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Marchamujer 2026 Celebrates Women And Equality With Citywide Events In Cartagena

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Hundreds join Cartagena Marchamujer celebrating women, equality, and charity. Photo Credit: Cartagena City Hall

The municipality of Cartagena celebrated the women of Murcia and protested in favour of equality with a new edition of the Marchamujer, in which hundreds of participants toured the city centre in a parade, as well as activities including workshops, dancing, sports, and games in Rambla Park.

March took off from Plaza del Ayuntamiento and filled the city streets with colour

The event, organised by the Cartagena City Council through the Equality Service in collaboration with the Mediterranean Federation of Women’s Associations, and taking place on Thursday, May 21, was dedicated to highlighting the role of women and reinforcing the commitment to true equality in society. The march, which boasted nearly 300 participants, took off from the Plaza del Ayuntamiento, and traversed the streets of the municipality with colour, enthusiasm and camaraderie among the participants. The march finally ended in Rambla Park, next to the Cartagonova municipal stadium.

Charity, community, camaraderie: Cartagena’s day of celebration

The rest of the day was a festive event, in which members of the community took part and socialised together. The programme designed for the event included a mobile disco, workshops, dancing, sports, and a raffle with exciting prizes that were donated by collaborating groups and organisations. 

Charity was also a main highlight of the event. The 2026 edition of the Marchamujer raised €3,052 for the Amazonas Sports Association, a non-profit organisation that promotes well-being and personal growth through therapeutic archery.

An event that united nearly 300 participants under one common message

The Marchamujer united associations, residents, visitors, and other participants around one message: Cartagena is advancing towards true equality, and appreciates the active role of women in all areas of the municipality and beyond.

Once more, the Marchamujer became a meeting point for citizen participation, awareness and the demand for more inclusivity in Cartagena, highlighting the important role of women in society.

“Women have a lot to contribute,” said Mayor of Cartagena, Noelia Arroyo, during her speech, “and from the City Council we aim to promote equality policies and help women play a leading role in society and in Cartagena.”

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Spain’s Nightlife Terraces Face Stricter Regulation As Cities Consider Mandatory Noise Sensors

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Complaints tend to increase during warmer months when terrace use intensifies and windows remain open. Photo credit: Alex Segre/Shutterstock

Spain is moving towards stricter control of noise in outdoor hospitality spaces, with proposals and existing municipal rules that may include real-time monitoring of sound levels using sensors on bar and restaurant terraces in certain areas. The changes are not being introduced as a single nationwide law. Instead, they fall under Spain’s established system of municipal and regional environmental regulation, meaning each city council decides how and when to apply stricter noise controls.

The most common framework used across Spain is the designation of acoustically saturated zones, areas where repeated noise complaints and measured sound levels exceed permitted thresholds. In these zones, authorities can restrict terrace capacity, reduce opening hours, limit new licences, or increase enforcement measures.

Cities already applying or expanding strict noise controls

Several major Spanish cities already operate or are developing tighter systems for controlling terrace noise, although the use of sensors is not uniformly mandated.

In Madrid, the city’s noise control system includes Zonas de Protección Acústica Especial (ZPAE), where terraces face reduced hours, stricter licensing conditions, and stronger enforcement. These zones are used in high-density districts where residential complaints are frequent.

In Barcelona, the city has long applied some of the strictest terrace regulations in Spain. Certain neighbourhoods, including parts of the city centre such as Ciutat Vella, Gràcia and L’Eixample, have previously seen earlier closing times, reduced terrace capacity, and enforcement based on sound measurements, including the use of monitoring data to justify restrictions.

In Valencia, local authorities have introduced pilot schemes exploring “smart terrace” concepts in some districts. These include acoustic monitoring tools and environmental adjustments designed to reduce noise impact in busy nightlife areas.

In the Balearic Islands (notably Palma de Mallorca), strict noise enforcement is already well established due to heavy tourism pressure. Regulations in entertainment zones often include tight limits on outdoor noise, operating hours, and licensing conditions.

In Málaga, municipal regulations have also been tightened in central and coastal districts where tourism and residential areas overlap, with restrictions on terraces and enforcement linked to noise complaints and measured thresholds.

These cities do not operate under a single shared system. Instead, they apply similar principles independently based on local demand, tourism intensity and residential pressure.

Why noise is a persistent issue in Spanish cities

Noise from terraces remains one of the most common urban complaints in Spain’s major cities, particularly in high-tourism and nightlife districts. Residents in these areas often report that the issue is not limited to individual incidents, but rather a continuous background level of sound during evening and night-time hours. This includes conversations from outdoor seating, movement of furniture, delivery activity, and general street congestion.

Complaints tend to increase during warmer months when terrace use intensifies and windows remain open. In densely populated districts, sound can travel easily between streets and residential buildings, contributing to ongoing disputes between residents and hospitality venues. Local authorities already use a range of enforcement tools, including inspections, fines, and acoustic measurements, to manage these conflicts. However, enforcement often depends on location-specific rules rather than a uniform national standard.

What the measures mean for residents

For people living in central or tourist-heavy districts, stricter controls are intended to improve consistency in how noise limits are enforced.

Residents’ associations in affected areas argue that current systems often rely on complaints rather than continuous monitoring. Where noise limits are exceeded, enforcement can vary depending on timing and available inspection resources.

More structured monitoring in some cities is intended to provide clearer evidence of breaches and reduce reliance on subjective reporting. This is particularly relevant in districts where hospitality activity is concentrated in narrow streets and mixed-use buildings.

What it means for bars, restaurants and tourists

For hospitality businesses, terraces are a major part of revenue, particularly in cities where outdoor dining is central to local culture and tourism. Any tightening of rules can affect seating capacity, opening hours, and compliance costs. Operators may face additional administrative requirements depending on the municipality, especially in areas designated as acoustically saturated zones. However, most cities continue to prioritise maintaining terrace activity while managing its impact on nearby residents.

For tourists, changes are likely to be gradual rather than immediately noticeable. Spain’s terrace culture remains a key part of its hospitality identity, and outdoor dining is not expected to be reduced nationwide. In some districts, visitors may experience more regulated environments, including earlier closing times or quieter seating areas. In others, especially outside high-density zones, there may be little visible change.

No nationwide uniform system

Despite the attention around noise sensors and stricter terrace controls, Spain does not currently have a unified national policy requiring all municipalities to adopt the same system. Instead, regulation remains fragmented. Cities such as Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Palma de Mallorca and Málaga apply their own rules based on local conditions, legal frameworks and environmental assessments.

The overall direction is consistent: increased attention to managing terrace noise in densely populated or tourist-heavy areas. However, the tools used, including whether sensors are deployed, remain entirely dependent on local government decisions rather than national legislation.

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Spain Helps Children Call Home Without Phones

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Some shops in Spain now allow children without smartphones to call parents for free. Credit : Littlekidmoment, Shutterstock

A few years ago, giving a child a smartphone started feeling almost unavoidable in Spain. Parents worried about school runs, after school activities, buses running late or children needing help while out with friends. Eventually many gave in and bought phones earlier than they really wanted to.

Now things seem to be shifting a bit.

In several parts of Spain, local shops are starting to offer children something surprisingly simple instead. If they need help, they can walk in and ask to call home for free.

No app.

No account.

No smartphone needed.

The idea is already being introduced in Navarra, Catalonia and Boadilla del Monte near Madrid through networks of participating businesses displaying stickers in shop windows so children know they can ask for help if necessary.

And honestly, part of the reason people are reacting so positively to it is because it feels practical in a very normal everyday way.

A child misses the bus after football practice. Somebody forgets keys. Plans change unexpectedly after school. Instead of carrying a smartphone connected permanently to social media and messaging apps, they can simply ask to make a quick call.

For many families, that sounds like a reasonable compromise.

Parents want children reachable without giving them full internet access

The debate around smartphones and children has become much bigger in Spain recently.

A lot of parents are no longer comfortable with how young children are when they first start using social media or spending hours online.

Some schools have tightened phone rules. Parent groups regularly discuss screen addiction, online bullying and children spending less time offline.

At the same time though, many mothers and fathers admit they still feel anxious about not being able to contact their children easily.

That is exactly the gap these shop networks are trying to fill.

The businesses involved are not acting as childcare centres or supervision points. Their role is limited to allowing occasional calls home if a child genuinely needs one.

In Navarra, the initiative is known as ‘Llama a casa’, meaning ‘Call home’.

It is being promoted by the association Adolescencia Libre de Móviles en Navarra together with the Official College of Pharmacists of Navarra.

According to organisers, more than 285 places have already joined including pharmacies, cafés, sports centres, academies and other local businesses.

Catalonia has launched a similar campaign called “Fes un truc” starting in Lleida, where commercial associations reportedly requested thousands of stickers for participating shops shortly after the project was announced.

Boadilla del Monte has also introduced its own version called “Comercio Amigo” through a local family support programme.

The idea feels familiar to many adults in Spain

Part of the reason the initiative resonates with people is because it reminds many adults of how things worked before smartphones became constant companions.

Children used to knock on a neighbour’s door if something happened.

Or ask to use a shop phone, or call parents from a café.

Several parents commenting online about the initiative said they feel pressure nowadays to buy phones earlier than they would actually like because they are afraid children will otherwise be unreachable.

Others say they deliberately delayed smartphones but struggled with practical situations once children started becoming more independent.

That is why the idea is spreading attention far beyond the towns where it currently exists. Because it taps into something many families are quietly wrestling with already.

How do you give children freedom without handing over permanent internet access at such a young age?

According to Spain’s National Statistics Institute, nearly 68 per cent of children aged between 10 and 15 used mobile phones in 2025.

However, the percentage among younger children dropped slightly compared with the previous year. That small drop may not sound huge, but many parents see it as a sign attitudes are beginning to change.

Not necessarily against technology itself. More against the idea that smartphones have become the automatic solution for every situation involving children.

Of course, not everyone agrees on where the balance should be.

Some parents still feel safer knowing children always carry phones. Others wonder whether these shop networks can realistically expand enough to become useful everywhere. But what is clear is that more families in Spain are starting to ask the same question.

Whether children really need smartphones as early as everyone assumed they did.

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British Pilgrim Dies After Fall On Camino De Santiago

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Puente la Reina village, Navarra on Camino route. Credit: Ayuntamiento PLR

A local resident discovered the lifeless body of a 64-year-old English pilgrim in the Robo River close to Puente la Reina-Gares on Friday morning, May 22. Police Foral officers, the police force of Navarra, rushed to the spot after receiving the alert at 9.30am.

Location and circumstances of the fall

Investigators suspect the man attempted to cross a ramshackle wooden bridge constructed from logs and pallets. This unofficial crossing is said to sit around two to three metres above the water level and serves local people accessing allotment plots. Reports indicate the structure does not form part of any official Camino de Santiago path. Registration details confirm the pilgrim was booked in as a registered guest at Hotel Albergue Jakue and nearby Albergue El Peregrino on Wednesday night. Concerns grew following failure to return for his booked accommodation among those around him.

Emergency services deployment

Firefighters from Navarra joined a duty doctor and an ambulance crew at the riverbank site. Medical staff could only confirm the death upon arrival near the riverbank on the way out of town towards Pamplona.

Police investigation underway

Officers from the regional force continue to examine details of what happened. Judicial authorities are now overseeing the case as standard procedure for such incidents. Everything points to an accidental slip that led to a plunge into the river. A possibility exists that the man struck his head during the fall from the height of the bridge. A local gardener who uses the bridge daily reported no unusual activity the previous day. Discovery occurred when the gardener returned to his plot the following morning and saw the body partially submerged.

Dangers on the pilgrimage

Another pilgrim lost his life on 17 April near Santiago de Compostela. That incident took place in the rúa do Beado area of O Milladoiro after the traveller suffered a sudden illness. Emergency teams from various services attended but could not revive him at the scene.

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