LUXURY RETREAT SPECIALIST

Sunday 27 May 2012

Times are desperate in Spain. The Sun is setting on expats' Costa dreams

Posted On 04:05 by Reportage 0 comments

 

It was sundowner time at the Cantina tapas bar in the picturesque village of Frigiliana, a few miles inland from the Costa del Sol town of Nerja. Inside, local men were watching bullfighting on television and smoking cigars in quiet contravention of the smoking ban. Outside, expatriate Britons were discussing the vagaries of living in Spain while downing glasses of tinto de verano, the popular summer drink of red wine and lemonade. Mark Jones, who runs his own gardening and pool maintenance company, had spent two days queuing at the local municipal office to renew his residence permit. "I got there at 9am on the first day and my number was 26; by lunchtime they were only up to number 6 and they close at 2pm," he complained. "You have to renew every bit of paper here every few years but I can't afford two days off to queue in an office. There are no staff now because of the cuts, so it all takes longer. It's like everywhere – as soon as the recession hits, it's the immigrants who cop it worst."  Conversation turned to a local couple, who are desperate to leave Spain but who can't because their house is still unsold after four years on the market - despite dropping the asking price from €1 million to €750,000. In 1992 the BBC spent millions of pounds launching an ill-fated soap opera, Eldorado, following the fortunes of British expats on the Costa del Sol. The project flopped and was cancelled a year later. Now, 20 years later, the real-life diaspora is experiencing an equally disastrous end to its Iberian dream. Times are desperate in Spain. More than a million people took the streets earlier this month to protest at budget cuts, 24 per cent unemployment and the rising cost of living. The price of milk and bread has risen by 48 per cent during the last year, according to a recent study, and of potatoes by 116 per cent. Electricity bills are up 11 per cent while property prices are in free fall; they have declined for 15 consecutive quarters and are 41 per cent lower than in 2006. Several of its banks are faltering: this weekend Spain's government is preparing to pump a further €19 billion into Bankia, the country's fourth-largest lender, in the biggest single bank bailout in the country's history. Trading in the bank's shares was suspended on Friday until negotiations over the rescue were complete. Santander, Europe's largest bank, was among 11 Spanish financial institutions to be downgraded by the credit rating agency Standard and Poor earlier this month; and there's no sign of anything like economic recovery on the horizon. Expats are finding life hard in a country where they once basked in a cheaper way of life. Around one million Britons spend part or all of the year in Spain, but thousands are now returning home – and more want to, but say they can't afford to because their property is no longer worth what they paid for it. For the first time since 1998, Spain recorded a drop in foreign residents last year, according to newly released figures. With its narrow cobbled streets, whitewashed houses and children riding horses down the main road, Frigiliana lives up to most tourists' idea of an authentic Spanish village. But appearances can be deceptive. Out of its 3,000-strong population, 1,280 are foreign nationals including 700 Britons, making the village one of the most expat-dominated in Spain. The school advertises itself as bilingual. The British population is so large that the local council pays Kevin Wright, a former travel rep from Leicestershire who has lived in Spain for more than 20 years, to run a "foreigners' department". He helps expats deal with everything from local business permits to burst pipes and land disputes with neighbours, and has noticed changes since the eurozone crisis began. "Before, I was getting 10 newbies a week moving here from the UK; now I get one," he said. "Some Brits have lived here for 20 years but now families move out here then six, eight months later pack up and go back because they can't find work, or didn't realise what the cost of living would be." Mr Wright says many Britons fail to learn Spanish or to assimilate, so that the community becomes dependent on itself – to its cost. "People think they can set themselves up doing business to other Brits, like finance or house sales and rentals, or pool maintenance, gardening and cleaning. "But the property market isn't there any more and people have cut back and do their own maintenance, so there's less work." In desperate economic times, the expat community is increasingly vulnerable to financial trickery. "The worst people for scamming you are other Brits," said Gary Smith, a builder, who emigrated two years ago. "You trust them more but they just take your money for an investment and you never see a penny." Elderly residents are particularly vulnerable. The exchange rate - still far less favourable than five years ago - has meant British pensions and other income in sterling do not stretch as far as they once did. Julia Hilling moved from the UK to Fuengirola, along the coast from Frigiliana, 20 years ago with her husband. They bought a spacious, three-bedroomed apartment with two balcony patios in an upmarket area, overlooking the town's castle. Six years ago, Mrs Hilling, by then a widow aged 83, was persuaded by an independent financial adviser to take out a full mortgage on the apartment. She was told the equity raised would be invested, risk-free, to provide an income, while the mortgage would help offset Spain's 34 per cent inheritance tax when she died. Now 89, Mrs Hilling has never seen any return on her money, owes more than €300,000 to Rothschild Bank on the mortgage and relies on handouts from her children to stay in Spain. "It's devastating," she said. "The man was British, very charming, and said there was no risk. My children said 'Mummy, please don't do this', but I needed the extra income. Now I'm fighting for my life and my home." She is one of more than 100 mainly elderly British expats who have banded together in a Spanish court action to have their mortgages voided, arguing they were mis-sold. Rothschild and several Scandinavian banks also named in the legal action claim the financial advisers are to blame; and the advisers, who are not regulated in Spain as they are in Britain, insist the risk was mentioned in the small print. In a country fighting for its own survival, Spanish politicians are not unduly concerned with the plight of British residents, particularly when many are retired so do not actively contribute to the national economy. Spain's government is currently involved in a dispute with Britain over extent of free health care for Britons under EU law and there are moves to force them to pay 10 per cent of their prescription costs. But for some, returning home remains unthinkable. Former fitness instructor and gym owner Jo Morrison, 49, moved to Spain from London with her partner Lloyd 11 years ago. In 2008 she sold her house in Putney so she could open a gym in Nerja but the project failed after her business partner pulled out, and then the global financial crisis erupted. She now works as a cleaner while renting a one-bedroom home. "Sometimes we've gone without food and I still can't believe that I don't have my house or any savings any more," she said. "But Spain is my home now. I'd rather sleep on the beach than go back to the UK."


Friday 25 May 2012

Bankia shares are suspended in Madrid

Posted On 08:51 by Reportage 0 comments

Trading in shares in the Spanish lender Bankia have been suspended in Madrid. The market regulator CNMV said it was "due to circumstances that may affect the normal share trading". Bankia is reported to be due to ask the government for a bailout of more than 15bn euros ($19bn; £12bn) after a board meeting later on Friday. Bankia, which is Spain's fourth-largest bank, was part-nationalised two weeks ago because of its problems with bad property debt. Any extra government money would be on top of the 4.5bn euros in state loans that the government had to convert into shares in the group in the part-nationalisation process. Shares in Bankia's parent company Banco Financiero y de Ahorros (BFA) have also been suspended. Bankia was created in 2010 from the merger of seven struggling regional savings banks. It holds 32bn euros in distressed property assets.


Thursday 17 May 2012

Spain beset by bank crisis, recession, bond pressure

Posted On 22:20 by Reportage 0 comments

Spain's borrowing costs shot up at a bond auction on Thursday, after economic data confirmed the country is back in recession and a report of an outflow of deposits from nationalised Bankia hammered its share price. Madrid approved plans by the country's heavily-indebted autonomous regions to make budget cuts worth 18 billion euros this year, and a government source said Bankia would present a plan for its restructuring next week.


Monday 7 May 2012

Vinnie Jones favourite for kidnapper role in true-life Costa tale

Posted On 13:47 by Reportage 0 comments

A SENSATIONAL new film is planned about the dramatic kidnap of a five-year-old expat on the Costa del Sol 25 years ago. The movie – with could star British actor Vinnie Jones – tells the story of the incredible rescue of Melodie Nakachian, who was snatched at gunpoint on her way to school. Written by expat Paul Grimshaw – who is about to shoot another gangster flick Shill, also starring Jones – it will recall the kidnap, which became international news in 1987. It happened as terrified Melodie was dragged at gunpoint from her car on her way to Aloha College, in Marbella. An agonising three days later, Melodie’s father – rich Lebanese businessman Raymond Nakachian – received a call from one of the kidnappers. The distressed father was told that if he wanted to see his daughter alive, he would have to cough up 1.5 million pesetas in cash (the equivalent of nine million euros today). Nakachian, constantly pursued by the police and media, negotiated with the French and Spanish kidnappers to bring the ransom sum down, pleading for proof his daughter was alive. The kidnappers responded with photos of the tot clutching the day’s newspaper, and chillingly, locks of her dark hair and voice recordings. Meanwhile Melodie’s distressed mother, a south Korean singer known as Kimera, released an appeal, transmitted on TV across Europe. After setting a date for the handover one of the kidnappers made an unthinkably stupid mistake while out jogging on the beach. Clumsily, he dropped his wallet which was later picked up by a passer-by and handed to police. Inside were details including the girl’s name, a draft of the ransom note and – crucially – details of where she was being held. Finally, 12 days after she was abducted, a dawn raid involving 100 police rescued Melodie from the kidnapper’s hideout in nearby San Roque. “Don’t cry, Mummy, I’m all right,” Melodie reportedly told her mother as her father brought her home, ending her terrifying ordeal. The story is being developed by scriptwriter Grimshaw, 45, from Cheshire. Now based in Calahonda, he is working closely with the family, who still live on the Costa del Sol, in Benahavis. “I’ve been in a lot of discussions with them and have met Melodie,” he said. “It will make a great film and Vinnie’s manager says he is very interested. “The energy behind Shill has given us a platform to develop the idea of bringing the story of Melodie back to life,” he added.


Spain to present new bank clean-up measures

Posted On 13:44 by Reportage 0 comments

Spain's prime minister said Monday the government will likely present important bank clean-up measures this week to clear up doubts about the solvency of the sector — a key source of worry over whether Spain might need a financial bailout. Mariano Rajoy gave no details but said he would not rule out lending, or injecting public money into the sector if necessary. "The last thing I would do would be to inject or lend public money but if it is necessary I would not hesitate to do it, just as other European countries have done," Rajoy told Onda Cero radio in an interview. He said the measures would almost certainly be presented after Friday's weekly Cabinet meeting. Rajoy's comments came after El Pais newspaper said the government was preparing to help out troubled lender Bankia SA. Spain's real estate bubble burst in 2008, saddling banks with enormous amounts of bad loans as unemployment rose and people could not pay their mortgages. The Bank of Spain says the sector has about €175 billion ($230 billion) in "problematic" holdings. Bankia is known to be among the worst hit. The government has forced banks to strengthen their finances by merging and setting aside some €50 billion ($66 billion) more in provisions this year to cover toxic assets. The Economy Ministry last week said Spanish banks were studying creating a separate entity — a "bad bank" — to take on these assets. Rajoy has regularly denied Spain needs a "bad bank." Spain's is at the center of Europe's debt crisis with investors concerned about its ability to push through austerity measures and reforms at a time of recession and with unemployment above 24 percent. The measures are aimed chiefly at slashing the government's deficit from 8.5 percent of economic output to below the maximum level set by the European Union of 3 percent by 2013. For this year, the goal is 5.3 percent.


Sunday 6 May 2012

Brink's Mat the reason that Great Train Robber was shot dead in Marbella

Posted On 11:49 by Reportage 0 comments

The Brink’s-Mat curse even touched on the Great Train Robbery gang of 1963. One of them, Charlie Wilson, found himself in trouble when £3 million of Brink’s-Mat investors’ money went missing in a drug deal. In April 1990, he paid the price when a young British hood knocked on the front door of his hacienda north of Marbella and shot Wilson and his pet husky dog before coolly riding off down the hill on a yellow bicycle.


Saturday 5 May 2012

British tourist falls to her death from hotel balcony in Magalluf

Posted On 16:32 by Reportage 0 comments

23 year old British tourist has fallen to her death from the third floor balcony of her hotel in Magalluf, Mallorca. Emergency sources said it happened at 4.25am Saturday morning at the Hotel Teix in Calle Pinada. Local police and emergency health services went to scene. After 20 minutes of an attempt to re-animate her heart, the woman was pronounced dead. Online descriptions for the Hotel say it is the best place to stay of you are looking for non-stop partying, adding it not suitable for families.


Friday 4 May 2012

Greek far-right parties could end up with as much as 20 percent of the vote in Sunday's elections. The neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party has intensified the xenophobic atmosphere in the country.

Posted On 09:47 by Reportage 0 comments

At night, the streets leading to Omonoia Square are empty. That wasn't always the case. The area was the premier multicultural neighborhood of Athens and one of the first quarters to be gentrified. Jazz bars and Indian restaurants lined the streets, separated by the occasional rooms-by-the-hour hotel. It was a quarter full of immigrants, drug addicts and African prostitutes, but also of journalists, ambitious young artists and teenagers from private schools. Today, the immigrants stay home once night falls. They are afraid of groups belonging to the "angry citizens," a kind of militia that beats up foreigners and claims to help the elderly withdraw money from cash machines without being robbed. Such groups are the product of an initiative started by the neo-Nazi Chrysi Avgi -- Golden Dawn -- the party which has perpetrated pogroms in Agios Panteleimon, another Athens neighborhood with a large immigrant population. There are now three outwardly xenophobic parties in Greece. According to recent surveys, together they could garner up to 20 percent of the vote in elections on Sunday: the anti-Semitic party LAOS stands to win 4 percent; the nationalist party Independent Greeks -- a splinter group of the conservative Nea Dimokratia party -- is forecast to win 11 percent; and the right extremists of Golden Dawn could end up with between 5 and 7 percent. My name is Xenia, the hospitable. Greece itself should really be called Xenia: Tourism, emigration and immigration are important elements of our history. But hospitality is no longer a priority in our country, a fact which the ugly presence of Golden Dawn makes clear. A Personal Attack Shaved heads, military uniforms, Nazi chants, Hitler greetings: How should a Greek journalist deal with such people? Should one just ignore them and leave them unmentioned? Should one denounce them and demand that they be banned? One shouldn't forget that they are violent and have perpetrated several attacks against foreigners and leftists. I thought long and hard about how to write about Golden Dawn so that my article was in no way beneficial to the party. On April 12, the daily Kathimerini ran my story under the headline "Banality of Evil." In the piece, I carefully explained why it was impossible to carry on a dialogue with such people and why I thought the neo-Nazi party should disappear from media coverage and be banned. Five days later, an anonymous reply to my article appeared on the Golden Dawn website. It was a 2,500-word-long personal attack in which the fascists recounted my entire career, mocked my alleged foreign roots (I was born in Hamburg) and even, for no apparent reason, mentioned my 13-year-old daughter. The unnamed authors indirectly threatened me as well: "To put it in the mother tongue of foreign Xenia: 'Kommt Zeit, kommt Rat, kommt Attentat!'" In other words, watch your back. Most Greeks believe that Golden Dawn has connections to both the police and to the country's secret service. Nevertheless, I went to the authorities to ask what I should do. I was told that I should be careful. They told me that party thugs could harass me, beat me or terrorize me over the phone. It would be better, they said, if I stopped writing about them. If I wished to react to the threats, they suggested I file a complaint against Golden Dawn's service provider. That, however, would be difficult given that the domain is based somewhere in the United States. Like Weimar Germany A friend told me that I should avoid wearing headphones on the street so that I can hear what is going on around me. My daughter now has nightmares about being confronted by members of Golden Dawn. Three of her classmates belong to the party. The three boys have posted pictures of party events on their Facebook pages. For their profile image, they have chosen the ancient Greek Meandros symbol, which, in the red-on-black manifestation used by Golden Dawn, resembles a swastika. The group's slogans include "Foreigners Out!" and "The Garbage Should Leave the Country!" The fact that immigration has become such an issue in the worst year of the ongoing economic crisis in the country can be blamed on the two parties in government. The Socialist PASOK and the conservative Nea Dimokratia (New Democracy, or ND) are running xenophobic campaigns. ND has said it intends to repeal a law which grants Greek citizenship to children born in Greece to immigrant parents. And cabinet member Michalis Chrysochoidis, of PASOK, has announced "clean up operations" whereby illegal immigrants are to be rounded up in encampments and then deported. When he recently took a stroll through the center of Athens to collect accolades for his commitment to the cause, some called out to him: "Golden Dawn has cleaned up Athens!" Yet, Chrysochoidis is the best loved PASOK politician in his Athens district, in part because of his xenophobic sentiments. His party comrade, Health Minister Andreas Loverdos, is just as popular. Loverdos has warned Greek men not to sleep with foreign prostitutes for fear of contracting HIV and thus endangering the Greek family. High unemployment of roughly 22 percent, a lack of hope, a tendency toward violence and the search for scapegoats: Analyses in the Greek press compare today's Greece with Germany at the end of the Weimar Republic. "We didn't know," said many Germans when confronted with the truth of the Holocaust after Nazi rule came to an end. After elections on May 6, no Greeks should be able to make the same claim.


Locked Up Abroad is different.

Posted On 05:57 by Reportage 0 comments

Reality TV is, at its core, about letting viewers revel in the bad decision-making of others: those who speak without thinking, who backstab, who have sex without condoms, who cheat. Frustratingly, though, reality shows—to which I am unapologetically addicted—tend to reward bad behavior, by giving its villains notoriety, spinoffs, opportunities to endorse weight-loss products, a nice sideline in paid interviews with supermarket tabloids, and other D-list rewards.

Locked Up Abroad is different. The National Geographic show, the sixth season of which premiered last week, gives its stars something they wouldn’t get on other reality shows: their comeuppance.

Having debuted in the U.K. (under the title Banged Up Abroad), Locked Up Abroad showcases one person (sometimes a couple) who ends up in prison overseas. Participants fit into one of two categories. The first group are the (largely) innocent: the married missionary couple who were kidnapped in the Philippines by the Islamist group Abu Sayyaf, for instance, or the seemingly goodhearted duo who wanted to help children in Chechnya, but ended up held hostage. These tales of the altruistic and naive can be difficult to watch.

But then there are those who rather deserve what happens to them. Typically these are drug smugglers, and their episodes follow a familiar arc. A young person—they’re almost always young—is bored or in need of cash (usually both). She is desperate or feels invincible (usually both). Someone approaches her and offers a seemingly great deal: an all-expenses-paid, luxurious overseas trip in exchange for a small favor. Sometimes the would-be employer is upfront and admits he needs a drug mule, but downplays the risk; other times, he hints at harmless-sounding illegalities, like bringing back legal goods to beat the export tax. In a few cases, the cover story is painfully thin: Come with me to check out this cool new nail polish technology only available in Thailand, for example. (That woman was in a vulnerable place: She had just been released on bail after killing her partner’s former husband—in self-defense, she claimed.)

The drug smugglers are caught, of course, usually at the airport, and brought to prison. And while a few episodes have taken place in developed countries—Spain, Japan, South Korea—the majority of our anti-heroes end up incarcerated in places with some of the dirtiest and most dangerous penitentiaries in the world.

Take last week’s episode, “From Hollywood to Hell.” (And pardon my spoilers, but this installment is too good not to describe in detail.) In 2001, actor Erik Aude was living the marginal Hollywood dream. An ür-bro, he had played bit parts in Dude, Where’s My Car?(credited as “Musclehead”) and 7th Heaven (“Boyfriend”) when a gym buddy asked him to go to Turkey to bring back “leather goods.” Aude makes the trip, and though a drug-sniffing dog alerts authorities at the Turkish airport, they find nothing—so Aude feels sure the whole thing is legit. He even recommends that one of his brothers start couriering for his friend. Then, when his brother backs out of a planned trip to Pakistan in 2002, Aude steps in, and shit gets real.

It is difficult to feel sorry for Aude. After his escort dumps him in an Islamabad hotel and warns him not to leave because the area is unsafe for Americans, he doesn’t head to the embassy or the airport. Instead, he goes jogging—and even tries to flirt with girls in headscarves on the street (with disastrous results). And when he is taken to the airport with just one suitcase, he is (he claims) not the least bit suspicious that he might be a drug mule. When a customs official asks him whether his trip was for business or pleasure, he cheeses, “Pleasure is my business.”

Aude’s episode is mind-bogglingly watchable, not least because he—of course!—plays himself in the re-enactment. In his telling, he was a virtual action star: On at least three occasions, he single-handedly fights back dozens of Pakistanis. After he takes out a prison bully, he is hailed a hero. He rejects a reduced sentence because it would require him to plead guilty—and his pride is more valuable than his freedom, he says.

Aside from those truly in the wrong place at the wrong time, the most sympathetic characters of Locked Up Abroad may be the embassy employees called in to assist the suspected smugglers. Inevitably, Locked Up Abroad participants are horrified that the embassies of their homelands—usually English-speaking countries like the U.S., the U.K., or Australia—can’t do more for them. I can just imagine U.S. Embassy workers calling “not it” every time they get word from local authorities about some young American knucklehead who thought he could sneak past security with a bag full of cocaine.

Tonight’s episode is called “The Juggler Smuggler,” and its “hero” is Mark Greening, a “party-loving” drug-runner who knows his latest trip is “doomed” when he doesn’t get his fortune told by “his favorite Gypsy woman.” I can’t wait.


Low fare airline bmibaby to close

Posted On 05:45 by Reportage 0 comments

Low fare carrier bmibaby is set to close later this year, threatening the loss of hundreds of jobs and the ending of its flights. The carrier transferred to International Airlines Group, the owners of British Airways, last month, but consultations have now started with unions about its closure in September. The GMB union said it was "devastating" news, especially for the East Midlands, where hundreds of jobs are now threatened with the axe. With bmi Regional, bmibaby transferred to International Airlines Group ownership on completion of the purchase from Lufthansa. IAG has consistently said that bmibaby and bmi Regional are not part of its long-term plans. A statement said: "Progress has been made with a potential buyer for bmi Regional, but so far this has not been possible for bmibaby, despite attempts over many months by both Lufthansa and IAG. Bmibaby has therefore started consultation to look at future options including, subject to that consultation, a proposal to close in September this year." Peter Simpson, bmi interim managing director, said: "We recognise that these are unsettling times for bmibaby employees, who have worked tirelessly during a long period of uncertainty. Bmibaby has delivered high levels of operational performance and customer service, but has continued to struggle financially, losing more than £100 million in the last four years. In the consultation process, we will need to be realistic about our options. "To help stem losses as quickly as possible and as a preliminary measure, we will be making reductions to bmibaby's flying programme from June. We sincerely apologise to all customers affected and will be providing full refunds and doing all we can with other airlines to mitigate the impact of these changes." Jim McAuslan, general secretary of the pilots' union Balpa, said: "This is bad news for jobs. Bmibaby pilots are disappointed and frustrated that, even though there appears to be potential buyers, we are prevented from speaking with them to explore how we can contribute to developing a successful business plan. "The frustration has now turned to anger following the news that Flybe (which is part owned by BA) has moved onto many of these bmibaby routes without any opportunity for staff to look at options and alternatives. Balpa's priority is to protect jobs; and we will use whatever means we can to do so." The changes mean that all bmibaby flights to and from Belfast will cease from June 11, although this will not affect bmi mainline's services to London Heathrow. Bmibaby services from East Midlands to Amsterdam, Paris, Geneva, Nice, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Newquay, and from Birmingham to Knock and Amsterdam, will end on the same date.


Wednesday 2 May 2012

No sunny delight for Arantxa in Marbella

Posted On 14:53 by Reportage 0 comments

TENNIS great Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario enjoyed the Marbella sunshine, despite her team losing in a major tennis tournament. The Spanish captain praised the local fans despite being beaten by the Slovak Republic in the Fed Cup play-off. “Playing at home is great, and we could hear the Spanish crowds supporting us,” the three-times French Open winner told the Olive Press at the Puente Romano Tennis Club. Unfortunately the Spaniards, up against a Slovak team containing two world top 20 players, were eventually outdone – thereby losing their place in the Fed Cup’s top group. It was an all round better tournament for Slovak player Daniela Hantuchova, who spent the following day lying on Marbella beach.


The Only Way is Essex star showed off her slender new figure in the Marbella sunshine yesterday

Posted On 14:50 by Reportage 0 comments

Frankie Essex has won her fight with the flab, shedding a whole stone in just two weeks.

The Only Way is Essex star showed off her slender new figure in the Marbella sunshine yesterday - just a fortnight after she started a gruelling diet and exercise regime in a desperate bid to swap her muffin top for a toned tummy.

And while Frankie may not have managed a six pack, all that sweat and starvation clearly paid off as there was barely a stretch mark or inch of fat on show.

Frankie Essex

Tanned and toned: Frankie Essex showed off her slender new physique on holiday in Marbella

Frankie piled on the pounds during a recent trip to Miami with TOWIE co-star Lauren Goodger.

The pair overindulged during their American vacation and made a pact to lose weight when they returned.

They started following the Cambridge Diet Plan, dropping their calorie intake to just 400 a day.

 

Frankie Essex
Frankie Essex

'No carbs before Marbs': A combination of diet and exercise helped Frankie shed a stone in two weeks

Frankie Essex 

Miami vice: The TOWIE star decided to diet after piling on the pounds during a trip to Florida

And Frankie signed up the services of personal trainer and Big Fat Gypsy Wedding star Tony Giles to whip her into shape.

Frankie and Tony were photographed on April 17 working out in an Essex Park.

She seemed well aware of her excess weight, grabbing her belly while exercising and pinching the fat on her thighs.

Sitting pretty: Frankie looked very toned and tanned as she lapped up the sunshine

Sitting pretty: Frankie looked very toned and tanned as she lapped up the sunshine

What's wrong? Frankie checks out the marks left by her bikini bottoms as she rearranges her swimwear

What's wrong? Frankie checks out the marks left by her bikini bottoms as she rearranges her swimwear

Golden brown: Frankie does her best to ensure an even tan as she soaks up the sunshine

Golden brown: Frankie does her best to ensure an even tan as she soaks up the sunshine

Tony - who is engaged to glamour model Danielle Mason - put Frankie through her paces making her do star jumps and squats, before strapping on boxing pads and sparring with her.

She clearly stuck to the work out sessions and the diet shakes.

Frankie showed off the effects of her weightloss during a night out in Marbella on Sunday night, posing with friends and TOWIE co-stars Billi Mucklow, Cara Kilbey in a trio of red, white and blue matching bandage dresses from Celeb Boutique.

Lauren Goodger proudly displayed her own diet efforts during a night out on April 23.

 

 

Frankie Essex

Frankie Essex

Frankie EssexFighting fit: Boxer & Big Fat Gypsy Wedding star Tony Giles whipped Frankie into shape
Fighting fit: Boxer & Big Fat Gypsy Wedding star Tony Giles whipped Frankie into shape

Fighting fit: Boxer & Big Fat Gypsy Wedding star Tony Giles whipped Frankie into shape 

She looked back to her slender best, but revealed she still wants to lose two stones before she'll venture back into a bikini.

She said: 'I want something quick because I’m going away again soon. 

'I want to go to Marbella and Ibiza and when I’m walking around I want everyone to go, ''My God, have you seen Lauren?''

'The quick fix will act as a motivator for me.'

Sunseekers: Frankie, Cara and Billi sip wine and soak up the sun in Marbs

Sunseekers: Frankie, Cara and Billi sip wine and soak up the sun in Marbs

 

Bashful: Frankie and Cara cover up their curves from the cameras

Bashful: Frankie and Cara cover up their curves from the cameras

Healing her broken heart: Billi Mucklow, Cara Kilbey and Frankie Essex at TIBU nightclub in Marbella

Red white & blue: Billi Mucklow, Cara Kilbey and Frankie Essex pose during a night out in Marbella on April 29





The Only Way Is Essex stars head to Marbella for the ‘sexiest ever’ show

Posted On 06:47 by Reportage 0 comments

STARS of The Only Way Is Essex are promising sizzling scenes when they hit Marbella later this month. 37 comments Related Stories Bit nippy in Marbs Maria? FORMER The Only Way Is Essex star Fowler has a swimwear malfunction on hols TOWIE'S Sam and Joey are back onDavid Cameron throws in TOWIE Bed-hopping not the only wayLauren finds a Good outfit Essex stars told to behave TV Biz told last month how bosses planned a special in the Spanish resort. Yesterday they confirmed that Lucy Mecklenburgh and boyfriend Mario Falcone, James Argent and his ex Lydia Bright, and Sam Faiers and her on-off-on again fella Joey Essex would all be flying to the sun. So it will definitely be “no carbs before Marbs”, as they famously say in Towie, for that lot. One name missing is Lauren Goodger. She’s being left at home after a row with producers. They will meet her this week to discuss her future on the show. An insider said of the special, to be shown this summer: “Those who have been chosen to go to Marbella can’t wait. “The girls have pledged it will be the sexiest Towie ever, with lots of bikinis and bare flesh on show. “There will be a lot of boozy partying and cameras will follow them 24/7 for a week.” All eyes will be on Lucy — she cheated on Mario with Mark Wright in Marbella last year when members of the cast were enjoying their hols in the sun.