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Orihuela woman dies because ambulance took too long to arrive

SAMU Ambulance

On Monday, 24th March, a 24-year-old lady passed away at her residence in Rincón de Bonanza’s Orihuela sector. According to her family, the National Police arrived earlier than the SAMU (National Emergency Medical Services), which took forty minutes to arrive.

Her uncle, Juan Ramón, says about the stressful and, most importantly, excruciating periods they went through while making a valiant attempt to escape the suffering and remember the terrible events that occurred only two days later. NAV was prescribed a pain reliever after visiting the emergency room of Vega Baja Hospital that morning for sciatica and everything going smoothly. The young lady had never experienced any health issues before. At approximately 1 p.m., his niece passed out and fell to the ground. She was talking and conscious. She informed him that her grandmother and partner were there. She lives next door, so it just took him a few seconds to get there.

After that, she experienced cardiac arrest. While the ambulance awaited its arrival, her uncle and partner both administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation. “We both knew how; I learnt in the military, and he had worked in an ambulance,” Juan Ramón adds. He claims that they attempted to resuscitate her for almost thirty minutes before National Police officers showed up there and removed them due to their weariness. “Our whole bodies hurt,” he remembers saying.

As Juan Ramón watched his niece “was losing consciousness, she was fading little by little, her pulse was losing its hold until she was left with her eyes open and glassy, in the void, with her face white and her lips purple,” he laments that the health services had asked her on the phone up to three times if she had her health card on hand.

He maintains that the ambulance “should have taken 10 minutes at most,” given that it is located on the road that links Vega Baja Hospital and the urban area. But for some reason, it took more than forty.

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He states in a weak voice that this is the reason she wants to make the world aware of “what’s happening, not just for my niece, for whom nothing can be done,” but “because until it affects you, you’re not aware, but it can happen to anyone.”

She called 112 at 1:07 p.m., according to her story and the call record on her mobile phone, and gave them all the information they asked for—with the exception of her health card, which she was missing at the moment.

Three minutes after that, his niece passes out. When he gets a call at 1:12 p.m. asking for the SIP once more, Juan Ramón responds that his niece has gone into cardiac arrest and reiterates that he doesn’t have that information. He also insists that they are performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation on her and asks that they move quickly because she is in cardiac arrest.

He gets another call at 1:20 p.m. confirming that they are unable to locate his niece’s details. Once more, Juan Ramón introduces them to his niece. It seems that their last name was incorrect. They affirm that they have located her a few seconds later. She is in cardiac arrest, Juan Ramón confirms. They take him to a doctor, who enquires about his niece’s health. The doctor is surprised that they are able to do cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) when he responds that they are.

A number of National Police patrols came about 1:25 p.m. Because they had been warned that the victim was conscious, the officers did not have a defibrillator, therefore they relieved Juan Ramón and NAV’s partner to continue CPR. Because they were within a short distance from the police station when they received the warning, one of the policemen objected.

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An ambulance came at approximately 1:45 p.m. and took over for at least another 45 minutes, utilising all available resources, after another 15 minutes of taking turns giving CPR. However, the death was confirmed around 2:00 p.m. without any success.

The first contact, which was received at 1:03 p.m., described a woman who had fallen, was experiencing dizziness and breathing difficulties, according to the Emergency Information and Coordination Centre (CICU). At 1:05 p.m., an ambulance from the Basic Life Service was sent out.

The call was categorised as priority 1 at 1:09 p.m. when the caller dialled 112 once more, stating that they were performing basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation. While they were familiar with the approach, the CICU offered to help guide the resuscitation manoeuvres while they mobilised a SAMU unit.

According to CICU sources, the Medical Service for the Uninfected Mumps (SAMU) was already providing assistance at 1:24 p.m. Advanced cardiac resuscitation and other recovery measures were administered by the medical team, but no reaction was observed.

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The notice was also given to the local health centre’s doctor. At the same moment as the SAMU (National Health Service), he and a nurse came in their vehicle. “The Orihuela Health Department is fully booked every day because there is only one SAMU (National Health Service), one less than the number of staff it has been assigned for the past three years,” says the medical expert, who has spent 23 years working in the local health centres.

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In 2022, the Valencian Community’s urgent and non-urgent land medical transport service specifications established four medicalised units in the region, two in each of the two health areas (Orihuela and Torrevieja). However, the specifications failed to consider that the one on the Orihuela coast, which is located in Torrevieja due to its proximity, actually has three.

This “error” means that in reality, a department with a protected population of 180,000 people—including Orihuela (without the Coast), Albatera, Algorfa, Almoradí, Benejúzar, Benferri, Bigastro, Callosa de Segura, Catral, Cox, Daya Nueva, Daya Vieja, Dolores, Granja de Rocamora, Jacarilla, Rafal, Redován, and San Isidro—has only one medicalised ambulance.

In July of last year, the Vega Baja Hospital’s UGT union branch notified management of the situation and asked that “this service, which we so desperately need, be restored as soon as possible.” As of yet, there has been no settlement.


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Costa Blanca

Fire in Benidorm sees two being treated for smoke inhalation

SAMU Ambulance

On Friday afternoon, April 4th, a fire at a residence on Avenida del Mediterráneo resulted in the transfer of a 73-year-old resident and a 43-year-old local police officer from Benidorm to the Marina Baixa Hospital in La Vila Joiosa.

Yesterday, Saturday April 5th, the Emergency Information and Coordination Centre (CICU) reported that a SAMU unit and a Basic Life Support (BLS) unit responded to the fire site at approximately 7 p.m. The two individuals who sustained inhalation injuries were subsequently taken to hospital.


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Costa Blanca

ETA member who was accused of planting a bomb at Alicante airport acquitted

Original Alicante Airport

Iratxe Sorzábal, a former commander of the ETA, has been acquitted by the National Court of the charge of placing an explosive device at the Alicante-Elche airport. Tedax deactivated the device, and the prosecution requested a six-year penitentiary sentence for the unsuccessful attack.

The primary piece of evidence was a handwritten letter that the Public Prosecutor’s Office attributes to Iratxe Sorzábal. The letter acknowledges the facts. The sentence states that the authorities issued a handwriting expert report that analysed several documents discovered in France, including the “kantada” that was attributed to the defendant. The Chamber further states that “this handwriting expert report, dated May 20, 2008, was ratified in the investigation phase before the Court; however, the Public Prosecutor’s Office did not propose it as evidence subsequently.” Consequently, the court emphasises that this discrepancy was the result of the absence of substantiation for a critical piece of information, namely the authorship report.

The court stated that it cannot be regarded as evidence against the defendant because it was not brought to trial and has not been subjected to a contradiction between the parties.

The court also considered the fact that Iratxe Sorzábal’s defence had explicitly challenged the report, claiming that she did not recognise the document as her own and had not written it.

The court also underscores that the authors of the police intelligence report, which analysed the existence and components of ETA’s Ibarla commando, its activities, and the details of the assaults it committed, were not proposed to testify at the trial. The existence and components of ETA’s Ibarla commando were analysed in this report, which was compared to documents discovered in France.

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The ruling cautions that the report could have provided insight into the potential authorship of the explosives placed at the Alicante airport, in contrast to the defendant’s denial of any involvement.

Iratxe Sorzábal, who served her initial sentence in France in the late 1990s for her involvement with ETA, was extradited to Spain in 2001. Despite her efforts to avert the extradition through a hunger strike, which she defended by citing the potential for mistreatment by Spanish law enforcement, she was extradited.

Following her release in September 2001, she re-entered ETA and was apprehended in 2015 in France, this time in the company of erstwhile ETA leader David Pla.

For the first time in Spain, she was sentenced to 24 and a half years in prison in 2022 for a double assault that occurred in November 1996 in Gijón, targeting the Palace of Justice and a pharmacy.

The National Court reopened the investigation into the 1996 murder of Montxo Doral, a non-commissioned officer of Ertzaintza. The Basque Autonomous Police have attributed the crime to a commando unit under the command of Sorzabal.

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In June 2006, the Paris Criminal Court sentenced her in absence to three years in prison for her membership in ETA’s political apparatus. She was again sentenced in her absence in 2013 at the trial in which her daughter’s father, former ETA leader Mikel Carrera Sarobe Ata, was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of two Guardia Civil officers in Capbreton in 2007.


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Costa Blanca

Van falls into a ditch on a closed street in Crevillente

On Wednesday afternoon, April 3rd, a van was ensnared in a ditch that had been opened by roadworks on Calle Santa María de la Cabeza, which is located in the centre of Crevillent (Alicante). Witnesses reported that the driver entered a road that was clearly marked as closed for maintenance work at approximately 7:59 p.m., which is when the incident occurred.

The white van, which entered the construction site, came to a halt on its side after one of its wheels tumbled into the ditch in the centre of the road, as seen in the photograph. The incident elicited enthusiasm among passersby, who approached to enquire about the situation. Construction workers and security personnel intervened to facilitate the vehicle’s removal.

The images illustrate the peril that unauthorised access to streets that have been closed for public works can pose, despite the fact that the driver’s condition has not been disclosed and no injuries have been reported.


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