
-
From 'mob wives' to millennials: Faux fur is now a fashion staple
-
'Really suffocating': Pakistan emerges from record smog season
-
Moscow targeted by 'massive' Ukrainian drone attack
-
Trump says will buy a Tesla to show support for Musk
-
South Korea's Kia denies responsibility for anti-Musk ad
-
Moscow targeted by 'massive' Ukrainian drone attack: mayor
-
Buzzed: Fans lift Alcaraz as he makes bee-line into last 16
-
North Korea taekwondo supremo that Austria can't kick
-
Alcaraz powers into Indian Wells last 16, Sabalenka, Gauff, Keys advance
-
Philippines' Duterte earned international infamy, praise at home
-
Greenland votes under shadow of Trump
-
Guatemala volcanic eruption deemed over after spewing lava, evacuations
-
Australia to play England in historic day-night Test at MCG
-
Kung fu girl group puts fresh spin on ancient Chinese art
-
Ex-Philippine president Duterte arrested for crimes against humanity
-
Military chiefs in Paris to discuss Ukraine security guarantees
-
Jokic dominates Thunder as Nuggets bounce back
-
Asian markets track Wall St selloff as Trump-fuelled economy fears build
-
Indian artisans keep traditional toymaking alive
-
Arrest of pro-Palestinian activist sparks outrage, Trump says 'first of many'
-
Syrian presidency announces agreement to integrate Kurdish institutions
-
Ukraine to present US with Russia partial truce after row
-
Pelicans to become first NBA team to play in Australia
-
Dalai Lama book offers 'framework' for after his death
-
Argentina searches for baby, sister swept away by floods
-
US-bound Afghans left 'without options' as Trump travel ban looms
-
Maradona medical team on trial four years after icon's death
-
Dortmund Champions League hopes in the balance ahead of Lille return
-
Australian snowboarder Brockhoff breaks back in World Cup crash
-
120,000 properties still blacked out in storm-hit Australia
-
Sabalenka, Gauff, Keys advance at Indian Wells
-
US capital scraps Black Lives Matter mural after Trump pressure
-
Search ends for missing crew member after North Sea collision
-
Yankees ace Cole to have season-ending elbow surgery: club
-
Yankees ace Cole facing season-ending surgery: report
-
Russian oligarch's superyacht could be auctioned in US
-
Newcastle sink West Ham to boost top four bid
-
Ratcliffe underlines desire for new Old Trafford
-
Keys survives Mertens to reach Indian Wells fourth round
-
Trump's energy chief vows reversal of Biden climate policies
-
Stars hop aboard for train-inspired Louis Vuitton show
-
One missing after cargo ship, tanker collide in North Sea
-
Colombia urges UN to remove coca leaf from harmful substances list
-
French parliament adopts bill to bring back village bars
-
Carney vows 'quick' transition to new Canada government
-
Winner of PSG's Liverpool clash will reach final says Luis Enrique
-
Liverpool need best display of season to beat PSG: Slot
-
Pope still improving, Vatican eyes end of hospitalisation
-
What we know about the North Sea tanker collision
-
'Not good enough' and 'overpaid': Ratcliffe slams Man Utd flops

Tension in Spain over use of EU recovery funds
The Spanish government is increasingly under fire over its use of the European Union's massive economic recovery funds, with critics blasting the distribution of aid as too slow and arbitrary.
Spain is due to receive 140 billion euros ($160 billion) from the fund by 2026, half of it in grants, making it the programme's second-biggest beneficiary after Italy.
The landmark 800-billion-euro recovery plan was approved by Brussels in July 2020 to help the bloc rebound from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, and make its economy greener and more digitalised.
"We are talking about extraordinary amounts," Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said earlier this month, calling the funds "a historic opportunity for Spain".
Spain and Portugal were the first nations to receive money, with Madrid collecting 19 billion euros during the second half of 2021.
The funds are at the heart of the economic and political strategy of Sanchez's government after the economy contracted by a whopping 10.8 percent in 2020 under its watch as the pandemic hit.
The government faces elections by the end of 2023.
But some business leaders and opposition parties have complained about a lack of coordination between the central government and Spain's powerful regions over the deployment of the money.
- 'Lack of leadership' -
Although Spain was the first to receive aid, the money was "not injected" as fast as expected in the "real economy", the CEOE employers' association said in a report in early January.
By the end of the year, only 38 percent of the funds allocated to Spain for 2021 had been used, official figures show.
This is "very far from the targets" that were set and the delay in using the aid will hamper growth, think-tank Funcas has warned.
Aerospace giant Airbus complained of a lag in the allotment of the funds, citing a "lack of coordination and leadership" from the responsible ministries, according to an internal memo published in El Pais newspaper last month.
Critics also say that even when the money is distributed, it is often not well spent, with small amounts spread across many projects.
"The current assignment system for the funds" leads to their "dispersion" and favours "little projects", some of them "a bit odd," said the Exceltur tourism association's vice president, Jose Luis Zoreda.
He cited as an example a golf course in the rainy northern region of Asturias.
To have a "real impact", the funds should focus on "a few large projects" with a strong potential to "transform" the Spanish economy, he added.
- 'Cruising speed' -
The row has in recent days become political, with the right-wing opposition Popular Party (PP) accusing the government of favouring regions and municipalities run by the left.
"Two years ago we proposed setting up an independent agency for managing EU funds" as happened in Greece, Italy and France, PP leader Pablo Casado said.
"But Sanchez preferred to distribute aid arbitrarily," he charged.
Casado and several right-wing regional leaders have threatened to take the government to court over the distribution of the EU money, accusing it of "favouritism".
But Sanchez quickly hit back.
"Let's not turn the European funds into a partisan question... which is what the opposition wants," Sanchez said Monday during a news conference with visiting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
Economy Minister Nadia Calvino, who served as director general in charge of the EU budget from 2014 to 2018, dismissed the PP's criticisms as "not relevant".
The deployment of European funds will achieve its "cruising speed" in 2022, she added.
T.Bondarenko--BTB