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  • 10
    Aug
    2012
    10:27am, EDT

    Spain police arrest five over 'Robin Hood'-style supermarket looting

    By NBC News and wire reports

    MADRID -- Spanish police have arrested five left-wing union activists for their alleged role in a "Robin Hood"-style looting of a supermarket made to highlight the plight of people suffering through the country's recession, authorities said Friday.

    The southern Andalusian Workers' Union made news Tuesday when a handful of its activists made off with nine trolleys full of food from a supermarket in the southern town of Ecija and left without paying. They later handed the food to poor unemployed people.


    A police statement said one person was arrested during an eviction Friday of members of the union who were squatting on Defense Ministry land to protest its abandonment and demanding it be handed over to hard-pressed farmers.

    Two others were arrested elsewhere Friday, and two on Thursday.

    Complete international coverage on NBCNews.com

    Spain is in the midst of its worst financial crisis in recent memory. Conservative Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government has pursued severe austerity measures, including deep spending cuts and tax hikes.

    Street protests by public workers, students, unions and other groups have become commonplace across the country, according to reports.

    NBC News' staff and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    57 comments

    But yet no bank CEO has been arrested for all the billions looted.

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    Explore related topics: spain, madrid, robin-hood, featured, andalusia
  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    9:02am, EDT

    Spain police: 3 al-Qaida suspects arrested, plotted Europe attacks

    A. Carrasco Ragel / EPA

    Police converge Thursday on the scene at an apartment at Los Junquillos district in La Linea de la Concepcion, Cadiz, Spain, where a Turkish man allegedly linked to al-Qaida was arrested.

    By Reuters

    MADRID - Three people linked to al-Qaida have been arrested in the south of Spain, one in possession of explosives they planned to use in attacks in either the Iberian country or other European nations, Interior Minister Jorge Fernandez Diaz said Thursday.

    He said police near Ciudad Real arrested on Wednesday two al-Qaida members from ex-Soviet republics who were likely heading to France, and a Turkish man near Cadiz whose house was searched and where explosives were found.


    The minister said one of the two arrested near Ciudad Real was a senior al-Qaida operative who had extensive experience in bomb-making.


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    "It is one of the most important operations against al-Qaida to date to be carried out on an international level," he said.

    US: Leaders' deaths put al-Qaida on 'path of decline'

    "There are clear indications that the suspects arrested could have been planning an attack in Spain, and or, other European countries," the minister told a news conference.

    He said the operation was conducted with the help of other international police forces, and that the explosive material was being analyzed. No details were given on how much material was found, though the minister said it was enough to blow up a bus.

    Compete international coverage on NBCNews.com

    An attack in 2004 targeting the Madrid train system that killed 191 people was blamed on al-Qaida.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    8 comments

    Here you go again. Hope people have not forgotten Madrid bombings. Followers of Islamic cult, especially Sunni Saudi inspired Islamic radicals and militants (al-Qaida, Salaffi, Wahhabi, MB and other label ones), are fast marching backwards to their seventh century desert tribal days. They are indulg …

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  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    5:43pm, EDT

    Hundreds of thousands protest Spain spending cuts, tax hikes

    Manu Fernandez / AP

    Demonstrators protest against austerity measures announced by the Spanish government in Barcelona, Spain on July 19, 2012.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    MADRID -- Hundreds of thousands of Spaniards marched on Thursday evening against the center-right government's latest austerity measures, passed after more than a week of demonstrations across the country.

    Parliament on Thursday approved a package of 65 billion euros ($80 billion) of spending cuts and tax hikes as part of measures to avert a full European bail-out, bringing more hardship in a severe economic downturn in a nation where one in four are jobless.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Demonstrators took to the streets in towns and cities across Spain, thronging the thoroughfares of Madrid and Barcelona, waving flags and bearing banners decorated with scissors to symbolize spending cuts.

    In Madrid, crowds of firefighters wearing helmets and t-shirts with the slogan "Firemen in danger of extinction" blew horns and let off firecrackers. Earlier, police officers and members of the Civil Guard joined the protests.

    "We have lived through bad times, but this takes the biscuit," said 58-year-old fireman Francisco Vaquero.

    Earlier Thursday, angry civil servants had blocked traffic in several main Madrid avenues, The Guardian newspaper of London reported. Protesters punctured tires on dozens of riot police vans.

    The sight of demonstrators on Spain's streets is nothing new. Young "Indignados" (Indignants) protested in their thousands against unemployment last year. One in four Spaniards is without work.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    But since Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy announced spending cuts and tax rises last week there have been daily demonstrations drawing protests from public service workers like police that have previously stayed away.

    Civil servants, whose pay was cut by up to 7 percent when their Christmas bonus was canceled, have used their coffee breaks this week to protest outside the ruling People's Party headquarters in Madrid.

    This article includes reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

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    24 comments

    Spare me. Socialism is what got Europe into this mess to begin with. Germany had to almost start from scratch after WW 2 and look where hard work got them. Now we are all supposed to bail out the countries on the Mediterranean whose lack of work ethic and easy living has gotten them in debt. HA!

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    Explore related topics: spain, madrid, protest, demonstration, march, featured, austerity
  • 24
    May
    2012
    6:31am, EDT

    So much for 'the Spanish dream': Euro crisis turns suburbs into ghost towns

    Pierre-philippe Marcou / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Empty buildings in Valdeluz, one of 12 near ghost towns scattered across Spain.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Just north of Spanish capital Madrid lies Cuidad Valdeluz. Built during the country's economic boom, it was promoted as a suburban family paradise for tens of thousands of people. 

    Today, it is one of 12 near ghost towns in Spain, a country that -- despite being the European Union's fifth-largest economy -- is teetering on the brink of a Greece-style meltdown. 


    Spain has the highest unemployment rate of all European Union countries at 21.7 percent, according to a report published this month by the Center for Economic and Social Rights. Among those aged under 25, nearly half -- 46.4 percent -- are without a job. More than half a million households had no one earning an income in 2011.

    NYT: One-fifth of Spain's GDP is now black market

    The report warned that "over half the population reports experiencing a heavy financial burden due to housing costs." The number of foreclosure proceedings rose from 25,953 in 2007 to 93,319 in 2009, an increase of nearly 260 percent.

    As she stood on the deserted streets of Valdeluz, journalist Lindsey Hilsum of the U.K.'s Channel 4 News said the suburb illustrated just how far and how fast Spain had fallen.

    On the streets of Madrid, they have a message for the leaders meeting in Brussels: stop cutting and start promoting growth. For them, the Spanish government decision to recapitalise Bankia, the country's fourth largest lender, while reducing education spending by 20 per cent, was the last straw.

    "This was the Spanish dream: new developments, luxury apartments, the good life. But it was all on borrowed money. Now the developers have lost their investments, the banks are in crisis, and increasing numbers of Spaniards are homeless," she said.

    Homeless and 'in debt forever'
    Maria Francisca Cano Munoz, Jesus Munoz Alcaza, their daughter and disabled son are among those about to lose their home.

    CNBC's Simon Hobbs discusses the euro's decline and whether Greece will leave the euro, with CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera and Bob Pisani.

    "We are going to end up with no home and in debt forever," Munoz Alcaza, an unemployed construction worker, told Hilsum through a translator. "We'll have to keep paying for this apartment, but we won't be able to live in it."

    Greece's debt woes put Europe on financial knife edge

    "At first they [bank officials] were nice and said 'Don't worry, you can pay at the end of the month to avoid interest,'" Cano Munoz added. "But when you cannot pay at all, suddenly you are a bad person and 'there's the door... go!'"

    As in Greece, politicians are looking to economic powerhouse Germany for help.

    Many residents fear that a slow economy is cutting into the number of foreign visitors. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    "Germany has got a lot of profit from the euro [currency]. Because Spain was rich, we bought many things that were made in Germany," an independent deputy in Spain's congress, Irene Lozano Domingo, told Hilsum.

    "We are all linked, so if we are going to hell, they are coming with us. This is what they have to see," she added.

    Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day: Is this beginning of a run on banks?

    Like other countries, Spain has bailed out its banks and slashed government spending. But the economy is now so bad that some are thinking of quitting the country altogether.

    "I don't know. Latin America somewhere? Brazil, Mexico ... somewhere where it's going up, you know?" a protester at a recent demonstration against education cuts told Hilsum.

    The euro is hitting its lowest level since July 2010. Discussing the impact the weak euro has on the global economy, with Larry McDonald, Newedge Group and John Spallanzani, GFI Group.

    European Union leaders concluded their latest summit early Thursday with few concrete steps to fix the continent's festering financial crisis, Reuters reported.

    One problem has been the need to get agreement between either the 17 EU countries that use the euro as their currency or all 27 member states.

    "I think about my one Congress, then I start thinking about 17 congresses and I start getting a little bit of a headache," Barack Obama said following the recent NATO summit in Chicago.

    The president's headache could get substantially worse, according to a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. It warned Tuesday that while the U.S. and Japan were leading a fragile economic recovery among developed countries, they could be blown off course by the European debt crisis.

    'Vicious circle': Europe crisis threatens world economy, OECD says

    The biggest continuing fear is that if Greece cannot be saved, other larger economies — like Spain or Portugal — might face the same fate. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The leaders gathered in Brussels recognized that Greece had endured significant hardships and promised to release development funds aimed at spurring growth, Reuters reported. 

    But Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters that the euro countries "have to consider all kinds of events," the news service added.

    Europe told to prep for Greek exit scenario

    Juncker insisted early Thursday that he had not asked the euro nations to prepare national contingency plans for a possible chaotic departure of Greece from the currency, saying the "the working assumption" was that Greece would remain part of the euro.

    But his statement was also a frank admission that Greece could wind up abandoning the euro.

    A new election is scheduled for June 17, as debate continues over the country's place in the euro zone. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Greece's fringe political parties, which are threatening to renege on commitments made to secure bailout loans, saw their popularity surge in recent elections. No party has been able to form a government, and the country will vote again June 17. 

    Germany's Pirate Party rides wave of popularity

    Many analysts have said that Greece, already in its fifth year of recession, has no hope of recovery if it sticks to the spending cuts and tax hikes it agreed to in order to secure bailout loans. 

    "We want Greece to remain in the euro area," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after the meeting, but she also expected the deeply unpopular policies of austerity to continue. "We expect that they will stick to the commitments that they have entered into." 

    Ghost towns tell the story of Ireland's faded dream

    The perception that European leaders lack the political will to tackle the continent's financial and economic problems has left markets on edge for weeks. Recession is spreading. Banks are under pressure.

    Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior economist at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong, said Thursday: "Europe is not doing enough, and the market may not wait for them." 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    329 comments

    There are innumerable homeless in Spain. There are empty houses in Spain. The empty houses are owned by those who have no intention of living in them because they have so much money they already own other houses they actually live in.

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  • 14
    May
    2012
    7:00am, EDT

    Protests outside nationalized Spanish bank as Euro zone worries grow

    Pedro Armestre / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman holds a card reading "This bank cheats, defrauds, throws people out of their houses" during a protest held outside Caja Madrid bank's headquarters in Madrid on May 14, 2012.

    Alberto Di Lolli / AP

    Riot police stand guard in front of a branch of the recently nationalized Caja Madrid bank during a protest in Madrid on May 14, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports — Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy on Sunday defended his government's harsh austerity measures aimed at correcting Spain's grim economic forecast, one day after tens of thousands of Spaniards took to the streets to protest his handling of the country's worst crisis in decades.

    On Friday the government ordered independent assessments of its banks' debt loads and forced them to set aside billions more in provisions for the real estate sector. 

    Global shares , euro hit as political risks pile up

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    If you see the photo of the Caja Madrid Bank with the Riot Police standing guard...remember that photo...that will be the United States in less then three years if something isn't done about the finanical ruin coming our way!

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    Explore related topics: business, eu, economy, spain, europe, madrid, police, protest, world-news, caja-madrid
  • 12
    Apr
    2012
    11:18am, EDT

    Aged nun accused in Spanish baby-stealing cases

    Pedro Armestre / AFP - Getty Images

    Spanish nun Maria Gomez Valbuena (C) leaves a court in Madrid on Thursday.

    By Reuters

    An elderly Spanish nun appeared in court on Thursday to face charges of stealing babies, after claims by hundreds of women that their infants were taken from them at birth and given away in illegal adoptions.

    Doctors, nurses and religious workers at several clinics and hospitals in Spain are alleged to have sold babies for adoption over decades, after telling new mothers that their infants had died.


    At the hearing at Madrid's Superior Tribunal of Justice, Maria Gomez Valbuena, a Sisters of Charity nun now in her 80s who once worked in the Santa Cristina hospital in Madrid, became the first person accused in the widening scandal.

    Clad in a dark habit, she was questioned by a judge but invoked her right not to testify.

    The formal charges against her are of illegal detention and falsifying documents in a case dating from the early 1980s.

    A crowd of mothers who say they were robbed of their babies shouted "shameless" at the grim-faced nun as she was escorted out of the court through a throng of journalists to a car.

    An association of parents and families, Anadir, has presented more than 900 lawsuits alleging child-stealing. Most have been thrown out due to lack of evidence.

    Many mothers say they were told by health or religious workers their babies had died at birth or shortly after, but were neither shown a body nor given a proper death certificate.

    Anadir says the practice began in the 1940s when, in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, the fascist government stole babies from political prisoners from the defeated Republican side.

    In subsequent decades it became a money-making racket, the victims claim. Parents who wanted to adopt babies were often referred to clinics that were known for finding babies for desperate families.

    Many of the mothers have said they believe their babies were taken due to a mistaken paternalism on the part of the doctors or religious workers who may have seen them as unfit mothers because they were young, poor or unmarried.

    Andrea Comas / Reuters

    Paloma Perez, who says she was a stolen baby, talks to reporters in front of a court in Madrid, Thursday.

    One mother testified in court last week that Gomez Valbuena had told her she could be jailed for adultery. The nun threatened to take her baby away and give it to another family, and later said the baby had died.

    The mother, Maria Luisa Torres, has been able to prove through DNA tests the baby she was told had died 30 years ago is alive after being adopted by another family.

    "I only hope there will be justice after so much suffering," Torres said last week after testifying in court.

    Many other mothers have found it impossible to track down babies they believe would now be adults, since the birth records, death certificates and adoption papers were falsified, according to Anadir and to the Madrid prosecutor.

    Alleged victims say they need help from authorities in unearthing evidence of their claims from graveyards and public registries.

    "The government will not fail in its duty. We share the pain of the victims and we will go as far as we can," said Justice Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon after meeting representatives of associations representing people who say their babies were stolen.

    The Ministry of Justice says it will gather the facts about all of the different claims to be able to investigate them more systematically, and will also handle the results of DNA tests.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    71 comments

    This is the kind of horrific religious abuse that creates atheists. What incredible arrogance.

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  • 24
    Feb
    2012
    6:45am, EST

    Night at the museum: Picasso's 'Guernica' undergoes robot health check

    Paul White / AP

    A technician works as a camera mounted on a mobile robot-like structure moves across Pablo Picasso's 'Guernica' painting at the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid on Feb. 21, 2012.

    Paul White / AP

    A technician looks at images on a screen as a camera moves across the painting.

    Every night after Madrid's Reina Sofia museum shuts its doors, a giant robotic machine is dragged out to resume a painstaking examination of one of the world's most iconic paintings. 

    Pablo Picasso's masterpiece "Guernica" is getting a full health check as it marks its 75th anniversary.

    The machine — dubbed 'Pablito' — is taking tens of thousands of microscopic shots of the 291-sq. foot painting to allow experts to penetrate the work like never before and see its real condition after a hectic life traveling the globe. 

    — Read the full report by The Associated Press.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    5 comments

    Why?

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