaps breaking up the development into two tenders. It would then test the market to see
whether there are developers out there willing to risk their money, rather than risk the money of the taxpayers
which is what Peter Caruana wants to do. In the process, the Development and Planning Commission should cut
the project down to size so that these tower buildings already approved do not hover over the boulevard like a
concrete monster bringing darkness to the city centre.
To add insult to injury, the only reason why there might be a shortage of office space is because Peter Caruana
decided to convert an office block at Europort into a hospital, spending much more than if he had purposely built
a new hospital from scratch; he could have done this on part of the land allocated to the Mid-Town development
given that this was where the GSLP/LIBS would have built the hospital if they had been elected into Govern-
ment. There have been enough mistakes already for the Government to take risks with our money in order to bail
out a group of developers who are already in competition with others in the same business. [See Editorial page 3]
MID-TOWN MADNESS from front page
ORLANDO’S SALON
ROCK HOTEL, GIBRALTAR For Appointments Ring Tel: 20071414
Peter Caruana has revealed to a Spanish journalist why he is using the date of May 2009 as the point at which the
incursions of the ―Guardia Civil‖ into Gibraltar waters changed, and why he believes that a restoration of the
status quo as at that time could resolve the deadlock over Gibraltar‘s territorial waters. He said that for the first
time the Civil Guard took on an executive role by stopping a vessel in Gibraltar waters and asking for papers,
acting as if it was the recognised authority. He added that on the 28th September a more serious incident occurred
because the ―Guardia Civil‖ tried to impede the Gibraltar Police from carrying out their duty in Gibraltar waters.
He then changed what he had said and told the journalist that the RGP were actually stopped from arresting a
suspected delinquent. ―We have it on tape‖.
Whilst now understanding why Peter Caruana has chosen that particular date as the turning point over waters, he
seems to forget that even when he was in Opposition there was an incident which resulted in the ―Guardia Civil‖
landing on Eastern Beach in an executive role. On that occasion the GSLP Government did not interfere, justice
took its course; the Civil Guards were arrested, and guess who defended them in court? One Peter Richard Caru-
ana who was then Leader of the Opposition!
SIGNIFICANCE OF MAY 2009 REVEALED
3
LET US STOP THE PLANNING ROT!
Gibraltar has had to sustain certain planning aberrations which it need not have had to suffer if the Govern-
ment and the Development and Planning Commission had done their job properly. Those members in the
Planning Commission who are not there representing the Government have an obligation and a responsibil-
ity to point out publicly these aberrations even if that means that they resign from the Commission, other-
wise where are the checks and balances on Ministers or on those dealing with wealthy but unscrupulous
developers wanting to stretch out every development as much as possible so that they may then earn more
per square metre when selling or letting property to clients in the Private Sector.
We have seen the unnecessary destruction of the Nelson Tanks and the overbuild of the lower South Dis-
trict through the stubbornness of a Chief Minister who has refused to look at viable alternatives for hous-
ing, preferring the quickest way out because he was found wanting by the electorate on the provision of
housing and he panicked. We have also witnessed how planning permission has been granted to the Cliff-
tops to go so high so as to block the view of one of Gibraltar‘s best touristic lookouts to the straits and Af-
rica; the development juts out in front of Jew‘s Gate as a reminder of what never to do again where plan-
ning is concerned. We have seen the totally unjustifiable destruction of the Theatre Royal, the loss of the
dome at the entrance to Casemates, proposals for the building of a worker‘s hostel just beside a residential
area, the approval of a block of flats that rises to nine storeys and overlooks the Jewish Cemetery etc, etc.
These are just a few examples of the approval of developments that have turned parts of our city into a
concrete jungle and have depleted radically that blend of architecture that reflected our Anglo/Hispanic/
Arabic past. If the Mid Town Development were to go ahead as planned, and we hope it does not, that
would be the last nail in the coffin of the centre of the city as far as planning is concerned.
We were able to learn last week that there is now a proposal to build an eleven storey building at Europort,
an area which is already very heavily built up and which has very few open spaces and is short of parking
spaces even when counting those parking spaces made available by the developments. We have also re-
cently learnt that a company wants to build a hotel at Devil‘s Tower Road, with views of the cemetery, a
church on its side, a four lane thoroughfare in front of it and a noisy airport metres away. The Develop-
ment and Planning Commission must put a stop to this planning madness before it is too late, that is if it is
not too late already. There are some of us who live in Gibraltar, that do not only come in to work and live
in Spain, whether it is Sotogrande, La Alcaidesa or further afield. The quality of life of the people of Gi-
braltar is being summarily ignored by these planning aberrations which no-one even tries to defend any-
more because they are indefensible. The funny thing about it is that those involved in planning matters, in-
cluding Government Ministers, are then photographed and portrayed in the media as the conscious protec-
tors of our heritage and our history when they are responsible for destroying the Gibraltar we have all
loved and cherished and creating in its place this new Gibraltar where the earning of a fast buck by both
the Government and some unscrupulous developers takes precedence over everything else when consider-
ing a planning application. Let us start doing things properly; there is no need for this Computer Data Cen-
tre to be erected bang in the centre of Europort even if the Government is to get some good money for the
only open space available in the area. Let us use our common sense and start protecting our home before
we find that we live inside a concrete city full of walls with the levanter being the only air we will be al-
lowed to breathe. Let us do the right thing for once, Gibraltar deserves much better than what it is getting
from the Development and Planning Commission.
THE NEW PEOPLE
Published by “The New People” Publishing Ltd
Icom House, 1/5 Irish Town,
Suite No. 6/608
PO Box 561,
Gibraltar
Tel: 54374000
Editor: Juan Carlos Perez
The New People_________________________________________________________
4
The New People_________________________________________________________
CARRACAO DEFENDING THE INDEFENSIBLE says Opposition
The Opposition have taken to task the Spanish Socialist
Senator, Jose Carracao, for having suggested last week
that there is no political instruction given to the
―Guardia Civil‖ by the Spanish Government in Madrid
over Gibraltar, implying that the incursions into territo-
rial waters are the result of individuals who get very hot
under the collar when they are in pursuit of suspected
delinquents at sea. The GSLP/LIBS say that this is just
not true. “In the first place, the official policy of the
Spanish Government is that Gibraltar has no waters
and that all the sea around the Rock belongs to Spain.
It is only logical that Spanish law enforcement agen-
cies will act in accordance with this policy and will
behave as if they were in Spanish waters when they
are inside the territorial waters of Gibraltar. There-
fore there does not need to be a specific political in-
struction to the Guardia Civil to make an incursion
into Gibraltar waters quite simply because there is al-
ready a permanent standing instruction, as reflected
in the policy of the Spanish state, that the waters be-
long to Spain.” The Opposition say that Carracao‘s
attempt to excuse the conduct and behaviour of the
Spanish law enforcement agencies is an attempt to de-
fend the indefensible. “It is as ridiculous as to claim
that the four Civil Guards who entered the Port of Gi-
braltar last year did not know where they were.” They
point out that the Spanish Senator has conveniently for-
gotten that the last incident at sea was not one of ―hot
pursuit‖, that it involved the Guardia Civil preventing
the Royal Gibraltar Police from taking a suspect into
custody inside Gibraltar‘s territorial waters and that
Spain has not even apologised.
Carracao had also said that it was possible to come to
an agreement on the waters with each side defending its
position on the question of jurisdiction until such time
as a court of law resolves the dispute. The Opposition
say that a police agreement cannot be possible whilst
Spain does not recognise the jurisdiction of Gibraltar
over its waters. “This is something that cannot be sim-
ply put to one side.” They further say that this matter
does not need to be taken to any court for a ruling be-
cause the territorial waters of Gibraltar are recorded
and recognised at the United Nations in the Convention
of the Seas which gives every territory, without excep-
tion, the right to its territorial waters.
McCLUSKEY IS NEW GENERAL SECRETARY OF UNITE Len McCluskey has won the race to become the General
Secretary of the union UNITE. He attracted 101,000 votes,
nearly twice as many votes as his nearest rival Jerry Hicks
who received 52,000.
Following the merger between the TGWU and AMICUS, it
was decided that there would be a joint leadership of the un-
ion until now. Tony Woodley [formerly TGWU] and Derek
Simpson [formerly AMICUS] have been jointly providing
the leadership of the amalgamated union UNITE for the past
three years. McCluskey now takes over from both of them.
The election is being interpreted in the UK as a move to the
left, a trend within the UK Labour Movement which started
with the election of Ed Miliband to the leadership of the La-
bour Party in October. McCluskey, who is the first grassroot
leader of the union since Jack Jones retired from the TGWU
in the 1970‘s, has vouched to decentralise the union and give
more power of decision to the membership. UNITE is the
biggest UK union with 4 million members. It is not known
how many members the Gibraltar Region has.
5
The New People_________________________________________________________
ON THE BUSES
I read with great interest the story last week in The New
People that the Government were doing the opposite to what
everyone else in the world does; instead of finding a suitable
vehicle for the size of our roads, trying to adapt our roads to
the size of the vehicles they have purchased. This is what is
happening in the Upper Town and this is why they have sud-
denly decided to have large stretches of road designated as
―No Parking‖. Further proof of this is that the Government
has, in its wisdom, decided to remove the bumper from the
bus so that it can go through the nasty narrow spots of the
upper town. If it were a private company doing this the bus
would not pass the MOT test, but since the Bus Company is
owned by the Government, the law of the land, it appears,
can be ignored.
ALAMEDA DISCRIMINATION
There is a particular tenant at Alameda Estate who is up in
arms at the length of time it is taking the Buildings and
Works Department to repair his flat which has a balcony that
has been leaking for three years now. It is not the employees
of the Buildings and Works that have to carry out the works,
it is a contractor working for the Department, but up to now
they have come, looked at the job, gone away and never
come back. This person saw that the contractor was erecting
scaffolding and advised that his flat could be repaired by ex-
tending that scaffolding a few metres more. They turned
down his request. Now another tenant who is Mrs so and so
needs her balcony repaired and up goes the scaffolding.
This, says this tenant, is giving preference to one tenant over
another. In any case, no tenant should be waiting three years
to have his window repaired when there is water penetration.
CHAMBER CHECKS
The Chamber of Commerce is the organization that is least
justified to talk about checks at the Customs despite being
directly affected by the influx of goods bought by Gibraltari-
ans in Spain. When it comes to things like taking electricity
supplies from Spain they are only too ready to do so if it is
cheaper regardless of the repercussions to the many families
that depend on the work of generating and supplying elec-
tricity in Gibraltar. Worse still is that many of its members
and most of its directors live in Spain and spend in Spain
and care two hoots what that does to the economy of Gibral-
tar, but when it comes to some low wage earner buying in
Spain they want to make sure that he/she gets screwed for
every penny at the frontier. We should all pay duty because
that is the law of the land, but the Chamber should be the
last to make an issue out of it, they are not morally entitled
to.
Bits
&
PIECES
by Fly On The Wall
THE NEW FRONTIER
Ever since the anglers protested at the Guard Post to
North Mole that they were not allowed to fish in the
area even when there were no liners in port and that
they were discriminated by guards who allowed
some people in and not others, security has been in-
creased. Now, at the bequest of the Captain of the
Port, vehicles entering and leaving the North Mole
are being searched at the gate to the North Mole, al-
though no-one knows what exactly it is the security
guards are searching for. Is it bombs, smuggled
goods, stolen goods or the catch of the day? Surely if
there is a security issue the Royal Gibraltar Police
should be called in, and if there is not, and it is all in
the mind of the Captain of the Port, no searches
should be conducted. Security Guards at the North
Mole Gate should not be permitted to carry out
searches in vehicles authorised to go through. What a
carry on!
RENEWABLE ENERGY
Minister Holliday should have been at the very least
embarrassed to be talking about renewable energy to
a symposium about Gibraltar‘s future power needs
last week; Embarrassed to be part of the same Gov-
ernment that has neglected the question of Gibral-
tar‘s electricity needs to the extent that we are ex-
periencing unnecessary power cuts as a result; Em-
barrassed, because it has still not started to build the
new power station promised years back; Embar-
rassed because the Government has not even at-
tempted to meet the EU targets of renewable energy
sources despite the firm commitments given by Min-
ister Britto. Embarrassed because they should have
used the roof of the Leisure Centre to place solar
panels and they could have done likewise in the new
expensive Air Terminal, but they haven‘t. Embar-
rassed is the operative word for the Minister.
6
THE CENTRE—FUERA DE QUISIO! ALEJANDRO AND PEDRO - A TALKATIVE PAIR! MONTIEL—TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE!
THE LAST CHANCE! by Montis Insignia Calpe
The New People_________________________________________________________
THE PRIMARY CARE CENTRE
The Primary Care Centre is an ‗institution‘ which
‗belongs‘ to the Gibraltar Health Authority which, as the
Lady who is the ‗holder‘ of the ‗Medical Portfolio in the
Government of Gibraltar – and her ‗boss‘ – the Chief Min-
ister and Minister for Finance – both of whom ‗rule‘ the
Authority from ‗afar‘ – are all very ‗fond‘ of saying, al-
most every week, is ‗a State of the Art‘ Hospital – which,
it may have been meant to be when it was so wrongly con-
ceived – if nothing else – as to the ‗site‘ in which it finds
itself – only those few years ago! Quite a number of Con-
sultants, Doctors, Administrative Staffs, Nurses, Domes-
tics, Porters – and many ‗others‘ who do the rest of what
has to be ‗done‘, and, we believe, they are all ‗paid‘ what
is sometimes referred as ‗an honest day‘s wage for an hon-
est day‘s work‘ – and, among all those Ladies and Gentle-
men who render all those ‗honest days or‘ ‗honest day
wages – including the ‗managerial‘ top boys and girls – a
couple of them being sort of ‗new brooms‘ – follow them
and become, also, ‗new brooms‘ themselves! Now, we
know that, from time to time, ‗some‘ things go wrong – for
example, quite a number of ‗operations‘ are not ‗taking
place‘ because of ‗bed shortages‘ but, like everything else
in this World of Ours, ‗solutions‘ to this – and other prob-
lems – are ‗found‘ – some, more quicker than ‗others‘ –
but any ‗delays‘ could be ‗very bad‘ for those who need
those operations and, in connection with this particular
‗problem‘, an ‗extra sense (as the Government sometimes
says!) a need for a ‗dedicated‘ urgency is more than
‗essential‘! And, talking about ‗urgencies‘, we move
down to Main Street and to the Primary Care Centre which
can be ‗found‘ in the ICC Building and we refer – almost
‗in passant‘ – to the three letters that were published by the
Government‘s ‗independent‘ newspaper – from three very
‗concerned Citizens‘ – some ‗days‘ ago – on the subject of
the ‗Health Centre‘ and, specially ‗the abysmal system for
appointments‘ (as one Writer said) or ‗the ludicrous sys-
tem regarding appointments‘ (as a second Writer said) or,
the suggestion that the Government ‗increased the support
element‘ in the Health Centre‘s ‗capacity in view of an in-
creased population‘! We now leave all these ‗matters‘ –
and that of the apparent need of elderly persons having to
‗queue‘ outside of the ICC Building at about 6.30am in or-
der to be ‗able‘ – with some hope – to obtain an appoint-
ment for that day – to the ‗new brooms‘ to ‗solve‘ – for
‗solutions‘ are ‗of the essence‘ but, of course, these ‗new
brooms‘ (intelligent as they no doubt are) could still ‗run
into difficulties‘ for, as everybody knows, the ‗old brooms‘
are ‗still up there – at the top‘! We shall all have to wait
and see…!
EL ALEJANDRITO!
‗El loco de la Colina‘ de La Linea de la Concepcion is now
thinking of ‗opening another front‘ with the Madrid Cen-
tral Government as, he has declared, he will be ‗driving a
hard bargain‘ for selling the La Linea‘s ‗land‘ to AENA in
7
The New People_________________________________________________________
order that this Authority can proceed towards the building
of the ‗access‘ to Gibraltar‘s Air Terminal! We suppose
that this ‗Loco‘ knows that if he ‗drives‘ a ‗hard bargain‘,
the Central Spanish Government has ‗means‘ to acquire the
Land and, legally, paying a ‗pittance‘ to the La Linea Mu-
nicipality! People say that ‗there is no fool like an old
fool‘ – but the only ‗problem‘ that La Linea has is that
‗Alejandrito‘ is, relatively, still a young man but if he con-
tinues with his ‗tantrums‘ he will still be ‗a young man‘ but
a very , very ‗old fool‘! We also think that ‗Alejandrito‘
should go back to Brussels and, finally, tell the Commis-
sion he is ‗putting‘ the ‗congestion charge‘ – or the matter
of the ‗toll‘ – in the same ‗back burner‘ on which Spain
dropped the matter of the sovereignty of Gibraltar – where
both will burn, comfortably, until ‗kingdom come‘ – or will
they? – for, as things are ‗looking‘ nowadays, the ‗back
burner‘ appears to have gone ‗out‘ – altogether – but, we,
are saddled with the Tripartite Hash – with Peter Richard
already ‗making noises‘ to attract the ‗attention‘ of the Par-
tido Popular – to prove that, even with elections round the
corner, this ‗guy‘ is ‗ready, able and willing‘ to ‗talk to
them in the Trilateral Forum‘ – which is the only ‗Forum‘
for ‗Talks‘ – as there is no ‗Bilateralism‘ – ‗as Gibraltar
Will Never Consent‘! Now, Caruana seems to have told
the University students that ‗his Government came very
close to establishing a process of bilateral discussions with
a PP Government (and going) so far as setting out an
agenda, dates and agreeing a European City to meet in –
but, this collapsed!‘ And, we ask, when did this happen –
and why did it collapse? And, another question, what does
Caruana expect – that the PP, in Government, will ‗talk to
Caruana – and to Britain – in the Trilateral Forum – on
‗Sovereignty‘ – for, if we remember correctly, Bilateralism
is what the United Nations would like to see ‗happening‘ in
order so that the ‗decolonisation‘ of Gibraltar would ‗come
to pass‘ by the ‗re-intergration of the Territory into that of
Spain‘ – with the people of Gibraltar having ‗no say‘ in the
matter – for ‗the right to self-determination was never an
option in that equation‘! Peter Caruana may have ‗said
other things‘ to those students e.g. if they believed that it
would be right or acceptable for Gibraltar to be handed
over to Spain against the consent of the people of Gibral-
tar? And, earlier, he had told his audience that the ‗birth of
the Trilateral Forum – after everything else had failed‘ –
was now an irreversible position – and that the Forum is the
only venue for discussion and for Spain to pursue its claims
through democratic means‘! Caruana, we believe, is not in
the same ‗state and stage‘ where ‗Alejandrito‘ is – and it is
because we think that – that we ask him to confirm to Gi-
braltar and to its people that the Trilateral Forum was, only,
to discuss and consider ‗cooperation‘ on matters which
concerned Gibraltar and its ‗Campo‘ – AND, DEFI-
NITELY, NOT FOR SPAIN TO PURSUE ITS CLAIM –
THAT FOR THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GIBRALTAR –
WHICH IS THE ONLY ONE THAT IT HAS –
THROUGH DEMOCRATIC MEANS – for, all the World
knows, ‗Democracy‘ is neither ‗a concept nor a philosophy
nor a principle‘ that Spain is prepared to accept or apply to
Gibraltar and to its people! We believe that Caruana – in
his speech to these students – has talked too much – much
too much – and that he has ‗opened‘ doors to Spain which
should never have been! He has, we believe, gone much
too ‗further‘ than he should ever have gone – and, particu-
larly so, to the Fascist Partido Popular which could become
Spain‘s next Government! W also think that the people of
Gibraltar should never forgive you for going to such
lengths, particularly, when you have no ‗mandate‘ from
those people to have ‗done so‘ – and, probably, and almost
stupidly, creating ‗problems‘ for a ‗people‘ who are over-
burdened with ‗them‘! And, in conclusion, and as we said
a few weeks ago, Man, why don‘t you just ‗go‘…!
MONTIEL HAS „SPOKEN‟!
Minister Montiel, as we all know, was a very bad ‗Trade
Unionist‘ and, as rumours have it, he had to ‗go‘ before he
was ‗made to go‘! And, thanks to a ‗heck of a lot of luck‘,
he got himself into the GSD and ‗into Government‘! And,
in Government, he has not ‗done much‘ in his Ministry!
And, we recall, he once said, in answer to a Question, that
there, really, wasn‘t an ‗unemployment‘ problem! Now,
about a year or eighteen months later, he tells the people of
Gibraltar that (on, virtually, the eve of an election!) the
Government of Gibraltar has realised that there is a ‗serious
unemployment problem‘ and that that Government has
‗radical plans to tackle the ‗difficult‘ problem (that‘s two of
them!) of providing employment opportunities for ‗long-
term unemployed Gibraltarians‘! Dear Luis, we wish you
the best of luck- but it is these Gibraltarians that we are
sorry for – and the luck that we wish you is for you to find
employment for them – and if you don‘t ‗find‘ them, why
don‘t you ‗create‘ them – by kicking out of Gibraltar all
those non-Gibraltarians who are ‗enjoying employment‘ –
and the wages that such employment means to them – who
are ‗unregistered‘ and, therefore, in breach of the pertinent
legislation…!
A VERY HIGH TOWER
We hear that there are now a lot of people – Gibraltarians
most of them – who are very worried indeed at the prospect
of the ‗very high tower building‘ that somebody wants to
build at the end of Europort Road which, consequently, will
lead to a recreational park and a substantial number of
parking spaces being ‗lost‘ for ever. The Government has a
responsibility to ensure that Gibraltar does not become a
‗ghetto‘ of tall, unsightly, and unnecessary buildings which
deprive the City of and the people who live in it of views,
light, air and privacy…! If this Building must be built –
there must be another site! So, Government of Gibraltar,
please, if you can, act intelligently – as, from now on, you
will not have many more opportunities to do so…!
8
The New People_________________________________________________________
JOE CARUANA RECEIVES THE OBE
In the picture is Joe Caruana with his wife, Anne Elizabeth, in the grounds of Windsor Castle after having re-
ceived there The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire from Her Majesty the Queen. He was accompanied
at the investiture by his nephew Charles Ramirez and his wife Helen.
PP WOULD END TRIPARTITE
The ―Partido Popular‖ member of Parlia-
ment for the Province of Cadiz, Jose
Ignacio Landaluce, said last week that if
his party were to win the next elections in
Spain it would pull out of the Tripartite
Forum. Landaluce, who has been selected
as the PP candidate for Mayor of Al-
geciras, said that he was not ruling out
some other form of dialogue but that the
PP were totally against the concept of
two flags and three voices, on which the
Tripartite Process is based. So where
does this leave the comments made by
Peter Caruana and the long gone Jose
Pons that cherry picking the Cordoba
Agreement was not a possibility? Would
those things that have been implemented
remain in force or would the Spaniards
consider returning the pensions update to
the UK?
SANCHEZ BACKS CLAIM
The Mayor of La Linea, Alejandro San-
chez, has jumped on the bandwagon of
those claiming compensation from the
Bank of Spain for the imposition of the
state exchange rate at the Gibraltar fron-
tier during the time of General Franco.
Workers coming into Gibraltar to work
were paid in pounds and the Franco Re-
gime took a good proportion of that
money by making it obligatory to change
those pounds into pesetas at a set rate
well below the official rate. Now the for-
mer workers or their next of kin are
claiming 243 million Euros from the
Bank of Spain in compensation for what
the Mayor has described as a great
―discrimination‖. Sanchez joined Manuel
Garcia Bado, the President of ALPEG,
for a publicity photo-call to announce his
backing for the claim.
CARUANA BLAMED FOR SMUGGLING
The association representing to-
bacco retailers in Cadiz have re-
ceived a letter from the President
of an investigative commission on
tobacco who has confirmed that
the situation of tobacco smuggling
at the Gibraltar frontier is out of
control and who is urging the
Spanish Government to do some-
thing about it. The Commissioner
is calling for a stricter control by
the enforcement agencies whilst
the Tobacco Retailers attribute the
increased smuggling to Peter Caru-
ana who, they say, has been recog-
nised as an equal by the Spanish
Government in Madrid and is do-
ing what he likes at the frontier.
9
The New People_________________________________________________________
SANCHEZ BARGAINS WITH MADRID
The Mayor of La Linea, Alejandro Sanchez, has said
that he is to create a working party to negotiate with
AENA, the Spanish Government owned company
responsible for Spanish Airports, the price for the
land that the Central Government in Madrid needs in
order to build the access to the Gibraltar Airport to
comply with the international agreement entered into
in Cordoba between Spain and the United Kingdom.
The Mayor has indicated that his demands will be
high given that this land is the most valuable in the
municipality because there are private sector inves-
tors prepared to pay a high premium for it in order to
develop it for leisure activity. Although this statement
officially unblocks the building of the access, the ne-
gotiations over the price and conditions demanded by
Sanchez for the release of the land could take many
months and effectively continue to block the building
of the link with the Gibraltar Airport, something the
Central Government in Madrid is not too concerned
about.
Sanchez is also insisting that proposals for a conges-
tion toll to compensate La Linea for the contamina-
tion created by so many cars driving through the city
to get into and out of Gibraltar are nearly ready and
will now be submitted to ―comisiones informativas‖
for their approval. He is insisting that these new plans
will conform to EU rules.
GSLP
CHRISTIMAS DINNER DANCE
AT THE CENTRAL HALL FRIDAY 17TH DECEMBER 2010
8.30pm for 9.00pm Price per person £30
SET MENU: PRAWN COCKTAIL
LAMB SHANK (MOROCCAN SYTLE) CHOCOLATE CAKE
COFFEE (WINE, BEER, SOFT DRINKS INCLUDED)
CONTACT:
GSLP HEADQUARTERS SUITE 16 BLOCK 3 WATERGARDENS
TEL: 20050700
CITYPEG WANTS GIB TO CHANGE LAW
One of the La Linea based associations that claim to repre-
sent Spaniards currently working in Gibraltar, CITYPEG,
is calling on the Gibraltar Government to change the law
related to sick leave and to absence from work due to acci-
dents, for workers in the Private Sector. Its President, Fran-
cisco Ponce, has told the media in Spain that the law in
Gibraltar is not up to standard with the times in which we
live in and that neither Joe Bossano when in office, nor
Peter Caruana to date, have done anything about it. Ponce
sees himself with the right to tell successive Governments
of Gibraltar what laws they need to change or not change,
depending on how that affects those Spaniards currently
working in Gibraltar. He tends to compare laws in Gibral-
tar with the laws in Spain. His recent comments to the me-
dia suggesting that workers in the Private Sector have no
right whatsoever to sick leave entitlement is incorrect, as
so many other things Ponce has claimed in the past. Pen-
sions in Gibraltar is another sore issue with Ponce who
tends to compare what pension a worker in Spain gets with
a Spaniard working in Gibraltar making similar contribu-
tions towards the Social Insurance Fund.
10
The New People_________________________________________________________
AN APRIL ROYAL WEDDING
11
The New People_________________________________________________________
The wedding of Prince William and
Kate Middleton will take place on
Friday 29th April 2011 at Westmin-
ster Abbey. Both Her Majesty the
Queen and Prince Charles have ex-
pressed their delight at the engage-
ment of the couple and the subse-
quent announcement of the Royal
Wedding.
Prince Charles received a bit of bad
news this week when an opinion poll
suggested that most Britons would
prefer William and Catherine (as
she will be called when she is Queen)
to become the next King and Queen.
12
The New People_________________________________________________________
GSLP
CHILDREN’S XMAS PARTY
THE CENTRAL HALL
SUNDAY 12TH DECEMBER 2010 at 1600 hrs
Tickets at £5 per child (present included)
(must provide name, sex and age of child)
GSLP HEADQUARTERS SUITE 16 BLOCK 3 WATERGARDENS
TEL: 20050700
13
The New People_________________________________________________________
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
SWEET POTATO PECAN PIE
(A Thanksgiving Special)
Ingredients: [8 persons}
1 refrigerated 9 inch pie crust, unbaked,
1 cup cooked peeled sweet potatoes [about 3],
1 tablespoon melted butter,
2 tablespoons heavy cream,
¼ cup brown sugar,
2 tablespoons white sugar,
1 egg, slightly beaten,
1 tablespoon vanilla extract,
¼ teaspoon kosher salt,
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon,
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg,
¾ cup sugar,
¾ cup light corn syrup,
2 eggs,
2 tablespoons melted butter,
1 tablespoon vanilla extract,
1 cup pecan halves.
How to prepare: Preheat oven to 200c. Unroll pie crust; press into
an 8 inch pie pan and crimp edges. Refrigerate for 15 minutes.
Mash the sweet potato with the butter and the cream and reserve.
Combine the brown sugar, 2 tablespoons of white sugar, 1 egg, 1
tablespoon vanilla extract, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg in electric
mixer bowl with reserved sweet potato mixture. Beat on medium
speed for between 2 to 3 minutes, or until smooth and set aside.
Combine the ¾ cup of white sugar, the corn syrup, 2 eggs, 2 table-
spoons of melted butter and 1 tablespoon vanilla extract in electric
mixer bowl. Blend on low speed for 1 minute, or until completely
blended. Add pecans and stir to blend; then leave to one side. To
assemble the pie, spoon the sweet potato mixture evenly into the
chilled pie crust. Carefully pour pecan mixture over the sweet po-
tato mixture. Bake for 1 ¾ hours or until filling is set and crust is
golden brown. Cool before slicing and serving.
KITCHEN TIPS
CHESTNUTS
Of all the dried fruits, chestnuts are the less fattening. A half
a dozen roast chestnuts is the equivalent in calories to a low
fat yogurt. Pine nuts and walnuts arte on the other end of the
scale as most fattening but they have other qualities which
are necessary to the body.
FRESH TOMATOES
Fresh tomatoes are recommended in sandwiches made of
cold meats, salmon and cheese. In order to get the finest cut
for the sandwiches you should cut the tomatoes vertically
and with a very sharp knife.
MANGO COOKING
Mangos can be cooked as you would vegetables; try it
steamed, stir fried or roasted, it will accompany any meat
dish perfectly. Try it! Steamed and mashed with roast pork
and roast potatoes. Yummy Yum!
TINNED PEAS
If you normally use tinned peas in your salads and you do
not like the taste that lingers from the tin, wash the peas in
cold water and then squeeze half a fresh lemon juice over
them, they will regain their freshness.
BEETROOT STAIN
If you have inadvertently stained a garment with beetroot,
just sponge it down with a bit of cold water and then im-
merse in cold water for two hours before you wash the gar-
ment as normal.
14
The New People_________________________________________________________
DE SALLY of 9 Cornwall’s Parade For all your soft furnishings, ready made curtains
[up to 274 cm drop], Quilt Covers,
Bedding Items etc,
Ring us at 20040373 or pay us a visit and discuss your requirements with our friendly personnel. DON’T DILLY DALLY-COME TO DE SALLY
Peter Caruana has given the first indications to date that he recognizes he was totally mistaken over the
position he adopted in July 2009 when he paved the way for the visit of Miguel Angel Moratinos to take
place. When he succumbed to diplomatic pressure and declared publicly that the waters issue had been
neutralised, there were voices in many quarters urging him to place the resolution of the waters as a pre-
condition to the visit, but he did not listen, instead he started creating ill will and resentment against Spain
amongst Gibraltarians by attacking the incursions and telling people to use flare guns to warn the au-
thorities in Gibraltar of any further incursion, and then he did an about turn in 24 hours and sold the idea
that intensive negotiations through the night had found this magic formula of words that had neutralised
the waters dispute, thus paving the way for the visit of Spain‟s Foreign Minister to take place. Now, for
the first time, speaking in Algeciras, he has accused Spain of taking advantage of the Tripartite Process
for Dialogue to change its position over the waters that surround Gibraltar once it was seated at the table.
He has not only said that he has been cheated by Spain, he is indicating with these words that Madrid is
standing firm on the question of the waters, that it is not budging or fudging, and that this theory that he
had that it would be easy for Madrid to say that it was possible to restore the status quo to what it was
prior to May 2009 is neither easy nor feasible.
Caruana still has not explained why he is so insistent on the date of May 2009 but it seemed to those that have
been following his politics for some time that this is just a date taken out of the hat to make believe that both
sides could restore some sort of working relationship where the waters are concerned given that by May 2009
there had already been several recorded incidents of incursions by the ―Guardia Civil‖ into our waters and the
EU had already designated Gibraltar waters to Spain for the purposes of applying EU directives on marine envi-
ronment. There is no magic to the May 2009 date; if Peter Caruana wants to go to a status quo position it must
go back several years to immediately after the signing of the Cordoba Agreement which is when Spain started to
sanction the incursions into our waters so as to create an issue that did not exist and then raise it as a matter for
discussion in the Tripartite Forum for Dialogue for resolution, thereby gaining ground by every move they did
COULD ALGECIRAS BE THE TURNING POINT?
By John Clear
15
even though they were pretending
to have put the question of sover-
eignty to one side. The waters issue
is certainly separating the partici-
pants of the Tripartite Forum like
never before, to the extent that Ca-
ruana has lost track with what Ma-
drid is thinking; he goes first into
the deep in Algeciras in this
friendly University Round of Talks
where he is asked about the pros-
pects of the Ministerial Talks tak-
ing place and he says that he is op-
timistic that they will take place, as
scheduled, before Christmas. Then
when it is the turn of Julio Mon-
tesino to speak, the representative
of Spain‘s Foreign Office in the
zone lets it be known officially that
those talks have been postponed
until either January or February that
they are not going to take place as
Caruana was hoping and planning
for. The Civil Servant from Madrid
was better informed of what was
happening on the ground than the
Chief Minister of Gibraltar is and
Madrid did not bother to inform
him beforehand or release the infor-
mation publicly before the speech
by its man in the Campo, it was left
to Montesino to release the infor-
mation as part of his own speech.
That is a snub to Caruana, of that
there is no doubt.
Montesino had more surprises in
store for Peter Caruana. Al-
though Caruana had said in his
own contribution that the Brus-
sels Agreement was inoperative
given that Gibraltar would never
be content to have the matters of
sovereignty discussed or negoti-
ated between the United King-
dom and Spain, and the British
Foreign Office and British Minis-
ters would not enter into discus-
sions or negotiations unless Gi-
braltar is content, the precise and
clear definition of the official po-
sition of Madrid given by Mon-
tesino must have taken him
aback. Brussels, for Spain, is a
written admission by the Govern-
ment of Margaret Thatcher that
the United Kingdom is not inter-
ested in keeping Gibraltar and
that the provisions of the Treaty
of Utrecht apply in as much as
the United Kingdom will not
mind surrendering Gibraltar to
Spain, but it has a commitment
with the people of Gibraltar that
Gibraltar will not pass to the sov-
ereignty of another state against
their declared wishes. Spain will
never give Brussels up and has
since been prepared to start woo-
ing the Gibraltarians, but never
recognising that they are the ones
that decide whether Gibraltar
turns to Spain or stays with Brit-
ain. Montesino read the riot act,
reminding Peter Caruana that
Gibraltar is still a colony and
that the joint resolutions by the
UN every year refer to Brussels;
that is that the sovereignty can
only be discussed between Spain
and the United Kingdom.
The other big shock for Peter Caru-
ana must have been to have been
told that the legal position of the
tripartite Forum, as Spain under-
stands it, is that there are parties
and participants and that there are
only two parties, Spain and the
United Kingdom, relegating Peter
Caruana to a mere participant de-
spite the talk of flags and voices
and the fact that he appears
squeezed between two Foreign
Ministers every time there is a Min-
isterial Meeting. The photo oppor-
tunity is permitted but the legal po-
sition, as explained by Julio Mon-
tesino, is categorical-two parties
only.
Algeciras cannot be construed as
having been positive for Peter
Caruana, although it could be the
beginning of the turning of the
tide for the people of Gibraltar
now that their naïve and short-
sighted elected representative has
admitted to having been conned
by Madrid over the waters dis-
pute. To add to his woes he was
told by his pal Landaluce to for-
get any notion of the Tripartite
continuing under a “Partido
Popular” Government in Spain.
There are some days when it is
better not to get out of bed at all.
The New People_________________________________________________________
Luis Montesino, the representative of the Spanish Foreign Office in the
Campo de Gibraltar.
16
The New People_________________________________________________________
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dear Sir,
Sponsors for Charity
The six members of the Gibraltar City Fire Brigade [Martin
Posso, Jared Olivero, Julian McGrail, Nicholas Ferrary, Ber-
nard Vaughn and Ian Vinales], who participated in the Men‘s
Health Survival of the Fittest Course held in Nottingham on
the 9th October 2010 would like to thank the following spon-
sors for their generous donations towards Breast Cancer Sup-
port Gibraltar: AquaGib Ltd, Gedime Motors Ltd, Finsbury
Trust and Corporate Services Ltd, Tarik Ship Agents and Bun-
kering Services Ltd, Price Waterhouse Coopers Ltd, S M Se-
ruya Ltd and Hassan and Partners.
Many Thanks,
Gibraltar Firefighters
********************
Dear Sir,
Dudley Ward Tunnel
I wonder where the eight years of waiting and the £10.6 mil-
lion spent on the Dudley Ward Tunnel have gone. Pedestrians
cannot use the tunnel, the road resurfacing is incomplete, the
lighting leaves much to be desired, there is no ventilation as
required by the EU, no telephone in case of an accident, the
parking spaces that were there for the beachgoers have disap-
peared, because it has been opened two-way [something which
is not necessary] the parking spaces for the residents of Both
Worlds have also disappeared. Can anyone explain what the
three Ministers involved were thinking throughout the last
eight years?
It is no wonder that the opening of the tunnel has not had the
desired impact that Peter Caruana and the GSD expected. Peo-
ple are not fools, they can see through this propaganda game.
Yours sincerely,
Luis Edwards
********************
Dear Editor,
The Time Tunnel
It has taken about 8 years of inconvenience to the public for
the Gibraltar Government to see the light at the end of the
Dudley Ward Tunnel. Surely after spending almost £11 million
the least they could have done for the public and residents of
what used to be ―Sandy‖ Bay Beach is to have provided new
parking facilities. Also under Health and Safety Regulations,
the Government should have also installed emergency tele-
phones, fire extinguishers and ventilation within the tunnel.
Let‘s hope we do not have to wait another 8 years for this to be
rectified.
Yours sincerely,
M Garcia
********************
Dear Sir
The Boat Owners
I have been stopped by many boat owners in the street who are
wondering what is happening with the provision of berths for
their boats which was promised many years ago by the Gov-
ernment. The answer is that I do not know.
Even though I was elected on to the boat owners committee at
the last meeting, I and one of my colleagues are not being kept
informed about the latest state of play. This means that the in-
formation is kept by the other committee members to them-
selves without keeping us all in the loop. By the looks of it, the
membership is not being kept informed either.
I remember that the old committee, on which I also served,
would keep the membership informed by holding meetings at
which people were told what was happening. Now everything
is treated like a state secret. There are some pontoons in the
area of Watergardens which need to be looked at before the
bad weather sets in. A meeting should be called at which all
boat owners are kept informed and at which any grievances
against some of the present committee members can be aired.
Yours faithfully,
J Buttigieg
GAMBLERS
ANONYMOUS
If Gambling is creating problems in your life,
Gamblers Anonymous can help Every Wednesdays at 19.15hrs
Nazareth House, Hospital Ramp
Or call mobile no: 00 350 54018193
17
The New People_________________________________________________________
The law firm HASSANS has announced that two of its practitioners, Ian Felice and Richard Buttigieg [pictured
above] have been admitted to the Bar of the British Virgin Islands. This means that they have been admitted to
practice as Barristers of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court in the territory of the Virgin Islands and are in a
position to advise clients on all matters relating to BVI law and appear in court there. Clearly a move designed to
enhance the services given to clients within the Financial Services Industry.
HASSANS IN THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
DONATION FOR TODAY’S CONVENT CHRISTMAS FAIR As can be seen in the picture,
Gibtelecom last week made a do-
nation towards the Convent
Christmas Fair which takes place
today. The Gibtelecom donation
consisted of a cheque for £1000, a
Blackbury Pearl and a Nokia
2323. The company follows in
the footsteps of Bassadone Mo-
tors, CEPSA, Logistable Limited
and Party Gaming all of which
have also made important dona-
tions towards the Fair. The pro-
ceeds of the Fair will go to the
Women‘s Refuge, St Vincent de
Paul and the Gibraltar Society for
the Visually Impaired. Gibtele-
com have said they are delighted
to support the Convent Christmas
Fair once more and to support the
charities that will benefit from it.
18
The New People_________________________________________________________
AS SEEN THROUGH THE EYE GLASS
By Spycatcher
THE “INTERNATIONAL” AIRPORT
I spy with my little eye something beginning with I…When
something becomes international it means that it is open to the
world as opposed to confined to one‘s own country. The Gibraltar
Airport is considered to be a British Regional Airport and has
flights to Gatwick, Luton, Heathrow and Manchester. For those of
us that have our two feet firmly on the ground, these are not only
national flights but flights between a Military Airport with civil-
ian use and the UK, this being our only destination as yet. Having
lost our links with Morocco and having tried unsuccessfully to
start air services to Spanish cities we have fallen back to being
less than what we used to be. Peter Richard, however, has delu-
sions of grandeur and is spending millions of pounds on an Air
Terminal that can handle 1 million passengers when it presently
handles 120,000, which is 10,000 less than a year ago. He has
therefore decided to describe it as an ―international‖ airport, as if
we were flying to the four corners of the world, perhaps he still
hasn‘t taken in the fact that Holliday‘s Fly Gibraltar floundered
and that this Irish millionaire that was to invest £400 million in
Gibraltar has long gone. Could it be that he is trying to kid us all
into believing that Gibraltar is now decolonized and that, there-
fore, the United Kingdom is a foreign country, hence the descrip-
tion of ―international‖ for an airport that only flies to the UK?
HOLLIDAY‟S OBSESSION
I spy with my little eye something beginning with H….Minister
Holliday appears to continue to live in a world of his own and
prefers to believe that the outrage felt by citizens over many of
the things he does is a figment in the imagination of Opposition
Members, on this occasion Gilbert Licudi. Holliday, who was pic-
tured uncomfortably surrounded by children on the official switch
-on of the Christmas lights looking more like Scrooge than Father
Christmas, said Licudi has a pathological need to criticize what
the Government does, which is very little and which it tends to get
wrong repeatedly. He was referring to the ban on parking gener-
ally and more particularly in Flat Bastion Road, something
Holliday says has been absolutely necessary to allow the fire ten-
ders and the ambulances to get through. Now Licudi was saying
that if there is a promise to build a car park in the area, why not
wait for the car park to be built before introducing the restrictions
without prior notice, after all the access to the fire tenders and the
ambulances must have been impeded well before now and
Holliday has had 14 years to sort it out. Holliday is, however, ob-
sessed with the Opposition, and responds to them as if he was be-
ing haunted out of office by them and this is why he even admits
to the GSLP having supporters in Flat Bastion Road, probably be-
cause he knows the GSD have lost the few it had.
TRIPARTITE BLUES
I spy with my little eye something beginning with T…The Tripar-
tite Process has been the subject of close scrutiny in the talks
sponsored by the University of Cadiz in Algeciras last week. It
was funny to see how each of the performers had a different part
to play and yet they finished up synchronizing, as if their roles
were just that, performances in a play for the benefit of their re-
spective audiences. Peter Richard went that extra mile to make it
clear that he would not give the United Kingdom permission to
even talk about sovereignty [unless proposals were put to him]
and to offer an olive branch to the ―Partido Popular‖ in the event
that they became the next Government of Spain, an olive branch
that was soon turned down by Landaluce who quite categorically
said that a PP Government would end the Tripartite Process. Julio
Montecino‘s contribution was also enlightening because he distin-
guished between ―parties‖ and ―participants‖ suggesting that the
parties are the United Kingdom and Spain and that Peter Caruana
is a mere participant, this is why he argued in favour of sover-
eignty being a bilateral issue. Where that leaves the voices, flags
and vetoes we heard so much about is the obvious question to ask.
Everyone concluded that there is no substitute to dialogue….yet
look at the grave disagreements that dialogue have brought about,
disagreements that did not exist before the Tripartite started. To
add to the woes of the pro-Tripartite lobby the Ministerial meet-
ing has now been postponed for a second occasion. What next?
MONTIEL WAKES UP
I spy with my little eye something beginning with M….Minister
Montiel has finally woken up to the fact that there are long term
unemployed Gibraltarians, and now that the general election is
round the corner he has decided to appear to do something about
it. Let us not forget that this is the same Montiel who used to say
that if there were any Gibraltarians unemployed it was because
they did not want to work. The same Montiel who puts young
people into schemes that do not offer solid jobs at the end, a good
example being the apprenticeships in the shipyard, where the guys
got the sack before receiving their qualifications showing they
had successfully completed the apprenticeship. Now the Minister
says that the Government will offer incentives to take on some of
these employees by breaching GSD tender procedures and giving
Government contracts to companies that take on some of these
workers, something criticized by the GSD prior to 1996 when the
GSLP was doing this. He talks of ex-offenders, individuals in re-
habilitation for substance abuse, single parents and persons with a
low academic background and poor social skills, and groups them
altogether, as if they were the problem and not the unfair competi-
tion from frontier workers and the neglect of this Government that
does not care for these people. Please Montiel, you are one of
those people with a low academic background and poor social
skills. How about a job equal to yours!
19
Info PageInfo PageInfo Page MASS SCHEDULE MASS SCHEDULE MASS SCHEDULE
Cathedral St. Mary The Crowned
Weekdays 7.30 9.15 12.25 18.15
Saturday 9.15 12.25 18.30 Sunday 9.00 10.30 12.00 18.30
St. Theresa‟s Church
Weekdays – Monday to Saturday 18.00 Sunday 11.00 18.00
St. Paul‟s Church
Weekdays 9.15 19.00 Saturday 18.30
Sunday 10.00 12.00 19.00
Our Lady of Sorrows
Sunday 9.30
Thursday 19.15
Sacred Heart Church
Sunday 11.00 19.00
Weekdays – Monday to Saturday 19.00
St Joseph‟s Church
Saturday 9.15 19.00 Sunday 10.00 12.00 19.30
Weekdays 7.30 19.00
St Bernard‟s Catholic Church
Saturday 17.45 (King‘s Chapel)
Saturday 19.00 Sunday 11.00
Weekdays 18.30 (Tuesday to Friday)
The Shrine of Our Lady of Europe
Monday Wednesday Friday 10.30 to 18.00
Tuesday Thursday—10.30 13.00
Saturday 11.40 Rosary – 12 noon Holy Mass
Cathedral of the Holy Trinity Monday & Thursday 18.30 Tuesday & Saturday 10.00
Wednesday & Friday 07.45
Sunday 8.00 Holy Communion – 10.30 Sung Eucharist
DUTY CHEMIST
Trafalgar Pharmacy, 48-50 Main Street
TEL: 20071710
11am to 1.pm
6pm to 8pm
WEEKEND WEATHER
Thursday will be cloudy in easterly winds with a chance of some rain about. Maxi-mum temperature: 19 degrees, minimum-12 degrees. Friday will be partly cloudy with some sun-shine in variable winds. No change in tem-peratures. Saturday and Sunday will be chilly, cloudy and rainy. Winds will blow from an easterly direction on Saturday turning south east-erly in the evening and becoming westerly on Sunday. Day minimum temperatures are expected to drop to 14 degrees during daytime on Saturday and will recover two degrees on Sunday to become 16 degrees. Night minimum for both days will be 7 de-grees.
CONTACT US
For letters, press releases, comments, messages and
advertising
Please contact The New People
via email at
If you need to speak to us, leave a message and your phone
number and we shall contact you.
The New People_________________________________________________________
20
LA ESPINITA DE MARIA TERESA!
Un poco más y se parte el Tripa Hartita en pedazos. No!
No ocurrió la semana pasada con las charlas en Algeciras,
las cuales han sido muy educativas por aclarar el palomeo
que se traen unos cuantos. No fue ni las colas de la fronte-
ra, ni el follón de las aguas ni las demandas que le hacen al
Cascarrabias aquellos españoles que hoy trabajan en Gi-
braltar. Ya estamos acostumbrados a todo este sin fin de
injusticias, demandas y promesas sin cumplir. El Tripa
Hartita estuvo en peligro de partirse gracias a una locutora
de TELE CINCO. Si! Fue María Teresa Campos la que
estuvo a punto de cargarse el Tripa Hartita con una pregun-
ta que le hizo a Albert Hammond en un programa titulado,
―Que Tiempo Tan Feliz‖. María Teresa es una de esas que
tiene la espinita de Gibraltar clavada es su corazón, y como
el de la espinita estaba en el plato, no pudo resistirse a pre-
guntarle si se sentía mas ingles que Yanito, por esto de
haber nacido en Londres durante la evacuación, una conse-
cuencia de la historia. En ese preciso momento se quedo
Gibraltar en suspenso-en el patio de mi casa no se escucha-
ba un alma, todos esperando la contestación de Albert
Hammond. Cuando vino esa contestación nos sentimos
muy defraudados. Tuvo una oportunidad de oro para decir-
le a María Teresa que se sentía Yanito porque eso es lo que
es, y la desperdicio miserablemente. Albert le dijo a María
Teresa que él es ciudadano del mundo. Se lo dijo a aque-
llos que antes nada son españoles, después son latinos, des-
pués europeos y después son parte del mundo.
Hay quien cree que estaba aleccionado por su amigacho el
Cascarrabias para no enfadar a los españoles y así proteger
el Tripa Hartita. Quizás quiso ser diplomático, pero hay
algunos pájaros viejos que nos acordamos de lo que paso
hace muchos años cuando Albert le dio la vuelta a una pre-
gunta para no admitir que era Yanito. Me quito el sombre-
ro para saludar a Albert Hammond el cantante y composi-
tor, pero tengo que decir que como hijo de Gibraltar deja
mucho de desear. En fin, que tampoco puede decir uno
algo que no siente, algo que no lleva por dentro, hay quien
es Yanito de pura cepa y hay quien no lo es y Albert no lo
es. Al pan, pan y al vino, vino, como dice el refrán. Menos
mal que no estaba Belén Esteban en el plato, porque esa
mata por defender a un Gibraltar español. VALE! Al fin
del día María Teresa se ha quedado con la espinita por de-
ntro y Albertito Hammond con ganas de ser leyenda. Hay
quien lo recordara por unas cosas y hay quien lo recuerde
por otras. Los Yanitos somos duros y no perdonamos fácil-
mente. Ya ves si es así que comemos pan de lata, pescao de
piedra y queso de plato, más duro que un roble!
The New People , Printed and Published by “The New People” Publishing Ltd, Icom House, 1/5 Irish Town, Suite No. 6/608, PO Box 561 Gibraltar. Tel: 54374000
The New People_________________________________________________________