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HELP Murcia Mar Menor Donates €2,000 To Support Camposol Dementia Respite Charity

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HELP Murcia Mar Menor donates €2,000 to Camposol respite charity. Photo Credit: HELP Murcia Mar Menor / Facebook

Local representatives from the HELP Murcia Mar Menor charity recently took a trip to Camposol in order to deliver a vital donation to the Forget Me Not respite care charity. The group, composed of local committee members Debbie, Paul, Chris, and Alan, pledged a total of €2,000, representing a significant donation in order to sustain local support services for the community.

A vital boost for local respite care

The HELP Murcia Mar Menor heroes were greeted by dedicated volunteers Diane and Helen upon their arrival. The hosts gave them a guided tour of the facility, where the committee members saw firsthand the critical role the charity plays in the community. 

Forget Me Not: Professional medical oversight and community support

The Forget Me Not charity, located at the Camposol Cultural Centre, Sector B, holds specialised sessions every Monday and Thursday in order to help individuals facing a wide variety of health conditions, including and especially dementia.

The charity offers care, gatherings, or even companionship and a friendly chat for those who are struggling with health conditions, or to their family members. These gatherings are often accompanied by fun and creative activities, including interactive arts and crafts tables, engaging games, and even occasional live entertainment.

During these gatherings, the charity also provides the expert care of a qualified nurse, who attends both weekly sessions. Additionally, Forget Me Not offers a freshly prepared hot meal for everyone who attends.

A special gift from HELP Murcia Mar Menor to dementia patients in the area

The visit also featured a heartwarming collaborative touch: the group presented a fabulous, custom-made “Twiddle Blanket,” specifically designed to provide sensory stimulation for dementia patients, which was generously crafted and donated by the talented Judith. This joint effort highlights how local charity networks continue to uplift vulnerable residents across the region.

How to get involved with HELP Murcia Mar Menor

HELP Murcia Mar Menor boasts two locations in the Region of Murcia: their office in Los Alcazares, and their charity outlet on the Avenida de la Unión, 57, in San Javier. There, interested visitors can donate and obtain more information on what the charity does, how their donations are used, and how to participate in upcoming events.

As for the events, HELP Murcia Mar Menor also carries out activities of their own, including their Coffee & Company gatherings which take place in local bars, and will now pause activity for the summer months, to officially resume in September.

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Why Your Weekly Shop In Spain Feels More Expensive Than Last Year

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, food prices in the country have continued to rise over the past year. Photo credit: Guillem de Balanzo/Shutterstock

If you have noticed your supermarket bill going up even though you are buying the same things, you are not imagining it. Basic food items in Spain have risen again over the past year and it is showing most clearly in the weekly shop.

Eggs, coffee, vegetables and other everyday essentials are all more expensive than they were a year ago. None of it feels dramatic on its own, but it builds up quickly. A few cents extra on several products becomes several euros more at the till without you really changing anything.

According to Spain’s National Statistics Institute (INE), food prices in the country have continued to rise over the past year, with categories such as eggs, coffee and fresh vegetables among those recording the strongest increases in the consumer price index. That is what most people are noticing. Not one big jump, just steady increases across normal shopping baskets.

Eggs, coffee and vegetables are driving most of the increase

Eggs are one of the clearest examples of recent price rises. Coffee has followed a similar pattern, moving up again after already expensive periods in previous years. Fresh vegetables have also increased, partly because supply changes with seasons and weather conditions.

Even supermarkets own brand products, which many people rely on to keep costs down, have not stayed stable. They have moved up alongside branded items, which means switching brands does not always reduce the total anymore.

The impact is most obvious because these are not occasional purchases. They are part of almost every weekly shop. Milk, bread, fruit, pasta, oil and vegetables form the base of most households’ spending. When those go up together, it is noticeable straight away.

Why the same items now cost more without obvious changes

There is no single reason behind the increase. It comes from several pressures feeding into the final price. Production costs have risen, transport is more expensive, energy costs have been higher and supply chains have been under strain at different points. When those costs increase, supermarkets eventually pass them on. Even if the rise happens gradually, it still reaches the customer.

What makes it harder to notice in real time is that prices do not move in a straight line. Some weeks nothing changes, then suddenly a few key items jump at once.

Why your receipt keeps changing even when your shopping does not

One of the most frustrating parts is that there is no single moment where prices clearly go up. It happens in small steps. One week eggs are more expensive. A few weeks later vegetables change. Then coffee shifts again. Because it is spread out across different products, it never feels like one clear increase.

Instead, it shows up as a slightly higher total at the end of your shop. If you compare receipts from a year ago, the difference is often there, but it is made up of lots of small changes rather than one big jump. That is why many people feel like their budget is being stretched without really knowing when it started.

What a typical weekly shop looks like now

For a standard basket including milk, eggs, bread, pasta, fruit, vegetables, coffee and cooking basics, the total is usually higher than it was last year even if nothing extra is added. It is not that people are buying more. It is that the same list costs more to complete.

Even small increases across multiple items make a difference over time. A few euros extra each week adds up across a month, especially for households on fixed incomes. This is why food inflation is often felt slowly rather than suddenly.

Why prices are unlikely to drop back quickly

Food prices tend to stay high once they have risen. Even if production or transport costs ease, retail prices do not usually return to previous levels. Supermarkets operate on tight margins and adjust slowly. When costs go up, prices rise. When costs stabilise, prices tend to stay where they are.

That means households often adjust to a new normal rather than seeing prices fall back. It is one of the reasons the weekly shop feels permanently higher once it has changed.

What people actually notice at the supermarket

Most shoppers are not tracking inflation data or price charts. They notice something simpler. The same items they always buy now cost more at checkout.

Nothing about the shopping list has changed. The routine is the same. The products are the same. The only difference is the total at the end. And that is what sticks.

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Fugitive Wanted On Terrorism Charges Nabbed In Estepona

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Suspected Moroccan terrorist nabbed at Estepona beach bar. Credit: Turismo Estepona

Police made a dramatic arrest on the Costa del Sol after spotting a wanted man during routine duties. Officers from Estepona Local Police detained the suspect this week at the entrance to Playa del Cristo beach, right by an exclusive beach club access road. Patrol members noticed two men of North African origin entering a vehicle previously flagged to authorities. They carried out identity checks to process an administrative report on the vehicle.

International warrant leads to detention

Investigators soon discovered that one occupant faced an international search order from Belgium, together with an arrest warrant. The man had successfully evaded capture since July last year and had been in hiding in Estepona. Belgian authorities were looking for him over alleged offences connected to terrorism and crimes against individuals. Officers took him into custody immediately Malaga Hoy reports.

National Police later confirmed to reporters that the individual remained subject to a return decision, with Belgium as the requesting authority for those specific charges.

Companion questioned but released

Checks on the second man revealed prior police references possibly tied to terrorism matters. Authorities found no active warrant or judicial order against him, so they released the individual without charges.

Additional items were found in the vehicle

A search of the car uncovered documents belonging to a third party, including a Spanish national identity card and an accreditation for reduced mobility. When questioned, both occupants denied knowledge of how the papers ended up in their possession. One man said he planned to travel to Morocco and had entered Spain via Tarifa around four or five days earlier.

Ongoing enquiries continue

Officers handed the seized documents and case details to competent services for further examination. Meanwhile, the detained fugitive moved to National Police station, where they are more equipped to deal with serious criminals. Procedures now are going forward according to the Belgian arrest warrant.

This incident draws attention to continued cross-border efforts against terrorism suspects on Spain’s Costa del Sol. Local forces maintain vigilance in popular coastal areas frequented by international visitors and residents. Cooperation between Spanish and European authorities plays a key role in such operations, helping track individuals wanted abroad.

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Magaluf’s Spectacular Seafront Concert

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One of the biggest free public celebrations of the summer on June 27 Credit: Facebook/CalviaNoticeboard

Magaluf is preparing to throw one of the biggest free public celebrations of the summer as the resort officially unveils its newly transformed seafront promenade on Saturday June 27.

Rather than a traditional ribbon-cutting ceremony, organisers have planned a full evening of entertainment on the beach, combining live orchestral music, cutting-edge technology and local food in a celebration designed to showcase a different side of one of Mallorca’s most famous destinations.

The event marks the completion of the second phase of the Gabriel Escarrer Juliá promenade renovation, a project backed by more than €6 million in investment and funded in part through European recovery funds.

Symphony orchestra takes centre stage

The headline act will be the Balearic Islands Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Pablo Mielgo, which will perform a free open-air concert directly beside the beach from 9.30pm.

Under the theme “Magaluf is Cinema”, the orchestra will perform some of the most recognisable movie soundtracks ever written. Audiences can expect music from Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Harry Potter, Jurassic Park, Superman, Schindler’s List, Titanic, James Bond and The Pink Panther, alongside other cinematic classics.

Organisers say the concert is intended to reflect Magaluf’s ongoing transformation into a destination focused on culture, family experiences and quality tourism.

300 drones to light up the bay

As darkness falls, attention will turn skyward when 300 synchronised drones launch above Magaluf Bay.

The aerial display will create giant cinema-themed images and animations over the sea, offering a modern and environmentally friendly alternative to traditional fireworks. The spectacle is expected to be one of the largest drone shows staged in Mallorca this year.

K-pop, DJs and food throughout the day

The celebrations actually begin much earlier, with activities running from 6pm.

A K-pop showcase featuring performers from Kpop Baleares will open the entertainment programme, followed by a set from DJ Alba Serrano. After the orchestra and drone display, the evening will continue with live music from Balearic group Lost in Translation, who specialise in reimagining famous movie songs.

Visitors will also be able to enjoy the second GastroFira de Magaluf, featuring restaurants, beach clubs and local businesses serving food and drinks throughout the day and evening. Participating venues include Bondy Beach, Blackbeard’s, Oceans, Kalima, Titanic and several other popular seafront establishments.

For one night, Magaluf’s famous beach will become an open-air cinema, concert hall and food festival all rolled into one. With free entry and no tickets required, organisers are expecting thousands of residents and visitors to attend

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