Saturday, May 9 · Day 24
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The Almaria Herald

“The truth, carefully.”

The Thread · The Estrella Quarantine · Entry 4 of 6

Port Sanitation Council to report Sunday as fuel vote holds to Monday

Port Sanitation Council to report Sunday as fuel vote holds to Monday

The Council's brief has quietly widened to cover both vessels, and the Chamber has left its Monday sitting untouched despite a fragile ceasefire in the eastern basin.

By V. Aldama·From edition 24, Politics

The Port Sanitation Council will deliver its preliminary report on the Estrella de Poniente and the Estrella de Llevant on Sunday evening, a sitting before the Chamber's fuel vote on Monday morning. The sequencing — first the epidemiology, then the reserve — was confirmed on Friday by officers familiar with both files, and has not been contested from either front bench.

At the Clínica Sant Cardenal Marín, four patients remain under observation from the Llevant cluster, and seven further contacts from the Poniente are kept under watch at Sant Miquel. One case is in isolation. The Ministry of Health, activating the National Epidemiological Surveillance Protocol this week, has designated the clinic on Carrer de la Llum a screening centre for the roughly two hundred and forty travellers who disembarked at Cordoba Harbour from the relevant itinerary.

The Council's mandate has quietly enlarged. What opened as an inquiry into a single vessel at berth seven now covers two hulls, two manifests, and the contact lists of both. Officers have declined to be drawn on whether the report will recommend an extension of the quarantine cordon or a release of the Poniente's lower decks; the document, we are told, will be brief and will name no persons.

The fuel file, meanwhile, has not moved. Corridor surcharges remain near eighteen per cent, a figure firm since the armed incidents in the eastern basin earlier this month. The Foreign Ministry's summons of the two belligerent envoys produced, on Friday, a three-day ceasefire brokered by a third party — fragile, conditional, and greeted by the Ministry with what Cardenal Marín, in his capacity as Foreign Minister, called a measured relief. Shipping through the Port of Almaria Vella has fallen nearly twelve per cent since winter; a pause, even a brittle one, is not nothing.

Neither the Government nor the Opposition has asked for deferral of the Monday vote. The Harbour Authority has, however, requested refiled routing declarations from carriers using the corridor, a technicality with expensive consequences for any operator whose paperwork does not match the week's patrols.

Don Rafael Castellan-Varro, addressing supporters on Friday evening, framed the sequence as a test. "Monday's vote is not a procedural matter. It is a question of whether this Kingdom still knows how to govern itself." The Nationalist leader's remarks are treated elsewhere in this edition.

What remains, for the Chamber, is a narrow corridor of its own: a report on Sunday, a vote on Monday, and a northern tariff file waiting in the sitting after. The calendar has been arranged so that none of these questions may be answered without reference to the others.

— Filed for Politics, edition 24.