- Business
- Childbirth & Education
- Legal Formalities
- Motoring
- Other
- Pensions & Benefits
- Property & Accommodation
- Taxes
- Airports and Airlines Spain
- Paramount Theme Park Murcia Spain
- Corvera International Airport Murcia Spain
- Join us for Tea on the Terrace
- When Expat Eyes Are Smiling
- Meet Wincham at The Homes, Gardens & Lifestyle Show, Calpe
- QROPS 2014
- Spain Increases IHT in Valencia & Murcia
- Removals to Spain v Exports from Spain
- The Charm of Seville
- Gibraltar Relations
- Retiro Park : Madrid
- Community Insurance in Spain
- Calendar Girls
- Considerations when Insuring your Boat in Spain
- QROPS – HMRC Introduces changes that create havoc in the market place
- QROPS – All Change From April 2012
- Liva & Laia : 15th November
Madrid asked London for additional information on the July 20 incident. "We are going to request explanations and clarifications from the British authorities," a spokesperson for the Spanish Foreign Ministry told the press.
Spanish authorities have complained that London failed to tell them that HMS Ambush, an Astute-class nuclear fleet submarine of the Royal Navy, was undergoing training close to Gibraltar, a British Overseas Territory that Spain claims as its own. But London does not appear to think that it is necessary.
"We are not obliged to inform the Spanish Government about the movements of our Royal Navy vessels in international or UK territorial waters," the Gibraltar Chronicle quoted an unnamed source in Whitehall as saying.
Gibraltar became part of the UK in 1713 and Madrid has tried to return the peninsula ever since.
Meanwhile, several members of the UK Parliament, led by Filton and Bradley Stoke MP Jack Lopresti, wrote a letter to NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, urging him to "take notice" of Spain's "increasingly unreliable" behavior with regard to Gibraltar, the Sunday Express reported.
The MPs, according to the newspaper, accused Madrid of "constant unlawful incursions" into Gibraltar waters. They have also been discontent that Spain has prohibited US warships from docking in the Gibraltar Harbor, but has allowed Russian ships to refuel and resupply at the port city of Ceuta that is located less than 20 miles from Gibraltar.
More than 50 Russian ships, including warships, submarines and amphibious vessels, are reported to have visited Ceuta since 2011. The visits do not violate international law, but they have caused outrage in the UK, US and beyond in the months after relations between Moscow and NATO went into deep freeze following the outbreak of the civil war in Ukraine and Crimea's democratic reunification with Russia.
Recommended Reading :
* Spain demands explanation over British Nuclear Submarine collision off Gibraltar
* British Foreign Secretary reassures Gibraltar over it's future