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Dutch technology for a smart loading and unloading pilot project in Alcoy

Alcoy has established a smart loading and unloading pilot project at the Rodes Urban Technology Park. The City Council’s Urban Sandbox created this first international project in conjunction with the Dutch startup Coding the Curbs, a European leader in digital urban road space management. This programme, which is free of charge to the city council, is being developed by the company with a Dutch government grant.

In addition, four parking places for people with limited mobility have been fitted with sensors, two on Calle Sant Antoni and two on Calle Sant Joan, to collect real-time data on usage patterns and peak demand. This programme will enable the City Council to make data-driven decisions on accessibility and parking policies.

The pilot will operate until January 2026. Beginning in the summer, preliminary data from the three test sites will influence conversations about potential expansions to additional places in the municipality, as well as the changes required to optimise its execution.

Digitally controlled loading and unloading


The smart loading and unloading zone is digitally managed and allows logistics and delivery businesses to reserve it via an online portal, thereby optimising the use of this type of public space. In addition, during the trial time, anyone can make a reservation to test how it works.

The technology allows customers to reserve a parking space for 30 minutes by visiting the online platform—via a website, without needing to install an app—or scanning a QR code at the place. If the spot is available, the app confirms the reservation and allows you to use it at that time.

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Signage and road markers clearly identify the test sites, and IoT sensors have been integrated to offer real-time availability information. This enables drivers to schedule their deliveries ahead of time or alter their routes on the fly, resulting in increased logistical efficiency and reduced vehicle traffic congestion. The pilot test will assess both the deployed sensors and the company’s software in a real-world scenario, with the Local Police and the Alcoy City Council’s Mobility Department collaborating.

The initiative is part of Alcoy’s Local Green Deal (LGD), which encourages more sustainable urban development models. It is also the first international collaboration under the city’s Urban Sandbox policy, which focusses on experimenting in real-world settings and agile innovation to address key urban concerns.

Coding the Curbs, founded in Amsterdam in 2020 as a collaboration between The Future Mobility Network and Fronteer, has expanded its activities to cities such as Utrecht, Groningen, Rotterdam, and Copenhagen, and participates in benchmark programmess such as YES! Delft, the DMI Ecosystem of the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure, and the EIT Urban Mobility network of the European Institute of Technology.

Iskandar Tange, the company’s CEO and co-founder, travelled to Alcoy recently with Jaap Tjebbes, project manager and product manager, to oversee the installation of the pilot area, which is located on Agres Street, across from the Rodes Technology Park, with municipal specialists.

Toni Francés, the mayor of Alcoy, stated that with this project, “Alcoy strengthens its commitment to open urban innovation and establishes itself as a real testing ground for technological solutions applied to the city.” We are dedicated to developing more efficient, sustainable, and accessible urban environments, and this project allows us to test and evaluate solutions that can be extended to other parts of the municipality or even reproduced in other cities.”

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Couple arrested for subjecting their three-year-old to female circumcision

The National Police have arrested a 38-year-old man and a 26-year-old woman in Elche (Alicante) on suspicion of committing a serious injury crime after discovering evidence that their daughter, a minor under the age of three, had undergone genital surgery that resulted in irreversible injuries.

The matter was brought to the attention of the National Police in Elche after a request from the Court of First Instance and the Juvenile Prosecutor’s Office, as well as a report written by professionals at the city’s health centre.

According to the report, during a normal medical check of the three-year-old girl, scarring physical indicators were discovered that may match to a traditional technique known as female genital mutilation, which is still practised in several African countries.

The educational and healthcare personnel conducted the evaluation as part of routine medical procedures, without any prior suspicions. The minor arrived in Spain in May 2024 and was legally residing with her parents.

The National Police investigation revealed that during the minor’s care and interviews with the parents, the father admitted that the intervention on the child occurred within the framework of a cultural belief but did not provide specific details about the time or location of the intervention.

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However, every piece of evidence gathered by police officials suggested that the act occurred outside of Spain. The inquiry also helped investigators identify the offenders, allowing them to locate and arrest the couple in Elche. The two arrested are being probed for a crime involving serious bodily harm. Both appeared before the Elche Duty Investigative Court.

The National Police warn everyone that any act that violates the physical or moral integrity of minors is a serious breach of Spanish law, regardless of the culprits’ cultural or personal backgrounds.

Child protection is ensured by national legislation and international treaties that Spain has signed. Respect for cultural and religious traditions must always be tempered by adherence to Human Rights, as enshrined in the Universal Declaration of 1948.

States have a commitment to protect the well-being, safety, and dignity of all minors, without exception.

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Crime fell by 5% during the first quarter of 2025 in the Valencian Community

The crime rate in the Valencian Community decreased by 5% in the first quarter of this year compared to the same period in 2024, making it the region with the second-largest decline in criminal offences, trailing only Catalonia (6%).

Between January and March, 66,659 crimes were perpetrated in the Valencian Community, compared to 70,179 criminal offences recorded in the same months the previous year.

In Spain, the rate fell by 2.8% in the first quarter of 2025, but rapes grew by 7.6%, as did drug trafficking (4.9%) and attempted murders (19.9%).

According to the Ministry of the Interior’s first quarter of 2025 report, a total of 589,683 criminal offences were registered in the first three months of the year, with 468,104 of them being conventional crime (79.4%) and the balance being cybercrime.

The traditional crime rate, at 40.6 offences per thousand residents, is one of the lowest in historical records and one of the lowest in the world, following a 3.2% decrease in these crimes in March.

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Online crimes are at 9.5 per thousand inhabitants, a 1.2% drop

In reality, cyber fraud (87.8% of all cybercrime) declined by 3.5% in March, confirming a shift in the increasing trend that began in 2011 and ended for the first time in 2024.

The Interior Ministry emphasises the progress of this crime over time, noting that it climbed nearly sixfold between 2016 and 2024, when it increased by 488.3%.

Rapes are increasing, but at a lesser rate.

Penetrative sexual assaults increased again to 1,242 in the first three months of the year, 7.6% more than in the same time in 2024. Other crimes against sexual freedom also climbed, this time by 2.5%.

The growth rate for all offences against sexual freedom is 3.8%, which is lower than in previous years, as the year-on-year increase between 2023 and 2024 was 5.7%. In a statement, the Ministry of the Interior relates these figures to policies aimed at raising awareness and reducing tolerance for these crimes, which leads to more reports.

84 completed homicides and 319 attempted homicides up to March

In the first three months of 2025, there were 84 intentional homicides and completed murders, a reduction of 11.6%. In contrast, attempted homicides and murders rose by 19.9%, to 319.

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Crimes of bodily harm and rioting also climbed by 2.1% compared to the same time in 2024, totalling 6,374. Kidnapping figures remained constant, from 28 in the first quarter of 2024 to 26 in the first quarter of 2025.

There is more drug trafficking and fewer robberies

Drug trafficking offences rose by 4.9% in the first quarter, reaching 5,287. The Ministry of the Interior credits this increase to the operations of the State Security Forces and Corps as outlined in specific programmes such as the Special Security Plan for Campo de Gibraltar.

Because very few complaints are lodged in this area, the Interior Ministry considers the increase to be an “indicator of police activity against this type of crime.”

On the other hand, all property crimes, which make up 42.5% of all conventional crime, fell by 5.3%.

Consequently, there was a decrease in robberies involving violence and intimidation (-9.4%), robberies involving force in residences, establishments, and other facilities (-14.3%), thefts (-3.3%), and car thefts (-3.2%).

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Autonomous communities commit crimes


Catalonia (-6%), the Valencian Community (-5%), and the Region of Murcia (-3.9%) are the autonomous communities with the highest reductions in crime during the last year.

It also fell in the Canary Islands (-3.8%), the Community of Madrid (-3.5%), the Balearic Islands (-3%), the Basque Country (-1.8%), and Andalusia (-0.6%), among other areas.

Castile and León, on the other hand, has had the greatest increase in crime in the first three months of the year, up 5%. Ceuta followed with a 3.3% increase, while Asturias saw a 2.8% gain. Crime rates have also risen in Aragon (2%), Extremadura (1.4%), and Galicia (1%).

The Interior Ministry’s statistics include data from the National Police, the Civil Guard, regional security forces, and numerous local bodies.

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Former hair salon employee arrested, accused of stealing 2,800 euros and threats to kill

National Police Car

The National Police have arrested a former employee of a hair salon in Alcoy on charges of stealing 2,800 euros from the company’s accounting book and threatening to kill his former employer and set fire to the property.

The investigation began after the proprietor of this establishment filed a complaint, claiming that a former employee, whom he had fired and paid severance compensation to a few days prior, issued these threats after discovering that he had seemingly kept the money. According to a police statement, the accused also told the victim that he had nothing to lose and planned to flee to his home country following the incident.

Officers from the Alcoy Police Station’s Judicial Police Brigade conducted a series of checks before apprehending the accused, who was charged with misappropriation of property and making threats.

Following police investigations, the 32-year-old man appeared before the Alcoy investigative court.


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