Dawn

Dawn

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Crisis or no crisis, Lent looms and it's Fiesta time again in Spain. This time the pre-Lent jollies which are called Entroido here in Galicia. They started on Friday evening and took up much of Saturday, well into the evening and the night. And they'll continue into the coming week, centred on a large effigy of a parrot called Rávachol, which will be immolated on Good Friday. Don't ask me why; it's just tradition. All of which is a nice lead into . . .

A Spanish Vignette: Just after I'd started reading El País down in Veggie Square today, the next table was (over)occupied by a group of 11 noisy revellers, in the ratio of 9 men to 2 women. As they were in fancy dress, I suspected they'd been up all night. So I asked the nearest young man if this was true. Yes, he said, and asked me for a cigarette. Then one of the young ladies turned to me and asked if they were disturbing me. Absolutely not, I said. A nice illustration of my theory that to get Spaniards to consider your existence, you have to force yourself onto their radar. As I say, they were noisy and merry but – unlike an equivalent bunch of Brits – unaggressive. At least not until a couple of guys started pushing each other around and knocked over a stack of folded chairs. Whereupon several of the group calmly settled them down and I continued with my glass of albariño and plate of chipirones. Occasionally giving one – on request – to the guy who'd sought a cigarette. When you've exchanged amicable words with someone in Spain, you're a close friend.

Corruption Watch

  • President Rajoy has published his tax returns over several years. These prove nothing other than he was well paid and that his income has risen 27% during La Crisis. Which will not go down well.
  • Spain's judges and prosecutors have criticised the lack of resources and specialist expertise with which to tackle prosecution.
  • El País complains that only the UK, Germany and the USA display examples of politicians who resign for malfeasance.
  • The paper's business section reports that corruption is the biggest problem facing the country and that it has dynamited Spain's 'good auguries', increased the debt problem and brought nearer the prospect of a bail-out.
  • The leader of the opposition has called for an 'anti-corruption unit' to be set up with 'surprise' visits by plain-clothed officers to high-level politicians' headquarters. My guess is he hopes this will never happen.
There probably are a few horse-meat butchers in the UK but, generally speaking, this is one animal the British don't like to eat. Things are different on the Continent, at least in Rumania, France and Spain, where dining on someone's ex-nag, is considered perfectly normal. In fact, here in Galicia we have butchers who specialise in carne de potro. Literally 'foal/colt meat'. The current storm in the UK and France over horse meat being where it shouldn't appears to have flared up because the EU-dictated lax cross-border controls gives organised crime the opportunity to substitute horse meat for beef as the meat moves from country to country. Essentially because the original certification, which is all that's required, can get detached from the original meat as it moves around and then attached to something which is from a very different animal. For example some diseased horse from Rumania. Presumably there's nothing to stop this being done with dog meat, for example, unless it tastes markedly different from beef when used in some microwave processed meat dish. Rumania is reported to produce astonishing quantities of horse meat, at prices well below that of beef. Making substitution highly profitable. To stop the scam, Brussels will have to give back some powers to the countries into which meat is imported. Which may take some time. Unless it's shown that Rumanian horse meat is riddled with something called bute, which is not good for us humans.

Finally . . . Each time I walk into town, I come across another closed shop. This time the place I bought my dining room furniture from ten years ago. And the new “Cheap Shoes” shop in the centre of town. If closures continue at the current rate, there'll be precious few shops left in 3 years' time. Perhaps just one huge Chinese emporium. Open all hours, seven days a week.

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