Piers Morgan Ignores The Real Marbella

Piers Morgan’s recent TV show, Piers Morgan on Marbella, aired recently on British TV, and portrayed Marbella in a very 1 sided light. Not having TV myself I caught the show on YouTube and watched with much surprise as Piers painted a picture of jet-set glamour (God, I hate those words…) sickening and distasteful displays of wealth and a prosperous seaside hot-spot.

For someone with Piers’ journalistic credentials, the show was shockingly one sided as Piers not only solely focused on the wealthy, glossed over gangland crime and governmental corruption but strangely completely ignores the Spanish population and the negative effect the unbridled capitalism, greed and corruption has had on this coast.

The show, I’m guessing, was put together by Max Clifford and co, as it was more of an advert for the glitz and glamour than anything else. Shameful on the part of Piers Morgan, if you ask me. Max Clifford desperately wants to be mayor, as he thinks he could “clean up” Marbella. The problem is, he would be cleaning up the victims of the boom and not the perpetrators, like the wealthy featured in the show.

So what was missed out? Well, firstly, there was no discourse about the effect that the unbridled capitalism of the boom years had had on the coast. Sure, there are many here who made millions through legal means and brought their wealth here, but, as many inhabitants of Marbella are painfully aware, much of the wealthy on this coast got their through exploitation, corruption and crime. The gap between the rich and poor is gigantic – the average wage here is the lowest in Spain, yet you see massive villas and flash cars everywhere you go.

Piers is filmed driving along the Golden Mile, a stretch of road that passes through Marbella heading west towards Gibraltar, lined with The Marbella Club and the Puente Romano, two of Marbella’s most exclusive hotels. Yet if he’d have turned around and headed east towards Málaga, a different picture would have emerged, one of massive, unnecessary construction, vast tracts of empty apartment apartment blocks, homelessness, huge displays of graffiti telling of staff enduring 9 months of non-payment of salary at a luxury hotel (something I have experienced myself down here at an architecture firm called Diseño Earle) and masses of poverty. The average wage in the Málaga region is a little over 1,000€ per month. Given the kind of wealth on display on this show, you’d find that a little hard to believe. Piers does mention the over construction, but doesn’t go into the long term effects that it has clearly had on the economic landscape.

Unemployment in the province has nosed over 30%, shockingly high, but unsurprising given the amount of construction workers that migrated here during the boom.

In the show, an English couple were interviewed, claiming that Jesús Gil, one of the men behind the scandalous corruption of the Marbella town hall, was viewed as a “modern-day Robin Hood,” even going so far to say that the average Spanish person loves what has happened as he “created the thriving Marbella of today.”

Thriving Marbella? Not even close. Shops, bars and restaurants are closing left, right and centre. People are flocking back to their own countries in scores. The banks have nearly given up repossessing property because they’ve got too much. Thriving Marbella? That’s the biggest joke of all.

The couple interviewed, Michelle and Stephen Euesden, say all this as they are sipping wine in their hillside villa, whilst below, in the barrios, Spanish and English alike struggle to make ends meet every month thanks to the greed and extravagance of these kind of individuals. Their side of the story goes much like this: The over-development attracted thousands to the coast, money was brought into the area and the local economy was given a massive boost. In reality, what happened was lots of rich people got richer by under-paying their staff, denying them contracts and paying them in black money, essentially robbing off the local government of much needed social security contributions, and then when things got bad, fired the staff and hoarded their money, leaving masses of unemployment a practically deserted city and a crumbling economy. The town hall sold masses of land that wan’t theirs to sell, taking sizeable backhanders as they did so, whilst ignoring the things they should have been doing- improving life on the coast for everyone. Every piece of land they sold to developers was stolen from the local community, who were often employed by these developers who withheld wages as they went bust. The few involved got super rich, whilst little trickled down but hideous working conditions.

How they can sit their and give their “alternative view” of the corruption is simply disgusting. Tell that to the tens of thousands now out of work. Tell that to the victims of crime that the police are paid by the gangsters to ignore, tell that to the masses living in poverty. Tell that to the average person, who’s quality of life has been stifled thanks to the over-development destroying the local landscape. Tell that to their own employees, one ex-employee who I know personally, who described the working conditions at their newspaper as being “dreadful.”

So a modern day Robin Hood? A reverse Robin Hood more like – robbing from the poor to give to the rich.

The Marbella talked about in the show does exist, but it is supported by the working man, who is underpaid and exploited by greedy capitalists looking for the glamourous lifestyle and not wishing to contribute any work themselves. It’s a Marbella that is the minuscule minority – for everyone else here life is not all luxury and glamour and laziness. It’s hard work, a real struggle. Many who work here don’t get a contract. They don’t get bank holidays. They don’t get any kind of security for the simple reason that these people take more than their share.

For a supposedly socialist country, what happens in this town – the corruption of the town hall, the police being bought and sold and bribed, the exploitation of the working man, is simply shocking and disgusting. If Piers Morgan was worth his salt as a journalist, this would’ve quickly become the topic of the show.

There are 4 comments in this article:

  1. 2/03/2010Lenox reckons:

    The Euesdens bought my newspaper off me back in 2000 but never paid me, switching the name instead to The Euro Weekly.
    Thanks for exposing them.

  2. 3/03/2010sugarcane reckons:

    To be honest that doesn’t surprise in the least, Lenox. I wouldn’t put anything past people that could so outrageously defend a convicted criminal who robbed off of the local people to hand to the rich.

    Thanks for dropping by.

  3. 14/04/2010sugarcane reckons:

    I posted this comment to the Euesden’s blog, currently awaiting moderation. Let’s see if they open up for a bit of a debate:

    “Of course what you say in the interview is utter nonsense – the “standard spaniard” (whatever that might mean…) hates what Jesús Gíl and his cronies did to this coast: he robbed the local economy and a few people got rich whilst everyone else got poorer. Not to mention robbing the local community of open spaces thanks to the over-development the few profited massively from. Or the total ignorance of the local-infrastructure which was largely ignored, making the lives of the “standard spaniard” miserable as the speed of the over-development outpaced the growth of the road network. I could go on, the problems caused by the artificial boom the likes of Gíl created are too numerous to go into without writing a lengthy essay.

    I know this because I work with many “standard spaniards” who see the destruction caused by the corruption day in and day out in the barrios in and around Marbella. They certainly do not defend Gíl or any of the corrupt officials Marbella has endured.

    You should honestly be absolutely ashamed of yourselves for defending a convicted criminal.”

  4. 14/04/2010sugarcane reckons:

    Just checked and that comment has not been accepted. Clearly they are not interested in any debate, just selling a totally false image of Marbella and justifying their own greed.

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