Portugal has been much in the international news
this year and most of the reports in the major papers have been positive.
When Portugal was rated number three in this year’s
Global Peace Index, published annually by the Australia-based Institute for
Economics and Peace, the Sydney Morning Herald was naturally
among those quick off the mark to list the results.
While noting that Portugal was up one place from
last year and now third behind Iceland and New Zealand, the newspaper
quoted the institute’s founder as saying that of the 163 countries monitored
over the past decade, 80 had become more peaceful while 83 had become less so.
The Washington Times had to admit that the
United States had dropped four places since last year and was now rated 128th
in the global index.
October’s general election in Portugal was
extensively covered and, even though Prime Minister António Costa’s
party failed to win an outright majority, the
Guardian pointed out that the Socialists’ victory cemented modest
gains across the European Union for the centre-left, which has suffered a
disastrous few years of fallout since the 2008 financial crisis.
The Financial Times emphasised that
the re-election of Prime Minister Costa was the latest sign of a
resurgence among Europe’s traditional social democratic parties following
worries for the centre-left in Denmark, Spain, Finland and Sweden.
“In Portugal it’s heaven. The rest of Europe has
gone crazy” made a catchy headline in the Sunday Times. It
was referring partly to the fact that the global financial crisis had brought
Portugal to its knees, yet a decade later the country was booming thanks to a
left-wing government.
The paper went on to quote Portugal’s Finance
Minister Mário Centeno as claiming: “We’re
growing faster than all average-sized countries in Europe”.
Various editions of Forbes
Magazine have been raving about the Algarve as one of the best places in
the world to retire to and Lisbon as one of the best places to invest in
property.
An Irish Independent journalist
commented that 50 km west of Faro, “popular resorts give way to crumbling,
iron-stained cliffs and expensive villas constructed on land now protected from further development by strict planning
regulations”.
Bloomberg had plenty to say about
property and declared that Portugal was Europe’s hottest property market but
that it was getting too hot for some buyers. It attributed this to Portugal
sticking to its golden visa programme even though locals are being squeezed.
An article in the New York Times focused on
the Alentejo region and in particular the village of Melides, which is being
transformed “as a wave of super affluent Europeans — artists, bankers, actors
and sports stars — have discovered this extraordinarily beautiful spot”.
The paper went on to tell its readers that Melides:
“happens to sit in the middle of a 40-mile stretch of nearly untouched Atlantic
Ocean beaches, and at the edge of hundreds of square miles of cork oak fields,
vineyards and rice fields”. Melides and the rest of the Alentejo coast, it
said, is what St. Tropez used to be in the
1950s, “before Brigitte Bardot, or Ibiza – before the
first wave of summer partyers ever heard of the Mediterranean hot spot”.
The Wall Street Journal came up with
another secret hideaway for the elite: Comporta in
the municipality of Alcácer in the district of Setúbal. Apparently it has been
attracting vacationing royalty, politicians and celebrities, but for
decades this 18-mile stretch of coastline has remained largely undeveloped. The
paper reckons that international developers are aiming to capitalise on the
area’s growing popularity by launching new resort and residential projects.
Tourism for ordinary folk with tighter budgets has
also taken up a lot of newspaper space this year. All-inclusive holidays
have become increasingly popular, especially in the Algarve.
“All-in on the Algarve proves to be easy-going
family fun”, according to the travel section in the Times. It gushed
about “sunshine, entertainment on tap and no money headaches” on an
all-inclusive visits.
A couple of years ago the Boston Globe ran a
story explaining why Portugal was such a hot holiday destination: “Relatively
affordable with fascinating history and even a little Harry Potter must-visit
mystique, is why this tiny country is suddenly on everyone’s lips”.
Holiday recommendations have been just as
enthusiastic this year in other papers. For example, “Golden beaches, low prices. Portugal's mostr beautiful seaside destinations for a final of summer, made a helpful headline in
the Daily Telegraph.
A seven night, half-board B&B offer at £416 per
person was on offer in the Belfast Telegraph, which waxed lyrical about
the Algarve’s coast and country, described the region as one of the most
popular holiday destinations in Europe, with modern resorts offering every
amenity a holidaymaker could wish for, as well as historic washed towns
and fishing ports, full of tradition and atmosphere.
If they didn’t already know it, Belfast readers
learned that resorts here offer “an abundance of great bars, shops, cafés and
restaurants, while trips to colourful local markets provide an entertaining and
rewarding pastime. With warm sunshine”.
Summer is the ideal time for most holidaymakers
to enjoy this most appealing and lively destination, but the Irish
Independent had some other timely advice: it’s good to visit the Algarve
out of season for those who seek tranquillity. For one thing, it’s easy to hire
a car “unhindered by August’s intense heat and traffic gridlock”.
The Mail Online travel section suggested
that holidaymakers “savour the Algarve at its authentic best, from
sensational seafood to some of Europe's best coastal walks”.
A guide in the Toronto Globe and Mail rated
all parts of Portugal north to south as “a foodie’s paradise” and went
into detail why.
Occasionally, foreign newspapers quite correctly
come up with stories involving serious misadventure or crime in this country,
but the Scotsman ran a remarkably positive article on drug
addiction, entitled “Why Scotland can ill afford to ignore Portugal’s
ground-breaking war on drugs”. The award-winning columnist wrote that it was
the lack of moral judgment, even more than the headline-grabbing
decriminalisation, that defined Portugal’s much-lauded drugs policy.
The gist of her article was that, as the country
with the highest number of drugs deaths in the EU, Scotland is desperate for
answers – and perhaps Portugal can
provide some of them.
Oh, and by the way, the Straits Times in
faraway Singapore was one of the highly reputable newspapers to remind readers
in October that 34-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo had just scored his 700th goal in
a dazzling career. Never mind that Portugal lost the game 2-1.
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