Costa Blanca
Orlander Wellness Retreat in Benidorm

Benidorm is getting ready to host the Orlander Retreat 2025, an exclusive event for the LGTBIQ+ community that blends relaxation, personal growth, and well-being in a special setting. This vacation, which has become a go-to for people who want to get away from daily stress and get back in touch with themselves, will take place in Benidorm from February 21st to 24th, 2025.
This event began in 2018 and has already been held more than 16 times in Spain.
The Orlander Retreat lasts for several days and has a full schedule of activities meant to improve your physical, mental, and social health. Participants will be able to take part in workshops on group dynamics, self-knowledge, excursions, mindfulness, coaching, and personal growth. These workshops will be led by experts.
Who does the Orlander Retreat in Benidorm want to speak to?
The official website says that this retreat helps with many of the emotional and social problems that the LGTBIQ+ group faces. So, it’s aimed at people who have trouble making friends and finding good, long-lasting relationships that aren’t through a dating app.
It can also mean people who are worn out of places where sex and shallow fun are the main focus and want something deeper.
They also help people who feel alone and don’t fit in with LGTBIQ+ society. They also help people who want to find a safe place and don’t feel like they have like-minded people around them.
Orlander Retreat helps people who have worry or find it hard to interact with others deal with their feelings by focussing on the emotional side of things. Last but not least, they say, “At the Orlander Retreat, we encourage complete acceptance.” You can be yourself here because people will like you for who you are.
What does the Orlander Retreat in Benidorm have to offer?
In light of this, the withdrawal makes the following points:
Real connections with people who share your hobbies and values can help you build relationships that last.
A healthy and satisfying place to live, not just a pretty place to live.
Place where everyone feels welcome and safe and you don’t have to worry about being judged for being yourself.
Emotional and physical health: learn how to handle your feelings, get over social nervousness, and boost your self-esteem.
To reserve a place, as they are limited, those interested must complete a form on the official website by clicking https://retiro-orlander.com/
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Costa Blanca
Man stole fire extinguishers to sell as scrap metal

A 20-year-old male is currently under investigation by the Guardia Civil for the purported theft of ten fire extinguishers. The fire extinguishers were discovered by Seprona officers during an inspection of a scrap metal establishment in Torrevieja. The store manager and the criminal are both the subject of an investigation.
The fire extinguishers, which were in near-new condition and completely charged, were discovered by the Servicio de Protección a la Naturaleza (Seprona) officers during the inspection. The investigation was initiated due to the fact that this material is “uncommon” in this form of business, as explained by sources from the Armed Forces.
Upon discovering the fire extinguishers, the officers enquired about the scrapyard manager’s documentation regarding the extinguishers’ arrival. The manager responded that he did not possess any proof of ownership. Additionally, he disclosed that a woman and her son had abandoned them there without his permission.
The company responsible for maintaining the fire extinguishers was identified by Seprona officers after they analysed the evidence and proof acquired. This verified that the extinguishers were located in a building in Torrevieja. The missing equipment was reported by the property manager of this community of proprietors shortly thereafter.
Fire extinguishers were recovered
Officers were permitted to confiscate the fire extinguishers and transport them to the Torrevieja Civil Guard barracks as a result of the formal complaint. Upon verification of their origin, they were returned to their legitimate owners.
The individuals implicated have been identified as a result of the operation. The 20-year-old man who is supposed to have stolen the fire extinguishers is being investigated for theft, while the 23-year-old proprietor of the scrap yard is being investigated for receiving stolen goods.
The Guardia Civil emphasises the necessity of reporting these types of incidents and reminds all individuals of the significance of doing so. In order to prevent the acquisition of stolen material, scrap metal dealers must establish rigorous controls, such as document checks on sellers and items received.
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Man sought for robbery and fraud in Amsterdam has been caught in Alicante

In Alicante, officers from the National Police have apprehended a 22-year-old Spanish national. The Netherlands sought him as the purported perpetrator of fraud and theft of mobile phones. According to a statement from the National Police Headquarters, he made transactions totalling over €50,000 after unlocking the phones.
The National Police in Alicante was informed of the issuance of a European Arrest Warrant for Extradition by the Netherlands. The pursuit of the fugitive was initiated by investigators, and he was ultimately apprehended following the establishment of a police operation.
Arrested in the street
The detainee, who was apprehended while walking in Alicante, is accused of violently snatching mobiles from his victims in Amsterdam between late 2024 and early 2025, thereby committing at least three robberies.
The arrested man and his associates, it appears, confronted the victims under any pretext, engaging them in conversation to establish a climate of trust and disinterest. They violently seized the mobile phones they were holding and fled the scene at this juncture.
They subsequently exploited the unlocked phone to place numerous orders at department stores, which they would subsequently retrieve in person. The financial loss of €50,000 that these offences caused to their victims was in addition to the overall financial harm they inflicted.
The maximum sentence is twelve years
The suspect may be sentenced to a maximum of 12 years in prison in the Netherlands for these offences. This individual was apprehended as a result of the effective coordination and exchange of information between the National Police and law enforcement authorities in other countries.
The detainee, who had a criminal record in Spain, has been transferred to the Central Investigative Court of the National Court, the judicial body responsible for processing his extradition.
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Former commander of ETA, has denied any involvement in the 1995 attack on airport

Iratxe Sorzabal, a former ETA leader, has denied her involvement in the attacks and has claimed that her confession to that attack and 21 others, which were recorded in a ‘kantada’ (a handwritten note sent by ETA members to the gang’s leadership after their arrest), was obtained under torture. She is currently facing six years in prison.
This is the statement she made in response to her attorney during the trial at the National Court, which is currently preparing for sentencing. The Public Prosecutor’s Office is requesting a six-year penitentiary sentence for her.
Sorzabal, who wept as she recalled her second arrest in 2001 and her time in police detention, insisted that she began collaborating with ETA in 1996. However, she denied that she was a member of any commando group, as her responsibilities with the group included securing the border with France.
During her interrogation, the former ETA member disclosed that the Civil Guard subjected her to a variety of forms of torture after her arrest. She discussed electrodes that caused burns on her back, bags being placed in her mouth, and blows. This experience compelled her to disclose the information she was compelled to admit as her own in the “kantada” and during her incommunicado detention at police stations.
“I signed because I had not slept for two days,” he stated. He also took 28 photographs and offered to claim the attack on Carrero Blanco as his own, which elicited amusement from the officers.
The prosecutor in the case, Carlos GarcÃa Berro, maintained his request for Sorzabal’s sentence following his statement. He explained that in this case, there are only two essential pieces of evidence: the statement made by the ETA member herself and her ‘kantada’. He acknowledged the latter as valid, suggesting that the defence cannot assert that this handwritten note should be acknowledged in certain trials but not in others: “It is Schrödinger’s ‘kantada’.”
He emphasised that the document should be analysed independently of the police statement and the circumstances of the arrest in this regard. He described this type of note as genuine and spontaneous, as it was a “compulsory accountability by ETA.” Consequently, he disassociated this note from the police statement.
He also emphasised specific details about her, including the fact that she was recruited by her companion, Iñaki Tellechea, who was also a member of the gang, to join ETA in 1994.
Nevertheless, Sorzabal’s defence, which initiated its report by advocating for a complete acquittal, underscored that this is a case in which the detainee was subjected to torture, that a handwritten note containing an account of her statements at the police station is included as evidence, and that if this rant is attributed to Sorzabal, it cannot be used to secure her conviction due to the violation of her constitutional rights.
Consequently, he expressed his scepticism that Sorzabal would have composed that note if she had not been tortured and suggested that it is challenging to legalise evidence of this nature when the detainee’s fundamental rights have been violated. He added a final issue after elucidating the procedural loopholes that complicate the validity of the evidence: if it were a confession, it would also be invalid because it was made without the presence of a counsel and without the knowledge of her rights.
“The nullity of the evidence is the only viable alternative.” He also stated that they are attempting to convict using null evidence and a handwritten note that has been inadequately translated and misinterpreted.
Sorzabal is accused of placing an incendiary device at the Altet Airport in Elche (Alicante) on July 29th, 1995, according to the Public Prosecutor’s indictment. At 12:45 p.m. on that day, a cleaning lady was “emptying the trash can located in the tunnel connecting the parking lot with the passenger arrivals area” when she “observed a bag containing a package containing cables and a battery.”
“After being notified, the State Security Forces and Corps proceeded to cordon off the area, and the Tedax deactivated the device, which turned out to be composed of a digital clock, a 9-volt battery, 500 grammes of the explosive substance Ameritol, an electric detonator, and some cables,” according to the prosecutor’s office information.
The information provided indicates that “no personal or property damage occurred, even though the explosive device was placed with the aim of causing maximum damage to people and public and private property.”
This marks the second occasion in which Sorzabal has been dragged before the court this year. The former ETA leader was tried for an October 1995 attack at the Irún border crossing (Guipúzcoa) that damaged the Spanish customs office at the end of last February. She is currently facing a 12-year prison sentence for this offence.
Sorzabal, who is currently awaiting her sentencing, denied “everything” during her statement as the accused. The statement also examined the accused’s “kantada,” which includes assaults that, at the time of their recording, had no clear perpetrator, such as the two aforementioned.
The manuscript that the former gang leader recounted “is everything” she “was made to memorise, with every detail” at the police station maintained.
The significance of this “kantada” is that it references attacks that have not been prosecuted or ascribed, such as the one that occurred against a Mapfre branch in 1993. This is precisely the reason why the tribunal did not concentrate on the Irún attack, but rather on the validation or dismantling of the document’s content.
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