ISSUE NO. 1699
25 - 31 January 2018
COSTA DE ALMERĂA YOUR PAPER, YOUR VOICE, YOUR OPINION
AN Almerian resident who allegedly held and shared child pornography with fellow members of a paedophile ring has been arrested in a nationwide operation mounted by the Guardia Civil. The 41-year-old, from Adra, was arrested along with 19 others across 14 Spanish provinces after officers raided 20 homes on suspicion of the possession of indecent images of children. Police began their investigation after learning the group were sharing an âabundanceâ of images and videos on social media and instant messaging apps. An officer then infiltrated the groups, going undercover as another user. The officer reportedly saw members of the groups would change their names often but police were able to see several of the groupâs membersâ phone numbers. Content allegedly featuring children and adults as well as animals was discovered after police analysed the files shared by the group. Police then raided 20 homes and made 19 arrests. All suspects have being charged by courts and have been bailed until they appear for trial.
Credit: Wikimedia Commons
19 held in paedophile crackdown
WWW.EUROWEEKLYNEWS.COM
BOAT WRECKED: The migrants were rescued from boats in the sea of Alboran.
Boat wreck horror Two dead and 70 rescued
by Joe Gerrard More than 70 people were rescued off the Almerian coast by the regionâs Maritime Rescue Service after a boat was wrecked, killing two on Sunday. Coastguards reached one boat which was sailing more than 30 miles southwest of Cabo de Gata at around 11.50pm on Saturday. Authorities had previously received warnings from an NGO that two boats had sailed from Morocco on Saturday afternoon. The coastguard boat Guardamar Polimnia rescued 34 people from one of the boats in the Alboran Sea. Another coastguard boat, the Salvamar Spica, arrived to find 33 people who were been rescued by a fishing boat after
their boat sank. Some of those from the sunken boat were still in the water. Two died when the boat sank. A further four people were rescued at sea by a coastguard helicopter and taken to Almeria City. The migrants, from Sub-Saharan Africa, arrived at Almeriaâs port in good health, according to reports. No children were reported to have been on board the boats. The news comes as Spainâs Commission for Refugee Aid
(CEAR) said the government needed to do more for migrants arriving in Andalucia. The bodyâs Refugees and Migrants in Spain report said the countryâs policy towards migrants was âimprovisedâ and âarbitrary.â It highlighted Spainâs use of internment centres for migrants, its methods for identifying unaccompanied children and difficulties in enforcing political asylum in the country. It added securing legal assistance in the province was also difficult for migrants
new to Spain. The report also stated: âThe conditions in police establishments located in Motril, Almeria and Malaga do not comply with standards compatible with human dignity.â Almerian police have the highest arrest rates for people linked to the organised trafficking and sexual exploitation. Police reportedly registered around 5,500 migrants in Almeria last year, with 22,000 registered throughout the country.