Costa Blanca
Torrevieja installs two more fixed speed cameras

The Torrevieja City Council is installing two additional cameras to accommodate fixed radar devices for vehicle speed control in the city centre.
They are situated on Avenida Alfredo Nobel, opposite the Mar Bella senior residence, on the road that connects the Los Locos seashore with the Torre del Moro area, north of the town centre, which has been finished.
It has also been installed on Avenida de Baleares, near the green zone owned by Minister José Ramón Garcia Antón, and near the intersections with Calle Córcega and Tenerife. These streets are connected to the educational centres: IES Mediterráneo, La PurÃsima, and Colegio Público Virgen del Carmen.
In addition to another mobile radar device, the City Council will now have five booths for two fixed radar devices, following the acquisition of two booths and a radar. The acquisition, which cost nearly €58,000 (VAT included), was awarded to SICE, the same company that performs street lighting maintenance.
The two fixed devices that are adaptable to the kiosks are relocated on an ad hoc basis or throughout the year, contingent upon the Local Police’s requirements. As a result, drivers are unable to determine if they are actively participating. The new booths and radar necessitate a period of testing, calibration, and authorisation; consequently, they will not be implemented immediately. Activation may necessitate several months.
Safety on the road
Before this installation, the Traffic Department had already implemented signage enhancements on this section of Alfredo Nobel Road to mitigate speed. Educational radars were employed to alert drivers, who in this instance tended to accelerate in the direction of Torre del Moro-Playa de Los Locos, in the region commonly referred to as Las Calas.
The same action was taken at the other kiosk locations, including Avenida de Desiderio RodrÃguez in San Roque, Avenida de las Cortes Valencianas, and Avenida d’Gregorio Marañón at Acequión beach, more than a year ago. The radar has enabled the reduction of speeds in urban areas to below 40 kilometres per hour in areas where accidents, particularly those involving pedestrians, have resulted in severe injuries and fatalities.
Penalties
The imposition of hundreds of sanctions of no less than €200 has more than offset the investment of over €60,000 for the first three-cabin radar implemented since mid-2023 and continuing throughout 2024. The most frequently imposed fines are €300, €400, and €500. Concurrently, municipal technical services field numerous appeals each month.
The technicians responsible for the contract have stated that the new acquisition will enhance road safety in the city, which “will undoubtedly result in a decrease in accidents in Torrevieja.”
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Costa Blanca
One dead migrant and 16 others dehydrated on boat found 62 miles off Alicante

Javea Maritime Rescue The Spanish Navy has rescued 16 sub-Saharan migrants from a small boat 62 miles off the coast of Alicante, as well as the corpse of another migrant who died during the crossing from Algeria to the Alicante coast. The information collected indicates that the 15 individuals who were rescued are in poor health and dehydrated as a result of their approximately 15-day period of adrift.
The Red Cross and the SAMU (National Rescue Service) were responsible for the treatment of the rescued migrants in Alicante, who were located 42 miles from Javea. Two of them have been transferred to a hospital, and two more are anticipated. The majority of the individuals who were rescued, including several minors, are from Somalia, while one individual is from Nigeria.
According to the Red Cross, the health status of those who are still receiving care is severe, with the majority exhibiting acute symptoms of dehydration, incisions, and infections. The volunteers who are assisting the migrants at the port of Alicante stated that they are extremely frail and can scarcely stand.
The individuals who were rescued disclosed that they embarked on a voyage from the coast of Algeria and were subsequently shipwrecked during the crossing. They were adrift in extreme conditions for approximately fifteen days, without food or water, according to their testimony. As a result, they were compelled to consume urine. According to the Red Cross, “One of the individuals consumed toothpaste due to a lack of alternatives and a reluctance to relinquish control of the boat upon its arrival.”
After the boat was observed on the high seas by air, the Salvamar Fénix of Maritime Rescue, which is stationed in the port of Javea, was mobilised at midday. Upon their arrival at the precarious vessel’s location, they discovered that one of the 17 migrants on board had passed away.
The Salvamar Fénix was directed to the port of Alicante, where it anchored at the Temporary Assistance Centre for Foreigners (CATE), and the remaining individuals were transferred aboard.
The National Police have reported the death of one of the immigrants to the duty court in order to facilitate the arrival of the judicial commission at the port to remove the body and subsequently transmit it to the Alicante Institute of Forensic Medicine.
The Red Cross has also mobilised its response team, and the CICU has dispatched the SAMU (National Emergency Medical Service) in response to the fragile health of the rescued individuals.
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Costa Blanca
Nuca, the turtle rescued two months ago in Torrevieja, returns to the sea

Nuca, the sea turtle that was rescued in February of last year after becoming ensnared in the port of Torrevieja (Alicante), returned to the sea yesterday, Thursday May 8th, after finishing her recovery process at the Oceanogrà fic de Valèncià ’s ARCA del Mar.
According to a council statement, the mayor, Eduardo Dolón; the councillor for the Environment and Beaches, Antonio Vidal; the municipal biologist, Juan Antonio Pujol; the president of the Real Club Náutico Torrevieja (RCNT), Carlos Carmona; and the veterinary team from the Oceanogrà fic Foundation participated in the release from a boat in the waters off Torrevieja.
The municipal biologist and the RCNT were commended by Dolón for their efforts in recovering Nuca, as well as the Oceanogrà fic team, for enabling the turtle to return to the waters from which she was rescued. He anticipates that she will soon return to the Torrevieja coast to deposit her eggs on one of its beaches.
A delicate rescue and a complete recovery
Earlier this year, the turtle, which has been named Nuca, was discovered swimming within the port of Torrevieja. Subsequently, they ensnared it and found it consuming the remnants of fishing activity.
The severity of its condition was confirmed by the capture of the animal, which was conducted by specialised divers from the Oceanogrà fic Foundation with the assistance of the municipal biologist and the Real Club Náutico Torrevieja. A previous injury had amputated one of its fins, and a hook had lodged in its oesophagus.
After his transfer, the Oceanogrà fic veterinary team used an endoscopy to remove the hook and started treatment to ensure his recovery. The positive development of Nuca in the past few months served as confirmation that he was capable of returning to the sea.
Veterinarians implanted a satellite transmitter into him prior to his immersion in the water, which will enable them to track his movements in real time. The objective is to gather data on his movements following rehabilitation and analyse his behaviour to enhance the protection strategies for this species.
The Biodiversity Foundation of the Ministry for Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge is supporting this conservation initiative within the framework of the PRTR, which is funded by the European Union-NextGeneration EU.
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Costa Blanca
80-year-old woman dies on a beach in Los Alcázares

While bathing in the sea atLos Narejos, a municipality of Los Alcázares, an 80-year-old woman passed away on Thursday.
At 1:33 p.m., the Emergency Coordination Centre of the Region of Murcia received a call informing them that a lifeguard had initiated cardiopulmonary resuscitation manoeuvres after several individuals rescued an incapacitated bather from the water.
A patrol from the Civil Protection of Los Alcázares has arrived at the location of the Civil Guard and a Mobile Emergency Unit, which is staffed by health personnel from the Emergency and Health Emergency Management 061. Despite their efforts, they were unable to save the victim.
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