WHEN 22-year-old Málaga student Elena’s parents were her age, they could easily afford to buy an apartment in the city.
Now Elena cannot even afford rental prices, and she continues to live at home with her family, working while she studies to simply afford to live.
“All of my friends are in the same position.”
She was one of hundreds of thousands of people marching across Spain, demanding immediate action on the country’s housing crisis, where residents face soaring rents and a shortage of safe, healthy homes.
It was the third protest the streets of Málaga had witnessed since June last year, the manifestations organised by Málaga Para Vivir.
“We are sending a very clear message for all governments, both municipal, regional, and state, which is that today marks the end of the housing business,” Málaga Para Vivir spokesperson Kiki España said during the march on Saturday.
Málaga Para Vivir spokesperson Kiki España.
“In the city, there are 34,466 people registered as housing-seekers, while there are 7,496 tourist accommodations with 32,132 places available. Does anyone think this is sustainable?”
The people of Spain are demanding their government stops treating housing as a business, but rather as a human right.
Architecture student Mario Muñoz said that every year, his landlord raises the rent.
“The only reason the homeowner gives us is that all the other flats are rising the prices so she has to do the same.”
He shares an apartment with four others. To rent alone is completely off the cards.
Protestors of all ages took to the streets of Málaga.
Average Spanish rent prices have doubled in the past decade, yet salaries are struggling behind to catch up.
Meanwhile, the supply of rentals has halved since the COVID-19 pandemic, and only 120,000 houses are being built each year.
Spain’s public housing makes up less than 2% of all available housing. In comparison, the OECD average is 7%, with 16% public housing available in the United Kingdom.
Gesturing his friends, Muñoz said they were all architecture students with a keen interest in their city’s housing crisis.
“I don’t have a solution but we see places where the problem has been controlled with public housing,” he said.
“The locals interests need to be prioritised over the tourism industry first as it’s pushing people out of their homes.”
Jimena Centurión and Yolanda Greta are two of more than 120 Torremolinos residents being evicted from their rental apartments.
Yolanda Greta and Jimena Centurión are two such locals who are suddenly facing homelessness.
They are just two of more than 120 Torremolinos residents being evicted from their rental apartments.
Greta has been in and out of hospital due to a chronic illness, which has accelerated due to the stress of the situation.
“We could be evicted this month, this year, we don’t even know when,” Centurión said.
The developer who originally built the apartment building was forced into liquidation due to unpaid loans. Sareb, a bank half owned by the State, became owner of the apartment.
It was only in August last year, when the building went up for auction, that the residents learned they were going to lose their homes.
“We received a notification from the courts that our rental contracts were not valid,” Centurión said.
Both Greta and Centurión have yet to find new homes to move to.
Protestors rallied under many different banners, but all had the same cry: ‘treat housing as a human right not a commodity.’
Engineer Manuel joined Málaga Para Vivir’s first organised protest in June last year. He was at the front of today’s procession, microphone in hand, leading chants for the three kilometre march from Plaza de la Mercad to Parque de Huelin, his voice hoarse by the time they reached their final destination.
In Plaza de la Merced itself, eight out of ten homes are used for tourist accommodation.
When Manuel first moved to Málaga ten years ago, the rental price for one room was €200. The average cost of a room now is around €500-600.
Manuel (left) paid €200 when he first rented in Málaga a decade ago. Now the average price is €500-600, just for one room. Credit: Samantha Mythen
“In the last five years, there’s been an increase of around 45% of the price of living here, and the salaries aren’t increasing to match this,” he said.
“We have a crisis in Málaga. The people that usually live here in the centre of the city have been displaced to the outer limits and other towns, as the cost of housing is very expensive and it’s only increasing.”
Estefanía Ortega Gamboa said he pays €400 for a room in Málaga, yet his salary fails to meet this – just €1000 per month.
‘My neighbourhood is not your business,’ states a protest banner.
A report from Spain’s central bank found nearly 40% of families who live in rentals spend more than 40% of their income on their accommodation.
“Now, in the center of Málaga, you don’t see any local people. Only tourists and the businesses that focus on those tourists,” Manuel said as activities rattled their keychains.
“We have to protest and encourage the institutions to do something for us because the housing crisis is getting worse every day. This is just the beginning of the fight because we have to fight for our rights.”
Málaga Para Vivir spokesperson Beatriz Linares and Kiki España speaking to protestors on Saturday’s protest in Málaga.
Leading up to Saturday’s protest, Málaga Para Vivir organised a series of community events to discuss solutions to the housing crisis.
Although they have not proposed specific solutions, the group wants to see the end of Málaga’s “city model,” which they believe has turned the city into a tourist amusement park.
“We can’t continue allowing a few to make money off our lives, to play with our lives as if it were a game,” Málaga Para Vivir spokesperson Beatriz Linares said.
“Housing can never be a commodity, it must be a right that we protect together.”
CONSERVATIONISTS at the El Acebuche Iberian lynx captive breeding centre in Almonte, part of Doñana National Park, are celebrating the arrival of two new Iberian Lynx cubs – marking the fifth litter of the 2025 season.
The births, announced by the Autonomous National Parks Agency (OAPN). Previous litters, each producing three cubs, were delivered by females Madroña, Parra, Narsil, and Sardina earlier in March.
One part of the breeding centre’s excellent strategy is to tell the public the names of individual mother lynxes (and sometimes the fathers!), to stimulate interest.
This is now the fifth litter of lynxes since Madroña (a prolific mother) opened the season on Thursday, March 6. There have now been 14 lynxes born this season – three cubs in each previous litter – and Kolia and Oleander are yet to give birth.
The OAPN noted that for the latest litter the confinement of Tamesis, a first-time mother, was “unprecedented”.
Tamesis gave birth to a stillborn foetus, but “two days later, surprisingly,” she continued to have contractions, and finally, two healthy cubs were born.
For this reason, the OAPN has stated that this is “a unique case” that they will study “to better understand the species.”
The female Madroña, who gave birth to three healthy cubs on March 6, was followed by Parra, Narsil, and Sardina, who each gave birth to three kittens.
These three births were estimated to have occurred between the 9th and 12th, as the Iberian lynx’s gestation period lasts between 63 and 65 days.
With this year’s litter, Madroña has now given birth to a total of 17 kittens over the seven breeding seasons in which she has participated, “making a very significant contribution to the recovery of her species.”
Támesis gave birth between March 12 and 13, while the last to give birth will be Kolia and Oleander, who are expected to give birth near the end of this month.
It’s worth noting that seven “genetically suitable” pairs were established for this season. Specifically, the seven pairs chosen were Hamma and Parra; Madroña and Gitano; Támesis and Juglans; Narsil and Junquillo; Oleander and Quetro; Sardina and Júpiter; and Kolia and Tintín.
According to the Autonomous Agency of National Parks, the pairs were established at the end of 2024 and were in the “socialisation phase” in December.
These pairs are chosen based on genetic information. Last December, they were in the “full pre-rut season,” and the centre’s work at that time was to socialise the selected pairs so they “would get to know and accept each other.”
This is the same number of pairs established last year, when a total of twelve lynx cubs were born.
Likewise, three cubs were also born at the La Olivilla Iberian Lynx Breeding Centre in Santa Elena (Jaén) in early March.
A spokeman for OAPN, announcing the recent births, said that the next phase in rescuing the lynx will be to cross-breed the La Olivilla and El Acebuche populations, guaranteeing variability “for greater success for the species.”
It is important for all residents of Andalucía to know that it is strictly forbidden to cause deliberate harm to a lynx: this would probably result in an immediate prison sentence for the perpetrator.
Even an accident involving lynxes, when you are driving, must be reported to the police immediately. Licence-plate recognition cameras are operating in lynx territory.
The Iberian lynx is a breed of wild cat, native to the Iberian Peninsula. It is listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List (IUCN = International Union for the Conservation of Nature).
In the 20th century, the Iberian lynx population had declined because of overhunting, poaching, fragmentation of suitable habitats, and the population decline of its main prey species, the European rabbit, caused by myxomatosis and rabbit haemorrhagic disease.
Fossil evidence suggests that the lynx has been present in Iberia for a million years.
By the turn of the 21st century, the Iberian lynx was on the verge of extinction. In 2002, only 94 individuals remained alive in two isolated populations in Andalucía.
Conservation measures have been implemented since then, which included improving habitat, restocking of rabbits and monitoring the lynxes.
Between 2012 and 2024, the population increased to some 2,021 individuals. This terrific success story has led to the lynx being reclassified. It is now only “vulnerable”, rather than “endangered”.
Between May 9 and 11, more than 10,000 people will take part in the famous race, organised by the Spanish Legion.
The challenge is to complete a difficult 101-kilometre course (64 miles) in 24 hours: competitors can walk, run or cover the course by mountain bike.
Nine thousand competitors will participate in the adult section, and one thousand, two hundred will attempt the children’s course.
The event is now 30 years old, and attracts participants from all over Europe.
The route of the race passes through the comarca (district) of Ronda, taking in Arriate, Setenil de las Bodegas, Alcalá del Valle, Montejaque, and Benaoján, before finishing in central Ronda, in the Alameda Park.
The Legion, which is based in Ronda, is the spearhead elite unit of the Spanish army, and has existed for more than 100 years.
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The race began back in 1995 with a dual purpose: to celebrate the Legion’s 75th anniversary, and to encourage young people to seek their thrills through athletic endeavour, rather than turning to harmful activities like taking drugs.
Only extreme external events have interfered sufficiently to cause suspension of the race: Covid led to its cancellation in 2020-1, and the Legion being posted overseas (Kosovo, 2001: Iraq, 2004: Afghanistan, 2010 and Lebanon, 2023).
The President of the Málaga Provincial Council, Francisco Salado, has highlighted his support for the 101-kilometre race, which combines nature and sport and is a magnificent example of the strong bond between the Legion and the province of Málaga.
“What began in 1995 as a local race to strengthen ties between the Legion and the civilian population of Ronda and surrounding towns has become a national and international benchmark for this type of road and mountain sporting event,” he said recently, adding that it is also “a magnificent showcase” for promoting tourism in Ronda and the surrounding towns, attracting some 25,000 people from different parts of Spain and other countries.
More than 1,500 people are involved in the organisation of the race, and will oversee logistics and safety.
Colonel Fernando Sánchez has provided details of the race: over 24 hours there will be an individual foot race (4,700 participants) and a team race (1,100 participants). The race will also have a 12-hour mountain bike race (3,200 participants).
Of the 9,000 participants, in addition to Spaniards, there are participants of twelve other nationalities, primarily Portuguese. Fernando Sánchez has indicated that the oldest participants will be an 87-year-old man and a 77-year-old woman.
A non-competitive three-kilometre children’s race will also be held, following part of the 101-kilometre route, with 1,200 participants.
This entire route is marked day and night to prevent anyone from getting lost.
Performance is controlled by a microchip placed on the race number worn by each participant and a document carried by everyone, called a “Legionary Passport,” which includes important information such as the schedule, departure, route description, refreshment points, and the profile of the race. Similarly, the passport’s design makes it easier for the organisers to control access at specific or unexpected points.
The army will mobilise 900 Legionnaires, 14 doctors and 18 nurses, 150 physiotherapy and podiatry students, 150 Civil Protection volunteers, as well as firefighters from the Provincial Consortium, officers from the Civil Guard, the National Police, and local police from the towns through which it passes, totalling another 220 personnel.
For medical assistance, there will be four first-aid stations (staffed by a doctor, nurse, and paramedic, and three of them staffed by physiotherapists and podiatrists), six ambulances with Basic Life Support and two with Advanced Life Support, and six mobile intensive care units.
Refreshment stations will be set up along the race route roughly every five kilometres for walkers and between 10 and 15 kilometres for cyclists.
The distribution plan is 34,000 litres of bottled water, 25,000 litres of isotonic drinks, 10,000 carbohydrate gels, 23,500 sandwiches, 3,200 litres of coffee, 3,000 litres of broth, 27,000 oranges, 23,000 bananas, 1,000 kilos of vegetables (cherry tomatoes and mini cucumbers), 30,500 sweets and energy bars, and 3,600 chocolate bars.
Logistical support will include 34 trucks, 25 light all-terrain vehicles, six all-terrain motorcycles, three water tanker trucks, and three buses. Fifty-five tents, 34 tables, and 30 portable toilets will be set up.
THE attractive town of Écija is situated on the main road which links Sevilla and Córdoba, about half-way (50 miles) from either city.
It stands on the banks of the Geníl River, so beloved of the poet Lorca. The Geníl rises in the Sierra Nevada, and wends its way to the flood plain of the Guadalquivir, as Lorca puts it, ‘from the snow to the wheat’.
Écija, in summer, is not for the faint-hearted. It’s very hot. July and August temperatures regularly reach 46 degrees centigrade (116 Fahrenheit) and even Andalucians find it oppressive.
Écija is known throughout southern Spain as ‘the frying-pan’.
The economy of Écija is based on agriculture (olives, cereals and vegetables), cattle (cows and horses) and the textile industry.
The most distinctive feature of the urban landscape of Écija are the city’s Baroque bell towers.
The bell towers. Credit: Turismo Provincial de Sevilla
In Roman times the town was at first known as Astigi. During the Roman civil war Écija stood ‘firmly’ at the side of Julius Caesar in the Battle of Munda.
According to Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela, who both wrote in the 1st century AD, it was the rival of Córdoba and Sevilla.
In 711, Écija was conquered by an Islamic army on its way to Córdoba, meeting strong opposition from the population, who offered a 6-month-long resistance before capitulating.
Due to its productive agricultural systems and therefore able to sustain several harvests a year, Écija served as a food provider for both Córdoba and Sevilla.
The city walls were demolished in the early 10th century as punishment for the local support to the rebellion against Umayyad rule led by Umar ibn Hafsun.
The place was seized by Christians on 3 May 1240.
The Jewish population of Écija apparently suffered the antisemitic revolt initiated after the assault on the jewry of Sevilla in June 1391, that spread across Andalucía and much of the Iberian Peninsula.
The effects of the 1755 earthquake (the one that devastated Lisbon) forced a profound urban renewal in Écija.
Although Astigi was one of the most complete Roman cities to have been discovered, the city council decided in 1998 to bulldoze Écija’s Roman ruins, including ‘a well-preserved Roman forum, bath house, gymnasium and temple as well as dozens of private homes and hundreds of mosaics and statues’ and replace them with a 300-slot car park.
The altar in the Convento de la Santísima Trinidad y Purísima Concepción. Credit Wikipedia
The most important church is the Convento de la Santísima Trinidad y Purísima Concepción (Convent of the Holy Trinity and Immaculate Conception).
It is governed by the Franciscan Conceptionists.
Popularly known as Marroquies, it is located a few metres from the Iglesia de la Limpia Concepción de Nuestra Señora. In 1582, the Marroquí sisters, Luisa, Catalina, Ana and Francisca, descendants of one of the oldest families of Ecija, decided to found a monastery of nuns.
The blessing of the new church and convent complex occurred on May 21, 1596. It was declared a cultural site on November 17, 2009. The simple structure contains its original angular belfry and a collection of paintings, altarpieces, sculptures, and jewellery, featuring Moorish and Andalusian Baroque art.
Hotel Casa Palacio Domus Astigi
If you’re thinking of overnighting in Écija (a pleasant interlude between Sevilla and Córdoba, if you’re sight-seeing), you could do a lot worse than stay at the Hotel Casa Palacio Domus Astigi.
It’s very central, it has the classic ‘patio Andalúz’ floor plan, and a couple sharing a room will pay no more than €70 per night (April prices).
The restaurant ‘Cien Vinos’ (One Hundred Wines) can be found in the Avenida Miguel de Cervantes. Its owners, Carmen and Manuel, insist on serving unique dishes with their personal ‘stamp’ on them.
The food at Cien Vinos serves unique dishes
Anything from a quick tapa to a sit-down meal is possible, every day of the week (early closing on Sunday).
From the terrace menu (they have separate lists for distinct sections of the house) we recommend ‘Lacoste of Acorn-Fed Pork’ from €12-18.
The very best pork in Andalucía comes from animals fed on acorns. The subtle flavour of the ‘bellotas’ impregnates the flesh, giving it a sumptuous taste.
As for wine, we think the restaurant’s name speaks for itself!