Soltalk February 2020 | Page 20

News Unusual visitors A number of wild boars have been spotted at night in the centre of Nerja. A video recently circulated showed adults and their young wandering around calle Pintada and visiting the Balcón de Europa. Experts say the animals come into populated areas in search of food and water as the countryside feels the effect of the drought. Málaga coach fired after “sextortion” claim Málaga Football Club suspended its head coach, Víctor Sánchez del Amo, on January 7 after an intimate video of him began to circulate on social media. During the same week, del Amo (known as Victor) complained that the president of Málaga CF, Abdullah ben Nasser Al Thani, and its general director, Richard Shaheen, had both “cheated him from the beginning with the planning of the workforce.” extortion.” At a press conference on January 15, Victor said that, when suspended, he asked the Club to pay him what he was owed and he would quit. However, after support from Málaga fans but haggling from the Club’s management, he claims he was fired, a move which he described as “totally unjust.” On January 11, the Club announced Victor had been dismissed. In a statement, it added that the action had been taken for “disciplinary reasons” and “serious damage caused to the Club by recent non-sporting events.” National Police investigating Victor’s allegations of blackmail have arrested at least three people believed to have circulated the video of Victor wearing a Málaga CF shirt but with his genitals exposed. Their investigation is continuing and further arrests have not been ruled out. Almost 1,400 users of electric scooters were fined in Málaga last year, according to the city’s Local Police. The most common offence was parking scooters in pedestrian areas, instead of in one of the 28 areas defined for that purpose. New by-laws regulating the use of the machines is expected to come into force in May. Victor says he received a “sextortion” demand from blackmailers for €20,000 to be paid in Bitcoins if he wanted the video suppressed, and he himself reported this to police on Oviedo on January 5. He described himself as a victim of “a crime against my privacy with harassment and Victor began work as head coach at Málaga in April 2019, after a playing career which started at Real Madrid in the mid-90s. He has been succeeded by a former Málaga CF player, Sergio Pellicer who has been coaching Malaga's reserve side, Atlético Malagueño since last summer. New boss Málaga’s initiative on noise Scooter fines A 51-year-old Málaga socialist has become the first woman to head the Guardia Civil in the force’s 175-year history. María Gámez has been the government’s sub- delegate in the province since September 2018 and her new role was announced last month. A lawyer by profession, Gámez is from Estepona and took her degree at Málaga University before entering politics in the 90s. Healthy sales Sales of non-new houses in the province of Málaga rose by 6.9% in 2019, bucking the national trend which recorded a fall of 1.3% after three years of increases, according to on-line agents Fotocasa. Only the Balearics and Santa Cruz de Tenerife returned figures higher than Málaga. The average price in the province at the end of the year was €2,244 per square metre, compared with €1,846 nationally. First babies The Axarquía’s first baby of 2020 was born in Vélez-Málaga hospital at 6.30am on January 2. Oliver is the son of proud parents Gloria and Ívan who live in Nerja. Two babies tied for the first new-born in Spain, both born at just two minutes past midnight on New Year’s Day in Valencia and Madrid. Málaga Town Hall will not permit any new bars or restaurants in city centre areas which it considered to be already “saturated.” The five-year moratorium on issuing new licences is part of a war on noise levels and applies in 103 streets where this exceeds 65 decibels in daytime and 55 decibels at night. Residents have complained that, with the level reaching 90 decibels on occasions, getting to sleep at night can become a problem. As a result, Málaga authorities began recording noise levels a decade ago and published the results in 2016. At that time, it planned to reduce noise in the worst affected areas, which included 98 streets in the centre and a five more close to the University campus. Measures, which went into effect last month, include earlier closing hours and fewer municipally organised outdoor activities. Bars and restaurants must close their doors and windows at 11.00pm while those with tables on pavements have had their opening hours curtailed. The number of special days, such as during Easter and Christmas, when owners can extend 18 their opening hours has been reduced from 70 to 20 per year. The new regulations have not been welcomed universally, with the Málaga Hospitality Association branding them “an interference in the free market in a key area of the city,” and predicting job losses as a result. Residents say it is too little too late. TV gang Three people were arrested in Málaga last month by National Police investigating a gang illegally supplying TV signals over the internet. They are amongst 15 people detained across Spain who are believed to have been providing the service to around 10,000 clients. Investigators say the equipment seized had the capacity to serve half a million viewers. Caves result Nerja Caves saw an increase of 2.4 per cent in visitor numbers last year, compared with 2018. A total of 441,590 people visited the caverns at Maro which were marking the 60th anniversary of their discovery, 70 per cent of visitors in 2019 were Spanish.