Soltalk December 2018 | Page 18

Speed reduction The maximum speed limit for cars on Spain’s secondary roads will be reduced to 90 kph from January 1, with vans, lorries, buses and coaches restricted to 80 kph. At present, unless otherwise stated, the limit is 100 kph. The country’s traffic authority, Tráfico, believes a ten kph reduction in speed will reduce road deaths by ten per cent. Tolls ending Tolls on the AP-1 autopista have ended. Spain’s socialist government said last month it would abolish all toll motorways once their existing operation concessions expire, starting with the AP-1 with effect from December 1. The AP-1, known as the Autopista del Norte, runs for 87 kilometres starting near Burgos and crossing the Basque mountains, ending in Eibar. Different scores A gang caught growing cannabis in Alicante were discovered to have been playing classical music to their plants 24 hours a day. Huge plantations were discovered in warehouses which experts say would have produced four crops a year, each netting about €80,000. Five Spanish, German and Swedish music- loving nationals were detained by police. Amazon bug Amazon Spain has warned customers not to click on any link or open any attachment in an email which purports to be from them. Doing so takes users to an apparently authentic Amazon page but which really is being operated by fraudsters which asks for confidential data to be input. More information on the Amazon site titled Proteger tu sistema (Protect your account). Amazon strike Meanwhile, Amazon’s packaging and delivery staff in Madrid plan further strikes during the festive period. After the breakdown of negotiations, stoppages are planned on December 6, 7 and 8, followed by December 15 to 30, and January 3. Unions say new working conditions and salary rates are illegal as they are worse than those currently in place. Protective pet A 25-year-old man in Tarragona received dog bites to the nose and arm last month when he attacked his girlfriend, the animal’s owner, during an argument. The pet then stood guard over her growling, and giving her enough time to call the police. The boyfriend was arrested and his victim admitted he had been abusing her physically and psychologically for over a year. Another delay for new Health Centre Yet another problem has hit the lengthy project to build a long-awaited new health centre in Nerja. It was in 2003 that the then mayor, José Albert Armijo, signed a deal with the regional government to go 50-50 on the estimated €2.4 million which it would cost to build a new facility, but since then, several sites have been considered and rejected as political wrangling continued. In 2010, Nerja Town Hall ceded land near the town centre to the Junta de Andalucía and spent €500,000 on preparing it for construction. However, it was then ruled out because it lies in a flood zone and since then, the site on the east bank of the Chillar river has remained undeveloped and continues to be used as a large, informal parking area. By early 2017, however, a site, previously considered and rejected in 2008 and 2009, was back in favour. The area is at the eastern end of the town on open land between the Burriana roundabout on the N-340 and Supersol supermarket, opposite the Nerja Club Hotel. Last month, however, it was revealed Nerja – planned site for new health centre that 4,500 square metres of the 6,500 square metre site does not actually belong to the town. However, making the announcement, mayor Rosa Arrabal of the PSOE gave an assurance that this would be “easily” resolved in the coming months, and once in municipal hands, the whole site would be ceded to the region’s health department. Speaking in Nerja last month, regional health delegate Ana Isabel Gonzalez said plans to develop the site have been completed and as soon as the land ownership issue is resolved, the construction work will be put out to tender. Minor rescued from prostitution Police in Málaga have rescued a 15- year-old girl from prostitution just as she was about to be moved to Granada. A number of people have been arrested in the operation which began in August when the Guardia Civil became aware that the sexual services of a minor were being advertised on the internet. Investigators suspected that the girl was from a Paraguayan family and her mother confirmed that she had run away from home after a number of quarrels, but, although unaware of her whereabouts, had not reported her missing. The mother also confirmed that photos of a young girl wearing only underwear which had been posted on contact websites were those of her daughter. It appears that the girl met a man in Vélez-Málaga who offered her 16 somewhere to stay and the possibility of earning some money. However, he was a member of the gang who then held her captive for a week in the Palma-Palmilla district of Málaga and obliged her to work as a prostitute. The gang consisted of a married couple and two minors, although there was no family relationship between them, and they forced her to have sex with a number of men before deciding to move her to Granada. Guardia Civil officers stopped the couple and their victim at Málaga bus station, while the minors were detained later. The gang has been charge with offences including sex trafficking, prostitution and membership of a criminal gang. The adults are being held in prison while the minors were sent to a reform centre.