Portugal Safety and Security Report Wednesday 24th July 2024

A very busy day yesterday as far as rural fires are concerned, with at least four fires classified as a “significant occurrences” by the ANEPC. Central areas of the mainland were the main areas affected, particularly Leiria District. At one stage there were nearly 900 operatives deployed (Civil Protection, Bombeiros, GNR and municipal resources, and up to 14 aircraft.

One again firefighting aircraft proved their worth, as one of the fires in the Andreus area, in the municipality of Leiria, posed a major challenge, due to the difficulty in accessing land resources to get close to the flames to fight them. A civil commander spokesperson said “We are fighting this fire only with aerial resources, because land resources cannot reach it, which worries us”

This is not as uncommon as it sounds. When I visit Pedrogrão Grande a few days ago with my colleague Fernanda, we saw many dense forests mainly of eucalyptus trees on steep hills which would be virtually impossible to fight any fire by land resources. When you factor in moderate/high winds, which can change direction and speed frequently, a situation often found in hilly conditions, this gives idea of the challenges involved.

The signs are that the level of fire risk which we have seen in the last two weeks is set to continue. The level is would say average for the summer, with the main high risk areas being the Algarve, Centre and parts of north east. As we have said many times before, it is very important if you are living in rural areas to be prepared, by having an emergency kit in case of evacuation and a plan of what to do should a fire approach your home. Fires can travel at great speed and intensity, so being prepared is very important.

We emphasise once again the importance of checking the daily weather reports and fire risk and Fire Weather Index (FWI) so that you are aware of the conditions in your area as well as areas that you may be visiting. With the holiday season many will be visiting areas of the Portuguese mainland which are prone to fires, so it is best to familiarize your self should a fire break out. This is particularly important in isolated areas. Ensure your mobile phone is kept fully charged.

If you have visitors staying with you, ensure that they are informed about the fire risk in your area in case they are planning to undertake countryside walks for instance. Be aware of the high temperatures sometimes over 40C. Those from overseas, used to cooler climates, should take care and the golden rule is not to hike alone in the extreme high temperature conditions, when high temperature warnings are in place. Early morning is a safer time and ensure others know exactly which route you are taking and how long it will be before returning. Common sense really, but sometimes overlooked.

On the issue of preparation, we thank all of those who participated in the “Preparedness for common natural hazards in Portugal” survey which we launched in March this year. We thank Kirsten Cooke a volunteer with Safe Communities for all her work based on her professional experience in this subject. Over 700 people participated which is a great result and we will be publishing the results shortly.

Our team at Safe Communities wishes you a safe week ahead.

News

CP suspends strike scheduled for this Wednesday

The CP – Comboios de Portugal strike, scheduled for this Wednesday (24) has been suspended due to an agreement with workers. According to the Federation of Transport and Communications Unions (Fectrans), the agreement established between the 12 unions and the railway transport company foresees the return to negotiations in the last week of September.

“Under the terms of the agreement, all salary indexes will be updated by a further 1.5% from 1 August 2024 and the value of the meal allowance will rise to 9.20 euros”, can be read in a statement published by the Federation of Transport and Communications Trade Unions (Fectrans).

The union structures that went on strike on Monday and had planned another day of strike for Wednesday stated, in the joint statement, that it was assumed in this agreement “that the new professional categories resulting from the merger of current categories are voluntary and that they will remain in place with the guarantee of career progression and the same functions”.

The union structures also highlighted that CP’s management “agreed to implement the agreement of May 29, 2023, unifying the annual productivity and review bonuses, for the same value as the driving career bonus, with effect from August 1 of this year, with the next payment in February 2025”.

The agreement also provides, without “prejudice to the application of what has now been agreed” , that from the last week of September “negotiations will be resumed”, with the aim of “reviewing the salary scales”, “agreeing with the trade unions on the transition rules for the new salary scales” and “continuing to agree on the functional contents of the careers/categories in which the need for continued discussion was identified”, they also stressed. 

Knowledge Pavilion celebrates its anniversary and has already been visited by 5.6 million people

Lisbon, 24 July 2025 (Lusa) – The Pavilhão do Conhecimento, which has already revealed the “secret life” of the intestines and shown the science behind aviation, has been visited by 5.6 million people since it opened its doors in Lisbon 25 years ago.

The data was released to Lusa by the “largest interactive science and technology center in the country” on the eve of its anniversary, which is celebrated on Thursday.Since July 25, 1999, the Pavilhão do Conhecimento – Centro Ciência Viva has received 5.6 million visitors, the majority of whom are Portuguese families.

Among foreign visitors, Brazilians and Spaniards stand out.

In 2023, the venue, which annually hosts exhibitions, recreational and educational activities and lectures, was visited by almost 300,000 people, around 37,000 more than the previous year.

The previous record for visitors was in 2002, the year in which the scientific and technological dissemination space received more than 272,500 people.

The first half of 2024 saw 171,500 visitors, with families leading the way, followed by schools and foreign tourists.

Located in Parque das Nações, the Pavilhão do Conhecimento inherited one of the emblematic buildings from Expo’98, the world exposition on the oceans.

Designed by architect Carrilho da Graça, the building then housed the Pavilhão do Conhecimento dos Mares, one of the most visited.

Its original name is based on the word “knowledge”, provided by the many exhibitions that the pavilion rents, produces or exports.

The most visited were, in 2004, “The Flight”, which showed the science and technology of aviation, in 2007 and 2008, “Knojo!”, which revealed the “indiscreet science” of the human body, in 2019 and 2020, “Pum!”, which exposed the “secret life” of the intestines, and, in 2022 and 2023, “Dinosaurs: The Return of the Giants”, which went back to the time when these animals inhabited the Earth.

In October, the Pavilhão do Conhecimento will have a new exhibition, “Science of Pixar”, which will be open until August next year and will reveal “the science of special effects” of characters from animated films produced by Disney/Pixar studios.

In total, there are 20 Ciência Viva Centers in Portugal.

The Pavilhão do Conhecimento, which is the headquarters of Ciência Viva – National Agency for Scientific and Technological Culture, is one of them, and the largest.

Its address is Largo José Mariano Gago, named after the physicist (1948-2015) who was Minister of Science (1995-2002 and 2005-2011) and today is immortalized in the name of the auditorium of the Centro Ciência Viva that he himself inaugurated in 1999.

On its anniversary, the Pavilhão do Conhecimento will have activities with free entry (entrance to the space is usually paid, at a price ranging from 9 to 14 euros) and prizes to be won, as many as the number of years the venue has been open to the public.

 

The Algarve Situation Report Wednesday 24th July 2024

by Mike Evans

A very warm welcome to you all and with the current temperatures along the Algarve in the high 30’s I am sure we are all looking at ways to stay cool. If you have any special ideas please let us know through our facebook page.

Last week l started the report by highlighting the extra traffic we can now expect on our roads due to the influx of tourists. Well, this week has been a particularly bad week on the roads with the GNR recording  a total of 230 accidents in the Faro district alone last week, resulting in three deaths, four serious injuries and 38 minor injuries, it was announced on Monday.

In a statement, the GNR’s Faro Territorial Command states that, in the week of July 15 to 21, 517 traffic violations were detected, the majority of which were for speeding (90).

That security force also made 46 arrests, namely, 18 for driving under the influence of alcohol, 11 for driving without a legal licence and nine for drug trafficking shows that there really is no hiding place for those who feel they can flout the law. During the same period, the GNR seized 165 doses of heroin, 45 of hashish and 15,860 euros, the note concludes.

The three deaths in the week were as a result of a crash between two motorbikes at the start of the Bike Fest in Faro. More details of this in the report following.

Woman of 45 dies in a house on the island of Armona

A 45-year-old woman died in the early hours of this Tuesday, in a house on the island of Armona, in the municipality of Olhão, with the causes of this occurrence unknown.

Upon arrival at the scene, it was found that “it was a 45-year-old woman, who was promptly assisted by INEM personnel, who performed resuscitation manoeuvres”.

“As it was not possible to reverse the situation, death was declared on site by the INEM doctor, and the body was later transported to the National Institute of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences in Faro, after contact with the Public Prosecutor’s Office”, can be read in the note published by AMN .

The Maritime Police Psychology Office has been activated. The local command of the Maritime Police of Olhão took charge of the incident.

Albufeira urges beachgoers to keep safe distance from cliffs

With the arrival of summer, Albufeira has resumed its yearly awareness campaign in which it warns beachgoers about the dangers of cliffs.

It’s been 15 years since a family of five was killed by falling rocks on Albufeira’s Maria Luísa beach, but the impact of the tragedy is still felt today.

In an effort to avoid similar tragedies from occurring, the local council organises an awareness campaign every summer, targeted at beachgoers who may be unaware of just how unstable cliffs at Algarve beach can be. They are advised to respect the signposting at beaches and the safety distances indicated in order to “avoid risky behaviour and possible accidents.” “Prevention is the best way of avoiding accidents,” says Albufeira mayor José Carlos Rolo, adding that the awareness campaign which the council carries out every year during the bathing season shows its commitment to the issue of beach safety.

“Albufeira is and we want it to continue to be known as a safe destination,” the mayor states.

The campaign is carried out with the support of Portugal’s maritime authority (AMN), maritime police, the lifeguard association of Albufeira (ANSA), as well as the Albufeira public health unit, which this year is also using the opportunity to warn beachgoers about the risks of sun exposure.

“Albufeira has 30 kilometres of coastline, surrounded by cliffs of rare beauty, being the municipality in the country with the biggest number of Blue Flags raised (25), which proves the environmental excellence of its beaches.

 However, the natural erosion process which they are subjected to puts them in risky situations, increasing the danger of rock falls,” the council warns in a statement to the press. “Every summer, or even outside of the bathing season it is common to see people walking atop the cliffs, seeking their shade or doing poses to take a selfie near a pretty rock formation, showing a lack of knowledge about the dangers they are facing,” it adds, explaining that the awareness campaign, which also sees flyers being handed out to beachgoers in Portuguese and English, aims to make sure beachgoers are well-aware of the possible consequences of these risky behaviours.

“Thus, for your safety, whenever you go to the beach, follow the advice of the municipal civil protection service: choose beaches with surveillance; do not remain at the top or base of cliffs and don’t park at the top of them; avoid risky access routes through cliffs to the beach ; respect the recommendations of lifeguards; stay away from areas where there are loose rocks or fissures; do not use the area near cliffs to seek cover from the sun and wind,” the council adds.

Faro bikers’ Festival marked by tragedy as 3 Die in Road Accident

Two men and a young woman died yesterday afternoon in a head-on collision between two motorbikes, close to the site of Faro’s ongoing bikers’ festival. According to police, the victims were all wearing the kind of kit that suggests they were in Faro for the iconic event.

The accident happened around 5.45pm on the road giving access to Praia de Faro. “The origin was a poorly-affected overtaking manoeuvre by one of the drivers who collided with the other motorbike which was travelling in the opposite direction”; GNR major Paulo Anjos of the Faro traffic brigade told Correio da Manhã.

The woman, who was a pillion passenger on one of the bikes, was subject to reanimation efforts at the scene, and transported already ventilated to Faro Hospital, “but did not survive the gravity of her injuries”.

Both men, aged 31 and 49, were killed outright. The victims have not yet been identified, but the woman and driver of one of the bikes are understood to have come from Santarém.

Traffic was halted in both directions for roughly two hours yesterday evening as the victims, their bikes and all the debris from the accident was logged and then removed from the scene. Police have since redoubled appeals for caution. “In events like these, the volume of traffic is always greater, and people should drive at reduced speeds”, reminds Major Anjos – also warning against bikers’ drinking alcohol and then taking to the road, stressing that drinking and then driving two-wheeled vehicles increased the likelihood of accidents even further than for drivers on four wheels.

Two Suspected Drug Dealers Arrested in Lagos

Two suspected drug dealers were arrested by PSP police in Lagos on Tuesday (July 16).

The arrests, which followed an investigation that had been ongoing for “around half a year”, are expected to have a “strong impact on the reduction of situations of drug trafficking in the town of Lagos,” the Faro PSP district command said in a statement to the press.

The suspects are also believed to have dealt drugs in neighbouring boroughs and to have supplied other dealers in the area, aside from selling the drugs directly to consumers themselves, the statement adds.

The investigation led to a police operation this week which involved “several house searches and non-house searches”, resulting in the confiscation of huge quantities of drugs, including “enough heroine for 21.839 individual doses and enough cocaine for 493 individual doses,” as well as a car and €1,100 in cash and other items related to their illegal activity.

The two suspects, aged 58 and 35, have already appeared before a judge, with one being remanded in custody and the other ordered to report weekly to police.

New Shops to Help Foreigners Obtain Official Documents

Foreign citizens will now have a single place they can visit to obtain tax, social security and health system user numbers.

Minister of Youth and Modernisation, Margarida Balseiro Lopes announced this new measure, at the end of a meeting of the first Council of Ministers at the Faculty of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova, in Almada earlier this week.

Among the 15 new measures approved at the meeting, the minister highlighted the recent issues with foreign citizens trying to obtain identification numbers for the tax, social security and national health systems.

“We know that the Finanças, Social Security offices and Citizen’s Shops, have been faced with long queues” and “we have thousands of foreign citizens living in Portugal who are unable to access something as basic as a Tax Identification Number (NIF), a Social Security Number (NISS) or a Health System Number (SNS Utente) “, she said. Therefore, “what we are going to do now in 2024 is have a single place where citizens will have access to the three identification numbers, in the Citizen Spaces – this is a measure for this year, in the last quarter of 2024”, explained Margarida Balseiro Lopes.

“We will make this service available in the Citizen Space of each town (Espaço Cidadão)”, explained the minister. The project is being implemented by AMA (Agency for Administrative Modernization) and AIMA (Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum), and is expected to ease the workload of the people who work in the current entities that issue these numbers.

Defibrillator saves Young Tourists Life in Albufeira

A 27 year old Irish man on holiday in Albufeira, who fell ill in the early hours of Monday morning, was immediately assisted by friends using the nearby Automatic External Defibrillator.

The incident happened close to the intersection of Avenida Sá Carneiro and Rua José Fontana, where the AED booth is located.

Friends of the man suspected a cardiorespiratory arrest and began resuscitation using the device until the arrival of a rescue team from the Albufeira Volunteer Firefighters, who managed to resuscitate the victim. The INEM Emergency and Resuscitation Medical Vehicle (VMER) was also called, and the victim was transported to Faro Hospital, conscious.

Albufeira was the first municipality in the Algarve to implement a community-based Automatic External Defibrillator program, certified by INEM, which allows lives to be saved in the event of cardiorespiratory arrest.

The “Albufeira + Segura” project operates 11 AED booths, equipped with automatic defibrillators, installed at strategic points on the public roads, plus two portable defibrillators – one given to the Municipal Police and the other to the Fire Department.

Launched in October 2017, the program initially trained 71 citizens, who voluntarily attended training in basic life support and automatic defibrillation, taking on the commitment to develop the network of equipment and integrate a greater number of community first responders. Currently, there are now around 900 AED operators assigned to the program, and by the end of the year, 12 more booths will be installed on the public roads of Albufeira.

The Albufeira Volunteer Firefighters and the GNR are the main partners of the program, being the first group of local first responders, with the advantage of being on the ground 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

15 Year Old Canadian Tourist Rescued from Ocean near  Lagoa

A 15 year old Canadian man was rescued on Monday afternoon, after jumping from a cliff into the water, at Carvalho beach, in Lagoa.

The alert was received by the Maritime Police at 5pm, through a member of the public who was on the beach, reporting that a young man had severe pain in his legs after jumping from a cliff into the water.

Members of the Portimão Maritime Police, crew from the Ferragudo Life Saving Station and crew from the Lagoa Volunteer Fire Department were dispatched to the scene.

On arrival, “it was found that the victim had been removed from the water by bathers who were on the beach, and that he had severe pain in his lower limbs, meaning they had had to drag the teenager from the sea. After stabilising the young man, with the support of the lifeguards on duty on the beach, the crew from the Ferragudo Lifeguard Station transported him to the Lifeguard Station pier, where crew of the INEM Emergency and Resuscitation Medical Vehicle were already waiting.”

The ambulance team promptly attended to the victim, who was subsequently transported to the hospital by the Lagoa Volunteer Firefighters.

And finally to end this report a word of warning to anyone who is a resident here and lives in another country for a period of time and owns a car with a foreign number plate.

During the summer, it is common to see cars with foreign licence plates driving on Portuguese roads. However, for these vehicles to be legally admitted and driven in Portugal, some specific rules must be followed.

Firstly, these rules apply exclusively to vehicles permanently registered in a European Union country — Switzerland, for example, is not included. Furthermore, to benefit from the tax exemption, the vehicle owner must prove permanent residence outside Portugal. The law is quite restrictive regarding who can drive a car with a foreign licence plate in Portugal. Only the following people are authorised:

Anyone who does not reside in Portugal;

The owner or holder of the vehicle and his/her family members (spouses, de facto partners, ascendants and descendants in the first degree);

Another person in cases of force majeure (e.g. breakdown) or as a result of a contract for the provision of professional driving services.

It is important to note that it is forbidden to drive a car with a foreign licence plate if you are an emigrant and bring the car from your country of residence to stay permanently in Portugal. In these cases, you have a period of 20 days to legalise the vehicle after entering the country. It is also not permitted to keep a car with a licence plate from your country of origin in Portugal if you live alternately in Portugal and in your country of residence.

A foreign-registered car can be in Portugal for a maximum of 180 days (six months) per year (12 months). These days do not have to be consecutive. For example, if a foreign-registered car is in Portugal during January and March (around 90 days) and only returns in June, it can still legally circulate in the country, tax-free, for another 90 days. If it reaches the accumulated 180 days, it will have to leave the country and will only be able to return at the beginning of the following year. During this 180-day period, the vehicle is exempt from paying taxes in Portugal, in accordance with article 30 of the Vehicle Tax Code.

Regarding insurance, compulsory third party liability insurance is valid in all countries of the European Union, as explained by Razão Automóvel . However, additional coverage may be limited in time and distance or even excluded, depending on the country where the vehicle is being driven and the level of risk associated with it. In these cases, it is advisable to contact the insurer to confirm that all the coverage contracted is in force in the destination country.

Complying with these rules is essential to avoid legal problems and ensure safe and smooth driving in Portugal with a foreign-registered car.

Have a good week.

 

Azores Situation Report Wednesday 24th July 2024

Price of food basket in the Azores increased by 6% in one year

In June of this year, the average basket of food products cost 133.52 euros, representing an increase of 6% compared to June 2023. The biggest price increase recorded was in olive oil (+60%) and the most significant decrease was in onions (-14%)

Updated travel advice has been published on the UK Government site https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/portugal/safety-and-security

Hiking in Madeira and the Azores

Hiking in Madeira and the Azores can be challenging. Choose paths that suit your fitness and experience.

Be prepared for narrow, uneven paths and heights. Wear suitable clothing and walking boots. Take extra care if it has rained, as the ground may be slippery and unstable. Check with your tour guide or local organiser that it is safe before you set off.

Leave details of where you are going with your hotel reception and take a phone with you. Reduce the risk by walking with a group or following a guide.

See more information about staying safe, walkway closures and access restrictions on Visit Madeira and Visit Azores.

Ponta Delgada Hospital says it is “quickly resuming” healthcare activities

The Hospital do Divino Espírito Santo (HDES), in Ponta Delgada, which suffered a fire, carries out a daily average of 399 consultations and 3,087 exams, but surgical activity is still “strongly conditioned”, announced the board of directors.

The fire, which broke out on May 4th at Ponta Delgada Hospital, the largest healthcare unit in the Azores, forced all patients who were hospitalized to be transferred to various locations in the Azores, Madeira and mainland Portugal.

According to those responsible for HDES, the health unit is “quickly resuming” healthcare activities to “values ​​close” to those existing before the fire, particularly regarding the number of medical consultations (399 consultations/day), Day Hospital sessions (70 sessions/day) and complementary diagnostic and treatment methods (3,087 exams/day) carried out.

In a press release to update data on the institution’s installed capacity to date, the administration states that in the HDES Emergency Service, despite being divided between the Ribeira Grande Health Centre and CUF Açores Hospital, it has already been possible to “match the daily average of care provided at the time of the fire, that is, more than 300 emergency care services per day”.

However, the surgical activity of HDES “is still shown to be strongly conditioned (average of 10 surgeries/day)” due to the dispersion of resources between the Operating Rooms available at the Bom Jesus Clinic and the CUF Açores Hospital, located in the city of Lagoa, on the island of São Miguel.

According to those responsible, “priority remains for urgent, emergency and non-postponable surgeries, particularly for oncological reasons”.

As a result of the fire on May 4, the institution’s installed capacity, namely in terms of the number of beds available for hospitalization, was compromised and dispersed across several public and private health and social institutions on the island of São Miguel, a situation that “has been gradually and phasedly reversed with the resumption of activity at the HDES facilities”, hospital officials also guarantee.

On July 15th, the institution resumed hospitalization in the Nascente Wing, initially with Palliative Care and Psychiatry, to which, as of July 17th, four medical hospitalization services and three surgical hospitalization services were added.

Currently, the HDES East Wing has a total of 199 hospital beds and four intensive care beds in the Critical Patient Unit.

As of today (July 23rd), 99 patients are hospitalized in the various medical-surgical inpatient services and there are no patients hospitalized in the Critical Patient Unit, the board of directors also reports.

Additionally, HDES maintains 17 surgical hospitalization vacancies at the Bom Jesus Clinic, 28 medical hospitalization vacancies at the Ribeira Grande Health Centre and 87 hospitalization vacancies at the CUF Açores Hospital, in the specialties of Paediatrics, Obstetrics, Neonatology, Cardiology, Intensive and Intermediate Care, Cerebrovascular, Surgery and Gastroenterology, it also indicates.

 

Algarve Situation Report Wednesday 17th July 2024

by Mike Evans

Good day to you all and I start this report with the warning that the Algarve is at one of its highest fire risk levels we have seen this year. While we can celebrate the fall in the number of fires so far this year we cannot let our guards down as the very hot weather coupled with the high winds can change things in a very short time.

As I write this report Eight municipalities in the district of Faro are today at maximum risk of rural fires due to hot weather, according to the Portuguese Institute of the Sea and Atmosphere. At maximum risk are the municipalities of Aljezur, Lagos, Monchique, Portimão, Silves, Loulé, Tavira and São Brás de Alportel. According to IPMA calculations, the fire danger will remain high in some districts at least until Sunday.

Having just spent a few hours travelling along the N125 in both directions I can definitely report that the summer tourist rush has certainly arrived along the Algarve. This, whilst good for businesses in the tourism industry,  can be the opposite for locals who have plans to reach a destination in a decent time. Please allow extra time if you are travelling through the Algarve during the summer months.

On a brighter note the Algarvian Goat is set to enjoy a better than anticipated summer. Although the Algarve region (Faro district) continues to be in a drought, the PSD/CDS-PP Government eased the restrictions that the previous PS executive had imposed in February to deal with water shortages, after the heavy rains in autumn and winter, reserves increased, and breeders interviewed by Lusa say they now have greater availability of water and food in the fields.

Nuno Coelho is a producer of Algarvian goats in the municipality of Alcoutim and gave the example of feed and straw – “they fell to almost half” the price that was charged when the scarcity of pastures, due to the lack of rain, led to a rise in the food for animals.

“This winter has been a little kinder and therefore brought a little more food abundance. Things have improved substantially”, said Nuno Coelho, who had 120 Algarvian breed goats, had to reduce the herd to 30 and start supplementing it with sheep to balance the accounts, because the goat is priced at 40 euros and the lamb reaches 120 euros.

The winter, he recalled, was “more regular and therefore it rained more”. The supply of water to the soil had consequences for the growth of pastures, bringing “more abundance of food for the animals”. Nuno Luís, with a herd of 300 goats in Castro Marim, also recognised that this “has been a normal year” and that the rain that fell allowed for “a good year of crops”, removing, for now, the scenario of lack of water that the sector was struggling with, for example, a year ago.

“We are in the summer part, of course, the water is disappearing more, but it is not said that we are running out of water now at this time. And even pastures, this year are good”, he assured, highlighting that “rations have dropped” and producers “spend much less”, because they have “more pasture on the side” and do not need to buy so much feed or straw.

Despite continuing to be a low-yield activity, both producers look to the future with greater optimism.

Now a look at some of the other stories that have been hitting the headlines in the past week.

Train collides with car and injures 6 people

Six people were injured – two seriously – when a train crashed into a car at the Poço do Barreto level crossing in Silves on the 12th July.

The six occupants of the seven-seater car were all Dutch nationals, three men and three women, aged between 18 and 25, a GNR source told Lusa. All six were taken to Faro Hospital, two by helicopter (two 18-year-old women with serious injuries) and the other four by ambulance.

“The rescue operation is complete, with all individuals removed from the scene, including the six injured from the car and the 24 train passengers,” Richard Marques, the sub-regional commander of the Algarve National Emergency and Civil Protection Authority, told Lusa.

The accident forced authorities to close the Algarve railway line to make sure safety conditions were ensured.

“Following the completion of rescue operations and confirmation of the track’s condition, train service on the Algarve Line was restored,” infrastructure authority Infraestruturas de Portugal (IP) said in a statement. Railway company CP later informed that the line reopened at 11.30am.

Road traffic had already been reopened earlier on the road crossing the Poço Barreto level crossing, located between Alcantarilha and Silves in the municipality of Silves. There were 24 passengers on the train, 17 of whom were transferred by a bus provided by CP to their destination, according to the deputy commander of Silves Volunteer Firefighters, cited by Observador newspaper.

The rescue operation involved firefighters from Silves and Lagoa, the National Institute of Medical Emergency (INEM), and GNR police. The cause of the accident is still being investigated.

52 arrests made by GNR in the Algarve

The GNR from Faro district carried out a series of operations in the Algarve, during the week of July 8th to 14th. The operations aimed to prevent and combat violent crime, alongside road inspections.

During the week 52 people were arrested, including 11 for driving without a legal license, 8 for driving under the influence of alcohol, and 8 for drug trafficking. The GNR seized 221 doses of hashish, 46 doses of cocaine, 18 mobile home-type houses, 72 ammunition, 2 compressed air rifles, 7 cell phones, 3 laptop computers, and various articles of clothing.

Regarding traffic offences, 355 infractions were detected, of which 176 were due to speeding, 28 due to lack of mandatory periodic inspection, 24 were related to anomalies in lighting and signalling systems, 12 due to lack of or incorrect use of seat belts and/or restraint systems. for children, 10 due to lack of civil liability insurance.

The GNR recorded 203 accidents resulting in 34 minor injuries.

Navy rescues four men after vessel sinks near Olhão

The Navy, through the Lisbon Maritime Search and Rescue Coordination Center (MRCC Lisboa), coordinated, on the night of Thursday, July 11, a search and rescue operation for four men, of Spanish nationality, after the shipwreck of the vessel they were travelling on.

According to the Navy, the alert came at 11:10 pm through a call from the GNR warning of the fact that the fishing vessel “Praia Monte Gordo ” was sinking, with four crew members on board, approximately six nautical miles, the equivalent of 13 kilometres south of Olhão.

Immediately, and in coordination with the captain of the Port of Olhão, the Navy vessel NRP Cassiopeia and the Olhão Lifeboat Station vessel were activated. Several fishing vessels that were in the vicinity were also alerted and coordinated to provide support to the shipwrecked people. The rescue of the four people was carried out by the fishing vessel “Costasul”, which was closest to the location, having transferred the castaways to the Lifeguard Station vessel, which transported them to the Port of Olhão. Upon reaching land, the people were assisted by INEM, although they were all in good health.

Rival gang fight leaves several injured in Faro

A brawl between two rival groups in downtown Faro left several people injured this week. The confrontation, allegedly motivated by issues related to drug trafficking in that area of ​​the city, led several residents to complain about insecurity and a lack of patrols.

Videos are circulating on social media showing several individuals in physical confrontations on Rua Conselheiro Bivar. According to TVI/CNN on Tuesday, the 9th, some suspects involved in the brawl have already been identified by the authorities.

The videos have been shared by customers of restaurants and shops who were in the area when the incident occurred and who had to leave the premises because “there were stones and bottles in the air”. Following this incident, residents have complained about the lack of security and frequent clashes between gangs, appealing that “someone has to do something”.

Maritime Police seize 300 kg tuna in Tavira

Members of the Tavira Maritime Police Local Command carried out, on the evening of last Monday, July 8, an inspection action at the Quatro-Águas ramp, in Tavira, which resulted in the seizure of a tuna, weighing approximately 300 kg, and fishing gear, namely two rods and deep-sea reels, reported AMN .

During the operation, members of the Maritime Police detected a recreational vessel, with four recreational fishermen on board, who had caught a bluefin tuna, weighing around 300kg, the capture of which is prohibited within the scope of recreational fishing .

The Maritime Police officers prepared the respective report and, as a precautionary measure, seized the fish, which was later donated to Social Solidarity Institutions, as well as two fishing rods and deep-sea reels. Four members of the Tavira Maritime Police Local Command were involved in this action, supported by two vehicles.

And finally to end this report, a couple of events which are well worth being aware of in the region.

The 42nd Faro Motorbike Rally is almost here. This year, one of the most notable events in the region (and the country) will take place from 18 to 21 July, in the mythical Vale das Almas, in Montenegro .

Four days, thousands of motorbikes, beer, concerts, exhibitions and street entertainment are the ingredients of what is considered one of the biggest and best biker gatherings in Europe and which every year, in July, attracts more and more bike lovers to the Algarve capital.

One of the highlights of the event is the motorcycle parade through the streets of the Algarve capital on the last day of the gathering, July 21 (Sunday).

And also this week, Silves is preparing to host another edition of its Beer Fest between July 17 and 21 at Praça Al-Mutamid, the town’s main riverside square.

Organised by Silves Futebol Clube and Silves Council, the event will feature more than 80 craft beers made by brewers from all over Portugal.

There will also be stalls selling handicraft and traditional products, live music and food trucks, totalling over 40 exhibitors from 19 different locations.

The event will run from 6pm to 1am and will be free to visit, although visitors wishing to try the many beers on offer will have to buy a glass.

If you’re going to either of these events remember don’t drink and drive and have a great week.

 

Portugal Safety and Security Report Wednesday 17th July 2024

Good afternoon. Many of us will be thinking of our holidays and with millions of people currently and planning to travel outside of Europe, it is wise to know what Consular protection exists in case something goes wrong. Embassies and consulates are there to help.

An EU citizen is unrepresented if there is no embassy or consulate from his or her own Member State present in the country. An EU citizen can also be unrepresented if the embassy or consulate established locally is unable for any reason to provide consular protection, for example because it is far away from where the EU citizen is located. Anyway it is best to plan ahead so before starting your holiday ensure you have the contact details of the embassy/consulate of your country, so you can contact them without delay.

The help that may be provided by embassies/consulates of (other) EU Member States include:assistance in cases of lost or stolen passport or ID card where the embassy can issue emergency travel documents – single-journey documents intended to allow you to return home. In the case of arrest or detention: once contacted, the embassy may provide information on the local legal system, or help you find a lawyer. Being victim of a crime: someone from the embassy may assist you and advise on the next steps. In case of serious accident or illness: staff may help contact your insurance company, family, or friends for you if you end up in hospital. Relief and repatriation in case of an emergency: the embassy may be able to help be evacuated, for example in case of a conflict, a natural disaster or civil unrest, and lastly death, staff may help notify next of kin and help you register a death.

In the last week we have seen the fire danger at VERY HIGH AND MAXIMUM levels in UP TO 75 municipalities. The main areas are the Algarve, parts of centre and parts of north east. This is so far the highest of the year. As we have mentioned many times before, with these levels there are various restrictions in place, particularly on the use on bonfires, burning of cut and piled waste for example. It is very important that these restrictions are followed. We publish these every morning on Facebook between 0730 hrs and 0800 hrs for all to see.

We also publish on what is known as the Fire weather Index or FWI for short. The FWI is a model-based index used worldwide to estimate fire danger. It indicates intensity of potential fires by combining the rate of fire spread with the amount of fuel (vegetation) being consumed, taking into account temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, precipitation, drought conditions, fuel availability, vegetation characteristics and topography.

‘Critical’ fires are defined as those covering an area greater than 10,000 ha and are challenging to extinguish until air temperatures fall and precipitation increases. They are typically associated with ‘extreme’ fire danger, which is an FWI of over 50. Last Saturday. A week ago about one third of the mainland in the south east was over 50 which is extreme level. Some of the major fires in 2017, the Monchique fire of 2018, Odemira fire of 2023 and Gambalas fire of 2022 all took place when the FWI was at or over this level. Being aware of this BEFORE a fire breaks out is very important, so we can be prepared and take appropriate action.

Air temperatures will start to rise from Tuesday onwards across the country. Algarve and Alentejo will be the regions with the highest temperatures. Friday will be the hottest day.

After a week with temperatures below normal for the season, a week of heat is coming. In some places, temperatures will reach over 40C by Friday according to IPMA. After a roller coaster weather, which is not so normal for summer, it seems that the heat is finally going to arrive. “The district capitals of Alentejo, therefore, Évora, Beja, and possibly Portalegre, may record temperatures of 37ºC or more. The Algarve may record very high values”, explains Patrícia Gomes, meteorologist at IPMA. A reminder therefore when exercising or working outdoors to drink plenty of water to avoid dehydration.

Our team wishes you a good week ahead.

News

Citizens’ Shops to expand to 95 by 2026

Almada, Setúbal, 16 Jul 2024 (Lusa) – The Minister of Youth and Modernization announced today that Citizen Shops will be expanded to 95 by 2026 and that the Advisory Council of the Agency for Administrative Modernization (AMA) will be reactivated in September.

Margarida Balseiro Lopes was speaking at the end of the meeting of the first Council of Ministers dedicated to Digital Transition and Modernization, which took place today at the Faculty of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova (Nova FCT), in Almada.

“In the digital government model, I draw attention to a body that has existed in law for many years” and that “we consider essential to reactivate in September, which is the AMA Advisory Council”, said the minister.

At this moment, “today, we have 72 Citizen’s Shops and our commitment is to have 95 Citizen’s Shops by 2026”, announced Margarida Balseiro Lopes.

One of the “great advantages” of Citizens’ Shops is, according to the minister, “finding in the same place a group” of entities, from Finance to Social Security, among others.

“It is essential that this Advisory Council” meets “to guarantee opening hours” and that the way in which the service is provided to citizens is “exactly the same, regardless of the counter and the entity providing the service”, stressed the minister.

The Government today approved 15 measures to simplify and reduce administrative bureaucracy, maintaining the name Simplex which, according to the minister, is a “well-chosen” name.

Gov.pt portal launched in September and implementation in the 1st quarter of 2025

Almada, Setúbal, 16 Jul 2024 (Lusa) – The single digital services portal gov.pt will be launched in September and the application will take place in the first quarter, the Minister of Modernization announced today, adding that a measure was approved that limits the creation of portals in the Public Administration.

“We will have a citizen entry point here, at gov.pt, which will be launched in September and where we will have a set of services that citizens will be able to access”, said the Minister of Youth and Modernization, Margarida Balseiro Lopes, who was speaking at the end of the meeting of the first Council of Ministers dedicated to Digital Transition and Modernization, which took place today at the Faculty of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova (Nova FCT), in Almada.

The minister guaranteed that she will not close the Tax Authority (AT) website.

“What we have to ensure is that citizens enter gov.pt and without realizing it” are having “access to a certain service” from AT without there being a disruption in access to that service, he said.

Furthermore, the citizen will have a reserved area with the entire history of interactions he/she has had.

From September, the State’s digital services telephone service will be available in English.

Furthermore, “a decree-law was approved today that establishes such important rules as limiting the creation of more portals and more applications in the sphere of Public Administration”, he said.

Margarida Balseiro Lopes argued that it is essential to standardize the customer service experience for citizens, both on the website and in stores, and to implement the Citizen Card and the Digital Mobile Key (CMD) as “unique authentication methods”

All of this will not be done “overnight”, but in “several stages”, with the gov.pt portal being launched in September, which will already have some services included on that site, with more gradually being added over time.

 

Azores Situation Report Wednesday 10th July 2024

Two deaths in the space of a year in Ribeira dos Caldeirões

The death of the Portuguese tourist on Sunday was the second tragic incident at that tourist spot in the Northeast. In 2023, a teacher also fell and ended up dying.

In the space of a year, there were two deaths from falls in Ribeira dos Caldeirões.

The first case occurred in the summer of 2023 and claimed the life of a teacher. According to reports from a tour guide who was at the scene, the person in question fell into the river, next to the waterfall that is close to the local accommodation in Ribeira dos Caldeirões. Although she was still rescued at the scene and transported to the Hospital do Divino Espírito Santo, she ended up dying.

The second victim was last Sunday, a 62-year-old national tourist, who suffered a fatal fall from a height of 20 meters, after losing her balance while taking photographs.

According to information gathered by Açoriano Oriental from the fire department, the accident occurred at around 1:30 pm, at a waterfall located at a lower elevation than the regional road, close to the Ribeira dos Caldeirões Park area. The victim died at the scene.

In both situations, the Northeast fire brigade highlighted the need to work on the issue of safety, whether by placing danger or prohibition signs, or placing protective guards, to prevent future occurrences.

Located in the parish of Achada, Ribeira dos Caldeirões Park is one of the main tourist attractions in the municipality, known for its waterfalls, gardens and watermills. It has a trail and is very popular for canyoning.

Azores secures acquisition of land for new Ribeira Grande Health Centre

The Government of the Azores has secured the purchase of the land for the future Ribeira Grande Health Centre, an investment of over 20 million euros and a long-standing demand from the population.

“The Regional Government of the Azores, through the Regional Secretariat for Health and Social Security, has secured, through the signing of a promissory contract, the purchase of the land where the new Ribeira Grande Health Centre will be built, in São Miguel”, said the regional executive.

Bilingual Schools Program in the Azores starts next school year

The Government of the Azores will move forward next school year with training teachers for the Bilingual Schools in English program, which will be implemented in the 2025/2026 school year.

The regional secretary for Education, Culture and Sport, Sofia Ribeiro, explained that the program, which is “voluntarily adopted by schools, will be implemented as a pedagogical experiment, and is aimed at the 1st cycle of basic education in the public and private networks of the regional education system”.

The project “has as its general principle the teaching of 30% of students’ weekly workload in English, covering English, Environmental Studies, Art Education and Physical Education”, said Sofia Ribeiro.

The program has the collaboration of the British Council and has its origins in the Bilingual Schools in English program, of the Ministry of Education.

 

Portugal Safety and Security Report Wednesday 10th July 2024

Good morning everyone. We start with the good news that in the first six months of the year there were 1,812 rural fires, the lowest number since 2014, according to the first provisional report of 2024 by the Institute for Nature Conservation and Forests (ICNF).

The more than 1,800 fires resulted in 2,965 hectares (ha) of burnt area, the second lowest value in the last 10 years, only surpassed in 2016 with 1,853 hectares burned. According to ICNF data, comparing data from the first half of this year with the history of the previous 10 years, there were 60% fewer rural fires and 80% fewer burned areas. Of the total area burned between January 1 and June 30, 1,664 ha corresponded to scrubland, 723 ha to agricultural areas and 577 hectares to forest stands.

Only three fires were considered major by the ICNF and occurred in the municipalities of Reguengos de Monsaraz (Évora), with 333 ha burned, Aljustrel, with 167 ha, and Castro Verde, with 115 ha, (both municipalities in the district of Beja). These three fires occurred in June, the month with the highest number of fires and area burned.

It is important however not to let our guard down. Even though the fire risk has been lower than in some previous years, the Fire Weather Index has recently shown areas where the FWI has exceeded 50 i.e. EXTREME, which means that fires can burn with great intensity, and are difficult for firefighters to supress. So take extreme caution when this is shown on our daily fire risk report. As I mentioned on KissFM last Sunday, some of the major fires in 2017, the Monchique fire of 2018, Odemira fire of 2023 and Gambalas fire of 2022 all took place when the FWI was at or over this level.

Turning from Fire to Water! Hurricane Beryl that hit the Caribbean last week wasn’t a freak Storm – It’s the exact nightmare meteorologists have predicted

We have previously reported and highlighted concerns by meteorologists about increasing ocean temperatures particular the Atlantic, as these can affect Portugal, with occasional cyclones and even hurricanes affecting the Iberian Peninsula at the end of the summer season.

An article by Dennis Mersereau, a weather reporter with more than a decade of experience covering extreme storms around the world, gives an insight into why we should be concerned. “A hot ocean provides the energy hurricanes need to grow—and can limit the cooling that happens in their wake, making it likelier that the storms that follow will be powerful ones. Hurricane Beryl’s record-shattering intensification into a scale-topping Category 5 storm has stunned even the most seasoned experts. This storm is the nightmare scenario that meteorologists were worried about heading into the 2024 hurricane season.

All the warning indicators were blinking red in the weeks and months leading up to Beryl’s formation. The ocean is a veritable sauna ready to support any tropical disturbance that can get its act together this year. We are monitoring the storms closely as well as the likely impact here in Portugal

Reminder of the “Information and contacts poster” produced by Safe Communities for use in emergencies. This poster is designed to help you in an emergency. It can be a stressful time, so having information and essential contact details immediately available will help you in summoning help though 112. Just print from the link below, fill it in and place in a conspicuous place in your home, inside entrance doors for instance. If you family and friends staying with you, ensure they are aware. If you rent a property to clients also ensure they are aware. Our thanks to ANEPC for supporting and sharing this initiative. It can be downloaded here: https://www.safecommunitiesportugal.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Emergency-Information-and-Contacts-BW-.pdf

Our team at Safe Communities wish you a very happy week ahead.

News

Aguiar-Branco says that NATO principles have never been more important than today

Lisbon, 09 July 2024 (Lusa) – The president of parliament believes that NATO’s dual dimension of defence space and freedom has never been as important as it is today, and highlighted Portugal’s role in strengthening the southern flank of the Atlantic Alliance.

These positions were conveyed to the Lusa news agency by José Pedro Aguiar-Branco, who is participating in Washington at the NATO Parliamentary Assembly summit, which brings together 32 delegations from member states, including 23 presidents of national parliaments.

“This summit is taking place on NATO’s 75th anniversary, a milestone that highlights the importance of the Atlantic Alliance in its security and defence dimension. Everyone is aware that today democracy and freedom itself are at stake, as well as the world as we wish it to exist in a free society. Never before has this dual reality been present among all its member states,” declared the President of the Assembly of the Republic.

José Pedro Aguiar-Branco, former social-democratic Minister of Defense, is in Washington accompanied by the vice-president of the Assembly of the Republic, the socialist Marcos Perestrello.

In more operational terms, according to the president of the Portuguese parliament, this high-level meeting of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly is analyzing the strengthening of the articulation between the eastern and southern flanks of the Atlantic Alliance.

“Although the immediate risks are on the eastern flank, due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, there is an awareness that the threats are global. We have threats such as disinformation, often via social media, which aims to create instability in NATO, particularly in terms of enlargement objectives,” he pointed out.

In this context, the President of the Assembly of the Republic also defended the need to create a strong line of communication in relation to third countries.

“At this summit, we will recognize that parliaments play a very important role today, as they represent different political families and shape the positions of different countries. The greater the exchange of antiparliamentary experiences, the greater the coordination, the greater the quality of the Atlantic Alliance will be strengthened,” he added.

2 Rodas: Agrerre-se à Vida’ campaign will inspect motorbikes from Wednesday

Lisbon, 09 Jul 2024 (Lusa) – The road safety campaign “2 Rodas: Agrerre-se à Vida” (2 Wheels: Hold on to Life) kicks off on Wednesday on Portuguese roads to monitor two-wheeled motor vehicles, driving under the influence of alcohol, speeding and mobile phone use.

This is the seventh of 12 awareness and inspection campaigns planned for this year within the scope of the National Inspection Plan (PNF), which are carried out annually by the Public Security Police (PSP), National Road Safety Authority (ANSR) and National Republican Guard (GNR) and will run until July 16.

The 2023 PNF established as priorities the themes of speed, alcohol, safety accessories and mobile phones and this year’s, according to a statement from the PSP, in addition to these four themes, adds a new chapter on the inspection of two-wheeled motor vehicles.

The “2 Rodas: Agrerre-se à Vida” campaign includes awareness-raising actions by ANSR and inspection operations by the PSP and GNR.

These operations, according to the statement, will have a special focus on roads and access points with high traffic flow to help reduce the risk of accidents and encourage drivers to adopt safer behaviour.

Security forces remind motorcycle and moped users of the importance of wearing an approved helmet, properly fastened and adjusted, thus reducing the risk of death in the event of an accident by 40%.

The use of other protective equipment such as gloves, boots, jackets with protectors, trousers with protectors and airbags, contribute to reducing the severity of the consequences in the event of an accident, they also warn.

 

Algarve Situation Report Wednesday 10th July 2024

by Mike Evans

Good day to you all. With the summer holidays about to reach their peak, this brings the expected millions of tourists to our area. Whilst this is great news for all the businesses that work within the tourism industry we should all take a moment for those of us who live here to be vigilant to the rise of the dreaded “covid 19 virus”

Whilst the Algarve receives tourists from all parts of the world, the UK during the summer is the country which has the most holidaymakers arriving in the Algarve and it is from there that we see that the cases of Covid 19 are on the increase. Up to the end of June the UK saw a total of 3,230 people over a 7 day period register with the virus, an increase of 15% week on week. Experts believe that the true figure is probably 10 times this figure.

 At the end of May, Portugal had an average of 130 notifications of positive cases of Covid-19 per day and in the last seven days the daily average was around 390, said the professor at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon, noting that at the beginning of May the number of notifications was “very low”, around ten cases. Whilst the current strain is nowhere near as dangerous as in 2019/20 it is important that we still follow the advice given by the DGS about washing hands regularly and when sneezing to make sure we cover our noses as well as possible. As with the pandemic it is the elderly who are at most risk so while we all want to enjoy the summer be mindful of the virus and if with the elderly try and keep clear of crowds.

Now a look at what else has been happening in the past week across the region.

GNR Arrests 4 Individuals linked to a Drug Trafficking Network in Loulé 

The GNR’s Faro Territorial Command, through the Loulé Criminal Investigation Unit (NIC), carried out, between the 2nd and 3rd of July, an operation which resulted in the arrest of four men aged between 20 and 48 years old, for trafficking in narcotic products, in the municipality of Loulé.

As part of an investigation into drug trafficking, which lasted 15 months, GNR officers carried out police investigations that revealed the modus operandi of the drug trafficking network.

“It was possible to determine that the drug traffickers always acted extremely carefully and used several high-powered vehicles, selling the narcotic product in the Algarve region”, details the GNR in a statement. The military personnel from the NIC of Loulé and the Intervention Detachment (DI) of Faro carried out three house searches and five non-house searches, namely in vehicles, through which the four suspects were arrested.

The searches also resulted in the seizure of 5,651 euros in cash; 520 pounds; four high-powered passenger vehicles; seven mobile phones; 153 doses of cocaine; 13 doses of cannabis (pollen); 16,000 doses of cannabis oil; 570 doses of marijuana; 44 MDMA tablets; 35 doses of MDMA; 21 luxury watches; five bags of hallucinogenic gum; and various materials used to prepare individual doses of the drug.

The detainees were brought before the Faro Judicial Court on Thursday, July 4, to apply the coercive measures.

Man Arrested for Rape in Faro

The Southern Directorate of the Judicial Police arrested a 27-year-old man, due to strong evidence of the crime of rape, which occurred in the municipality of Faro, the PJ reported .

The facts date back to the early hours of October 20, 2023, the date on which the PJ received communication of the complaint, formalised with the police authorities by the victim herself.

Following the investigation, according to the PJ, it was possible to determine that the victim, a 19-year-old woman, was approached by an unknown person when she was leaving the space where a popular fair was taking place. At that time, she was allegedly coerced into sexual acts, through threats using a sharp weapon. “The sexual assault took place on a public road in a secluded location, and the victim was unable to seek help from any passers-by,” reads the statement.

The set of steps taken allowed the identification of the suspect and the collection of relevant evidence, with the arrest of the alleged perpetrator being carried out on Wednesday, July 3, after his return from an absence abroad.

The detainee will be brought before the competent judicial authority for the application of coercive measures.

The investigation is led by the Public Prosecution Services, Department of Investigation and Criminal Prosecution of Faro.

Man Wanted for Thefts in S. Brás is in Preventive Detention

The Faro Judicial Court ordered the preventive arrest of a 27-year-old man who was wanted for thefts from homes and vehicles in São Brás de Alportel, the GNR announced on Tuesday. According to a statement from that security force, the suspect had been arrested on Saturday following a complaint of “breaking into a residence”.

It was later discovered that the detainee was the target of an arrest warrant, as part of an investigation into “burglaries in residences, thefts and use of vehicles, thefts inside vehicles and violation of domicile”, which occurred in the municipality of São Brás de Alportel.

Woman named defendant for motorhome theft in Portimão

A 40-year-old woman has been named a defendant in an investigation that in recent days led to the recovery of a motorhome stolen in the municipality of Portimão, the GNR revealed on Tuesday .According to the statement released, the suspect is the partner of a man previously detained and subject to the coercive measure of preventive detention as part of an investigation into a vehicle theft that occurred on May 1.

Following the investigation, search warrants were executed which allowed the recovery and seizure of several items, such as “a stolen motorhome, valued at several thousand euros, a stolen electric bicycle, valued at around three thousand euros, and a light passenger vehicle with foreign registration”.

Collision Between Boats on the Arade River leaves 3 slightly injured

Two maritime tourist vessels – one with three and the other with four passengers on board – collided on the afternoon of Tuesday, July 2, on the Arade River, in Portimão . The causes of the accident are unknown, according to the National Maritime Authority ( AMN ). The collision resulted in three minor injuries.

Following an alert received from a member of the public who was on the beach at 2:30 pm, reporting that an accident had occurred between two boats in front of the Portimão Navy pier, members of the Portimão Maritime Police Local Command and crew from the Ferragudo Lifeguard Station were immediately called to the scene, AMN details in a statement. Members of the Portimão Fire Department also went to the scene.

“Upon arrival at the scene, it was found that the collision had resulted in three minor injuries, to whom first aid was already being given by members of the Navy ships that were docked at the Portimão Naval Support Point, as well as by a team of Marines,” the note adds. The crew of the Ferragudo Lifeguard Station subsequently transported two of the victims – two American women (aged 57 and 22) – to the Ferragudo Lifeguard Station, where they were waiting for the Firefighters who assisted them and then transported them to a hospital unit.

The third victim, a 57-year-old man, left the scene on his own using his own boat.

According to AMN, the remaining passengers on the damaged vessels were also transported by the crew of the Lifeboat Station and by the military personnel on the Navy ship’s launch to the Ferragudo Lifeboat Station.

The owners of the vessels were notified that they cannot sail until an inspection is carried out to prove “their seaworthiness conditions”.

The local command of the Portimão Maritime Police took charge of the incident, and a maritime accident procedure was opened to determine the causes of the accident. The AMN also guarantees that there is no source of pollution in the Arade River.

GNR Operation results in 75 Arrests

The GNR police carried out a series of operations in the district of Faro, during the week of July 1st to 7th. The operations aimed to prevent various crimes, including violent crime, and road inspections.

In total, during the week there were 75 arrests in the Algarve, including 20 for driving under the influence of alcohol, 9 for driving without a legal licence and 7 for drug trafficking.

4 high-powered passenger vehicles, 198 doses of cocaine, 16,000 doses of cannabis oil, 21 luxury watches, 9 mobile phones, 5 cannabis plants and various materials used to prepare individual doses of narcotics were seized. Regarding traffic, 370 infractions were detected, of which 143 were due to speeding, 32 due to lack of mandatory periodic inspection, 22 related to anomalies in lighting and signalling systems, 11 due to lack of or incorrect use of seat belts and/or restraint systems for children, 10 for improper use of a cell phone while driving and 7 for lack of civil liability insurance.

The GNR detected 173 accidents, resulting in 2 deaths, 2 serious injuries and 29 minor injuries.

Body of Man found in Olhao Harbour

The body of a man was found floating inside the fishing port of Olhão on Wednesday afternoon, with the causes of the incident so far unknown.

After an alert at around 4pm, via members of the public who were in the area, members of the Olhão Maritime Police Local Command and INEM’s Emergency and Resuscitation Medical Vehicle (VMER) immediately went to the scene.

The 45 year old Guinean man was declared dead at the scene by the VMER doctor.

“Upon arriving at the scene, it was found that it was the body of a man, and it was removed from the water by a member of the public who was in the area,” says the National Maritime Authority in a statement.

“Death was declared on site by the VMER doctor, and the body was transported, after contact with the Public Ministry, to the Institute of Legal Medicine of Faro”.

The Olhão Maritime Police Local Command took charge of the incident.​​

Crash on N125 leaves One dead.

A man died on the morning of the 3rd July  as a result of a collision between a heavy goods vehicle and a passenger car, on the EN125, in Portimão.

According to the Algarve Regional Emergency and Civil Protection Command, the accident occurred at 6:30am, in the Portimão-Lagos direction, causing traffic to be closed in both directions until around 10am.

The head-on collision between the two vehicles “resulted in the death of the driver of the passenger car”. The accident occurred at kilometre 44 of the EN125, next to the ‘new bridge’ over the Arade river, to Portimão, “with the causes of the collision unknown”.

The GNR’s Traffic Accident Criminal Investigation Unit (NICAV) is investigating, to determine the causes of the accident.

Portimao Man arrested on Sexual Assault Charges

In Portimão, a man has now been arrested on suspicion of sexually abusing a 14 year old girl, causing her to become pregnant. In a statement, the police revealed that they arrested the 41 year old man “for the alleged authorship of several crimes of sexual abuse of dependent minors, or those in a particularly vulnerable situation and violating their private life”.

The crimes were committed between July 2022 and October 2023, in Portimão, “making the victim a teenager who at the time the events began had turned 14”. According to a police source, the suspect was placed under house arrest after the first judicial interrogation.

The investigation conducted by the Portimão Criminal Investigation Department was initiated following the detection of the minor’s pregnancy, who gave birth at the end of last year.

The police statement says, “the significant sexual contacts took place inside the suspect’s home, who took advantage of the relationship of trust he had with the minor”. 

10 Arrests Made During Afro Nation Festival

The PSP made 10 arrests during the Afro Nation Festival, which took place from 26th to 30th June in Praia da Rocha, Portimão and attracted around 35,000 each day.

According to the police, the arrests resulted from crimes of drug trafficking, resistance and coercion against an employee, driving without a legal licence and speculation.

Five reports were also issued for offences due to possession of a narcotic product and sale and/or possession of nitrous oxide.

In total, the PSP seized 458 doses of marijuana, 504 doses of cocaine, 245 doses of amphetamines, 400 doses of hashish, 74 canisters of nitrous oxide and €1424 in cash, which police suspect came from drug trafficking.

Policing of the event involved, “around 200 police officers from its various departments, committed daily, whose actions aimed to guarantee public order, the management of road traffic and the prevention of criminal activities that generate a feeling of insecurity in the community”.

Until the next time Stay Safe…

 

The Algarve Report  3 July 2024

 

by Mike Evans

Good afternoon to you all. We start this report with the news recently published that the “Save Water” campaign which was set up in the Algarve earlier in the year has seen a 12% reduction in water usage for those establishments that signed up to the scheme which is commendable. However, we are met with the news this week that The amount of water stored fell in June in all river basins compared to the last day of the previous month, according to data from the National Water Resources Information System ( SNIRH ).

The Barlavento Algarve basin continues to be the one with the lowest amount of reserve water, falling from 22.3% in May to 20.8% in June.

At the end of June, the Mira basins also had less water availability, with 40.5% (41.4% in May) and Arade 40.8% (42.7% in May). The amount of water also fell in the Lima basins, from 76.1% to 53.5%, and in the Sado basin, from 72.3% to 66.7%.

On the last day of June, the Mondego (91.3%), Guadiana (87.4%), Cávado (87%), Oeste (85.7%), Douro (80%) and Tejo (77.9%) basins had the highest volume of water.

According to SNIRH data, of the 58 monitored reservoirs, 28 had water availability above 80% of the total volume and another six below 40%.

June 2024 storages by river basin are higher than the June storage averages (1990/91 to 2022/23), except for the Lima, Mira, Ribeiras do Algarve and Arade basins. Each river basin may have more than one reservoir.

According to the Portuguese Institute of the Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA), almost half of mainland Portugal was experiencing weak or moderate meteorological drought at the end of May, with a greater focus on the southern region.

So whilst there are many who are giving themselves a “pat” on the back for saving water there are obviously many across the region who are happily going about using water without a care in the world! It remains to be seen if we are going to get through the summer without any restrictions but let’s hope that people start to realise this precious resource is something we all need and must be preserved and used sparingly.

Now a look at some of the other stories that have happened across the region in the past week.

16-year-old arrested for murder in Faro

A 19-year-old man died yesterday, allegedly due to stab wounds, following an argument near Faro ‘s municipal swimming pools. The alleged killer, a 16-year-old boy, was later arrested, the PSP revealed. The Faro Public Security Police Command (PSP) said, in a statement, that it was called at 6:30 pm to a “dispute between citizens” in the city of Faro.

“Upon arriving at the scene, police officers came across a male victim with trauma to the chest caused “by a sharp weapon, who was treated at the scene by emergency teams,” it reads. “However, these efforts proved fruitless and death was declared at the scene,” he added.

The Judicial Police arrested the alleged murderer, a young teenager, aged 16, due to strong evidence of the crime of qualified homicide. “The confrontation had already been previously scheduled, between a group of young teenagers”, reveals the PJ.

Aware that they were outnumbered, the group of four young people that included the victim fled, being pursued by more than a dozen other teenagers. When they separated, the victim ended up being ambushed and fatally attacked.

“The investigative steps carried out by the Southern Directorate of the Judicial Police allowed the collection of relevant evidence that led to the complete identification of those involved, including the suspect responsible for the crime”, highlights the Judicial Police.

The detainee will be brought before the judicial authority for the purposes of initial questioning and application of coercive measures.

Man suspected of murder with a knife arrested in Albufeira

A 26-year-old man was arrested on Saturday, the 29th, due to “strong evidence” of the murder of another 77-year-old man, using a bladed weapon, in Albufeira, the Judicial Police (PJ) reported.

According to a statement published on the PJ website, the victim, owner of a commercial space, “was attacked with a sharp weapon, following an argument related to debts relating to the lease of the commercial space he owned, last Thursday”.

According to the PJ, the victim’s disappearance was reported to the authorities on Friday, late in the evening. The detainee “abandoned the body inside the establishment”, and the investigation by the Southern Directorate of the PJ “found that he was preparing to hide the body”, reads the note. The PJ also reveals that it collected “relevant evidence that led to the complete identification of the suspect”.

The detainee will be brought before the judicial authorities for the first judicial interrogation and application of coercive measures.

The investigation is led by the Albufeira Department of Investigation and Criminal Prosecution.

PJ arrests six people for criminal association in the real estate sector

The Judicial Police , through the Southern Directorate, as part of an investigation initiated in 2021, carried out a police operation in which four men and two women were arrested, on suspicion of committing the crimes of criminal association, qualified fraud, money laundering and document forgery, in the real estate sector, in the Algarve .

In the operation, “Orange”, led by the Regional DIAP of Évora, seven house searches and two company searches were also carried out, dozens of properties, 14 vehicles, a vessel, computer equipment and a large collection of documentary evidence were seized.

At issue is the investigation of an organised group, with several nationalities, resident in the Algarve and with links to the diaspora in other countries, who created in our country in Portugal an economic organisation in the real estate sector, entirely fraudulently financed by bank loans. The “modus operandi” involved the creation of companies under Portuguese law, through which they acquired hundreds of properties, the ownership of which, through simulated transactions, they immediately transferred to third parties.

In their name, and using false documents, they took out housing loans with Portuguese banking institutions, in amounts much higher than the initial purchase price of the goods, appropriating the difference, in addition to the proceeds from the subsequent use of the properties as tourist and residential accommodation.

To date, more than 20 companies controlled by the various suspects identified in the investigation have been identified, through which more than 300 properties were acquired and more than two hundred fraudulent financing agreements were contracted, with a total value of around 40 million euros.

The detainees will be brought before the first judicial interrogation with a view to applying coercive measures.

GNR launches “Operation Field”

The National Republican Guard (GNR) will carry out Operation Safe Field between 1 July, 2024 and 16 February, 2025. The operation’s objective is to bring awareness, patrolling, and inspection of agricultural and forestry farms throughout the national territory, in order to repress the practice of crimes of theft of agricultural products and machinery, crimes of Human Trafficking in the workplace and prevent the occurrence of accidents with agricultural and forestry vehicles or machinery.

During the operation, the GNR intends to raise awareness among the population in general and the rural population in particular, for the adoption of behaviours that can prevent possible criminal offences, namely the theft of agricultural products and machinery and the theft of non-precious metals; identify possible situations of exploitation in the context of work, namely those that may be related to Trafficking in Human Beings and also, raise awareness on safely driving agricultural and forestry vehicles and avoiding accidents.

In this way, patrol and inspection actions will be intensified in view of the seasonality of agricultural and forestry crops in each region, directing them to the places, days, and times of greatest risk, taking into account the history of theft, and control and inspection actions will also be developed to control and supervise the transport of agricultural and forestry products at the crossing points of the land border, in coordination with the Guardia Civil to tackle cross-border crime. Awareness-raising and information actions are also carried out with owners, and local and regional entities associated with farms to promote the dissemination of advice with a view to adopting behaviours that prevent theft.

Portugal’s rural firefighting force at ‘maximum capacity

 Portugal’s rural firefighting force is being reinforced today to reach its maximum capacity, with 14,155 operatives, 3,162 teams and 3,174 vehicles on standby, with 72 aircraft.

The National Operational Directive (DON), which establishes this year’s Special Force for Fighting Rural Fires (DECIR), indicates that resources are being reinforced for the third time this year with the entry into force of the so-called ‘reinforced – Delta level’, which lasts until September 30.

Over the next three months, 14,155 personnel, 3,162 teams and 3,174 vehicles will be operational – numbers that could increase if necessary, since this year’s DECIR provides for the mobilisation of additional resources to respond to more serious situations. In this situation, the number of firefighters could exceed 20,000, a reinforcement that is made above all by volunteer firefighters.

This year’s DECIR provides for 70 aircraft for this period, which is considered the most critical, which could rise to 72 with the hiring of two heavy ‘Canadair’ aeroplanes, with the contract process still underway. Of the total number of operatives involved, the largest number belongs to the fire brigade (8,061), of which 3,794 are from Permanent Intervention Teams, followed by the ICNF (2,430), the GNR (1,946) and the Special Civil Protection Force (216), according to DON.

The firefighting force for this year has increased slightly compared to 2023, with the exception of the aerial resources, (numbers identical) – with 261 more operatives, 78 more teams and 183 more firefighting vehicles.

Provisional figures from the Institute for Nature Conservation and Forests (ICNF) indicate that 1,796 rural fires have broken out since the beginning of the year, consuming around 2,918 hectares – 56% of which refers to scrubland, 19% to forest stands and 25% to agricultural land.

In the same period in 2023, there had already been almost 4,000 fires and around 8,800 hectares burnt.

Until the next time stay safe

 

 

 

Azores Situation Report 3rd July 2024

 

By our correspondent from the Azores

Road accident in Ribeira Grande leaves three dead and one injured

A traffic accident that occurred on the expressway between Lomba da Maia and Ribeira Funda, in the early hours of Sunday to Monday, caused three fatalities.

According to the Public Security Police, the accident involved two vehicles and four people. One of the cars had only one passenger, while the other had three.

One of the vehicles was heading northeast to Ponta Delgada and the other from Ponta Delgada to the northeast, and they collided head-on after one of the vehicles left its lane.

The collision immediately resulted in the death of the drivers, as well as the front passenger of the vehicle, which was carrying three people, with only the passenger in the back seat surviving.  The accident occurred at 11 pm on Sunday.

Two extrication vehicles were at the scene, given the circumstances of the collision between the vehicles, as well as five emergency ambulances, two of them from the Ponta Delgada Volunteer Firefighters and one vehicle from the Azores Regional Command.

Five earthquakes with magnitudes between 1.6 and 3.0 on the Richter scale felt in Terceira

Five earthquakes with magnitudes between 1.6 and 3.0 on the Richter scale were felt today in Terceira, as part of the ongoing seismo-volcaeic crisis on the island, authorities announced.

According to the Azores Seismo-volcaeic Surveillance and Information Centre (CIVISA), the tremors were recorded at 01:50 local time (02:50 in Lisbon), at 06:41 local time (07:41 in Lisbon) and at 07:03 local time (08:03 in Lisbon).

The first earthquake, recorded at 01:50 local time, had a magnitude of 1.6 on the Richter scale and its epicentre was approximately four kilometres northeast of Santa Bárbara. It was felt with a maximum intensity of III (Modified Mercalli scale) in Santa Bárbara and Doze Ribeiras (Angra do Heroísmo).

At 06:41 local time, three earthquakes were recorded on Terceira Island.

The next event had a magnitude of 3.0 on the Richter scale and an epicentre about five kilometres east-southeast of Serreta. The second had a magnitude of 2.7 and was located five kilometres northeast of Santa Bárbara, while the third, with a magnitude of 2.9, had an epicentre three kilometres north-northeast of Santa Bárbara.

“According to the information available to date, the earthquakes were felt with maximum intensity IV/V (Modified Mercalli scale) in Serreta, Raminho, Altares Doze Ribeiras, Santa Bárbara, Cinco Ribeiras, São Bartolomeu (municipality of Angra do Heroísmo) and Biscoitos (municipality of Praia da Vitória)”, CIVISA added.

The events were also felt with intensity IV in S. Mateus da Calheta, Terra Chã, Posto Santo, Santa Luzia, S. Pedro, Sé, Conceição, Santa Luzia, Ribeirinha (Angra do Heroísmo), Quatro Ribeiras and Agualva (Vitória Beach), and intensity III in Vila das Lajes (Vitória Beach).

The fifth earthquake on Terceira Island, recorded at 7:03 am local time, had a magnitude of 2.0 and an epicentre approximately four kilometres northeast of Santa Bárbara.

CIVISA reported that this tremor was felt with maximum intensity III in Santa Bárbara (Angra do Heroísmo).

The Portuguese Institute of the Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA) also issued a statement on the earthquake registered at 06:41 local time, giving it a magnitude of 3.4 on the Richter scale and an epicentre approximately four kilometres east-southeast of Serreta.

“According to the available information, this earthquake was felt, and a new statement with updated instrumental and macro seismic information should be issued soon,” he added.

The events are part of the ongoing seismic-volcanic crisis on Terceira Island since June 2022.

On Thursday, due to seismic activity on the island, CIVISA raised the alert level for the Santa Bárbara volcano to V3 and that of the island’s fissure volcanic system to V1.