logo
Spain opens probe after cable theft halts high-speed trains

Spain opens probe after cable theft halts high-speed trains

CNA05-05-2025

MADRID: Spanish police opened an investigation on Monday (May 5) after thefts of copper cables halted high-speed trains from Madrid to the south, leaving thousands of passengers trapped in trains or stranded at stations.
The disruption took place on a busy day as travellers were returning home after a long weekend in Madrid and before the start on Tuesday of a week-long annual fair in the southern city of Seville, a major tourist draw.
It came a week after a blackout in Spain and neighbouring Portugal also brought trains to a halt on the Spanish high-speed rail network, the second longest in the world after China's. No firm cause for the outage has yet emerged.
The transport ministry said the cable theft took place on Sunday in the central province of Toledo at five points within a few kilometres of each other on the high-speed line linking Madrid and Seville.
The theft disrupted travel between Madrid, Seville, Malaga, Valencia and the southern city of Granada, affecting more than 10,000 passengers and at least 30 trains.
Service was gradually returning to normal on Monday.
Transport Minister Oscar Puente called the cable theft a "serious act of sabotage" in a post on X.
"It was quite a coordinated action. Whoever did it knew what they were going for," he added.
Spain's Civil Guard police force has opened a probe into the "theft of copper cabling" to "clarify what happened and identify those responsible", the interior ministry said on social media.
The price of copper has soared in recent years, triggering thefts of cables that use the metal in train and telecommunications networks around the world.
The head of Spain's main opposition Popular Party, Alberto Nunez Feijoo, said images of "thousands of Spaniards trapped on trains" without water were "unbecoming of the fourth largest economy in the eurozone".

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says
Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says

Spanish Defence Minister Margarita Robles speaks during the La Toja Forum on global challenges in Lisbon, Portugal, April 1, 2025. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes/File Photo Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says MADRID - Spain stands by its defence spending target of 2% of GDP, Spanish Defence Minister Margarita Robles said on Thursday, as pressure grows from NATO leadership and the United States for the Mediterranean country to increase it. "We think that this 2% is enough to meet the responsibilities we have committed to," Robles said. Spain will not veto a NATO decision to raise the defence spending target during a summit to be held later this month in The Hague, she said. "What is important is that each country is able to meet the objectives it has set itself," she added. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced in April a plan to increase military spending by 10.5 billion euros ($11.99 billion) this year, bringing forward to this year a goal to meet the 2% of GDP target from its previously self-imposed deadline of 2029. Despite the new plan Spain, which spent just 1.3% on defence in 2024, the lowest among NATO members, is under pressure to spend even more. European defence commissioner Andrius Kubilius said on May 3 Spain ought to raise spending to 3% of GDP. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Farmers in EU raise alarm over Mercosur, Ukraine trade deals
Farmers in EU raise alarm over Mercosur, Ukraine trade deals

Straits Times

time2 days ago

  • Straits Times

Farmers in EU raise alarm over Mercosur, Ukraine trade deals

A farmer holds grains in his hands as other members of Spanish farming associations hold cardboard cutouts of U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin as they protest to demand the government to limit Ukraine's grain imports, outside the Agriculture Ministry in Madrid, Spain, June 4, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera A man checks grains he picked up from the ground during a protest by Spanish farming associations to demand the government to limit Ukraine's grain imports, outside the Agriculture Ministry in Madrid, Spain, June 4, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera Members of Spanish farming associations hold cardboard cutouts of U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin as they protest to demand the government to limit Ukraine's grain imports, outside the Agriculture Ministry in Madrid, Spain, June 4, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera REFILE - CORRECTING DATE FROM \"JUNE 3\" TO \"JUNE 4\". PARIS/MADRID - French and Spanish farmers warned on Wednesday that a flood of imports under planned European Union trade agreements with South American bloc Mercosur and Ukraine risked severely undermining European agriculture. The concerns come ahead of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's official visit to France and the expiry on Thursday of a free trade deal with Ukraine, which is expected to shift to import quotas this summer. Lula said on Tuesday he would discuss the EU-Mercosur deal with President Emmanuel Macron, a strong critic of the agreement in its current form, which was finalised in December but still needs approval from member states. In a meeting with members of parliament, French farmers' groups urged Macron to rally enough partners to form a blocking minority against the Mercosur deal, which they say would be devastating for the beef, poultry and sugar industries and compromise the EU's ambitions in terms of food sovereignty. "It would be a real tragedy for our industry," Alain Carre, head of French sugar industry group AIBS said. "We're sounding the alarm." French farmers held nationwide protests last year over low incomes, rising costs, and competition from cheap imports, particularly from Ukraine and Mercosur countries, demanding fairer trade terms and lighter regulation. "Our demands (for an EU-Mercosur agreement) are simple: reciprocity of rules, traceability abroad and much clearer labelling," Jean-Michel Schaeffer, head of French poultry industry group Anvol, said. Meanwhile, a few hundred farmers protested in Madrid against cheap grain imports from Ukraine and other countries, saying prices have fallen below production costs. Spanish farmers are likely to lose 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) this year, said Javier Fatas, a leader of farmers union COAG from the Aragon region in northeastern Spain. "This happens because of trade deals signed by Spain and the EU as part of geopolitics, bringing us prices too low to sustain our farms," Fatas said. He warned that genetically modified grains from Mercosur also created unfair competition, echoing French farmers' concerns. Wednesday's protest was peaceful, but only the beginning, he added. "Bad times are coming." Here are the main EU import quotas for Mercosur products in the agreement: Product Quota Volume Tariff / Note Beef 99,000 t 7.5% tariff Poultry 180,000 t 0%, phased in over 5 years Pork 25,000 t 83 euros/tonne Sugar 190,000 t 0% Corn (Maize) 1,000,000 t 0%, phased in Industrial 450,000 t 0% Ethanol Fuel Ethanol 200,000 t One-third of MFN tariff Rice 60,000 t 0% Honey 45,000 t 0% REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Madrid's ghost towns revived as Spain's housing crisis escalates
Madrid's ghost towns revived as Spain's housing crisis escalates

Business Times

time3 days ago

  • Business Times

Madrid's ghost towns revived as Spain's housing crisis escalates

[SESENA, Spain] The first call came two minutes after estate agent Segis Gomez posted a listing in Sesena, a development near Madrid that gained notoriety as one of the so-called 'ghost towns' created when Spain's property bubble burst in 2008. Half-built and half-empty for more than a decade, these days the squatters have gone from this development 40 km south of the capital and middle-class families, driven out of the city centre by an acute housing crisis, are moving in. Construction, meanwhile, has restarted. Demand is so strong in Sesena that Gomez has a waiting list of 70 people for each property. Property prices have recovered their original value after plunging to less than half during the crisis, he said. As anger grows over the cost of housing in Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has made providing affordable homes one of his main goals – even as he encourages population growth through immigration. The size of the challenge is clear in Madrid, which grew by 140,000 people in 2024, but only registered permits to build 20,000 new homes. Short supply is being exacerbated by a boom in holiday lets, record migration and onerous planning laws. 'The problem is that we can't match supply and demand quickly enough. So prices go up, or people have to trade price for distance,' said Carles Vergara, a real estate professor at IESE Business School in Madrid. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Tuesday, 12 pm Property Insights Get an exclusive analysis of real estate and property news in Singapore and beyond. Sign Up Sign Up Sesena has been adopted as a commuter town as Madrid overflows, even though it is located in the neighbouring Castile-La Mancha region and still lacks good transport links to the capital and public services, which caused homebuyers to reject it in the past. Its founder and original developer, Francisco Hernando, had a vision of 13,000 affordable apartments with gardens and swimming pools on the Spanish plain where author Cervantes set his best-known work Don Quixote, but the project became a byword for speculative greed and corruption. Only 5,000 homes ended up being built. Hernando, who began his project in 2004, failed to tell homebuyers he hadn't secured access to water or that the town had no public transport or schools. Hernando died in 2020. When the market collapsed, initial investors saw the value of their property plummet, while many homes ended up in the hands of banks. Today, Sesena teems with life as parents drop children at its three schools, drink coffee in its bars and visit recently-opened gyms and pharmacies. Impact Homes, a developer, is constructing 156 one-to-four bedroom apartments it expects to complete this year. Next door, another building has already pre-sold 49 per cent of its units, it said in an email. 'Sesena is at 100 per cent,' said Jaime de Hita, the town's mayor. Nestor Delgado moved to Sesena in 2021 with his family from Carabanchel in south Madrid because an apartment cost 20 per cent less to rent. In May, he bought a house with his wife for 240,000 euros (S$352,105). 'We chose (Sesena) because we can afford it,' Delgado, 34, said. The trade-off is rising before 5 am to be among the first in the queue for the 6.30 am bus to Madrid to arrive at his construction job by 8 am or face an hour's wait for the next bus. Other ghost towns are also coming back to life. Valdeluz, a development 75 km east of Madrid originally envisioned to house 30,000 people, was abandoned a quarter of the way through when the property bubble burst. Mayor Enrique Quintana told Reuters the town's 6,000-strong population is swelling with people from Madrid and could expand by 50 per cent in the next four years. A development on the edge of the village of Bernuy de Porreros, 100 km north of Madrid, which as recently as six years ago was mostly abandoned, is now bustling with activity as handymen put the finishing touches on homes. Lucia, a 37-year-old state employee, bought her house in April. Her daily commute to Madrid involves a 15-minute drive to the train station in Segovia and 28 minutes on the high-speed train, which costs her 48 euros for 30 trips thanks to a frequent traveller discount. The development began to revive when Spain's so-called bad bank Sareb, which was set up to take bad loans from the financial crisis, in 2021 began selling the homes for as little as 97,000 euros. Four years later, one property was resold for double that, said resident Nuria Alvarez. Until recently a relatively compact city, Madrid is on the way to becoming a metropolis like Paris or London, with commuter zones stretching beyond its administrative boundaries, said Jose Maria Garcia, the regional government's deputy housing minister. The metropolitan area's population of 7 million will grow by a million in the next 15 years, the government estimates. Madrid has a deficit of 80,000-100,000 homes that's growing by 15,000 homes a year and plans to build 110,000 homes by 2028, Garcia said. Sesena, meanwhile, is once again dreaming big. Its mayor, de Hita, said the town is securing permits for a new project dubbed Parquijote, with a proposed investment of 2.3 billion euros to build a logistics park that will create local jobs, along with 2,200 homes. It's no quixotic fantasy, de Hita said. 'This time we have learned from what happened,' he said. 'It is fundamental that we look for growth by learning from the past.' REUTERS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store