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Save A Life & Yorkshire Linen Team Up With 11th Defibrillator

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Life savers at Yorkshire Linen. Credit: EWN

Save A Life charity has delivered another automatic external defibrillator (AED) to a busy location on the Carretera de Mijas.

This latest unit now stands ready at the entrance of Yorkshire Linen Beds & More. Local residents and shoppers can rest easier and in emergencies gain quick access to vital equipment if cardiac emergencies occures.

Community fundraiser success behind progress

Yorkshire Linen hosted a popular charity market on May 2. Crowds browsed stalls offering crafts, jewellery, honey and second-hand goods in the car park behind the store. Organisers raised substantial sums through raffles and sales. Steph from Yorkshire Linen reported €850 from the raffle and the market plus around the same was donated from S.A.L’s own fundraising. At the installing of the AED on Friday, May 15, Steph said that it was time they got one, and that the whole team would receive a training course from S.A.L in the coming days on CPR and AED use.

Funds from the market contributed directly to purchasing and installing the new AED. Gerry and Jenny Hannam, founders of Save A Life, expressed gratitude for the strong community turnout and Steph’s forward thinking. Their initiative has now placed multiple devices across Mijas, Fuengirola and nearby areas. The Hannam family was at the unveiling with the Yorkshire Linen team and Euro Weekly News’ own resident medical columnist Dr Marcus Stephan to celebrate this the eleventh AED installed in the area. The twelfth is already lined up for Mijas Golf in the coming days.

Why public AEDs matter

Cardiac arrest strikes without warning. Survival rates drop by about 10 per cent with every minute that passes without defibrillation. Locations like retail outlets see high footfall, so placing equipment there maximises response potential. Save A Life also runs CPR and first aid training sessions to equip people with essential skills.

Yorkshire Linen’s support demonstrates how businesses can play an active role in community safety. Shoppers at the store and passers-by can benefit from far better protection on this busy stretch of road.

Wider impact on the Costa del Sol

This installation adds to a rapidly growing network of publicly accessible defibrillators. Save A Life has reached double figures in units provided so far. Recent placements include locations in Calahonda and Benalmadena.

Community members continue to back the cause through fundraising markets, lunches, galas and donations.

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Horror In Modena As Car Rams Into Pedestrians On Busy Italian Street

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Aftermath of attack in Modena. Credit: Visgrad X

A 31-year-old driver ploughed a Citroën C3 into crowds on Via Emilia in central Modena on Saturday, May 16, striking at least ten people before smashing into a shop front. Police have confirmed seven individuals suffered injuries, with four in serious condition and one woman losing both legs in the violent episode. People pursued the suspect on foot after he abandoned his car and attempted to stab a passer-by who tried to stop him.

High-speed impact shocks local residents

People in the area saw the car accelerate rapidly towards the pavement in a pedestrian zone. Witnesses recalled the vehicle reaching speeds estimated at 80 kilometres per hour, sending victims flying and sparking immediate panic. The driver, originally from Seriate near Bergamo and with Tunisian roots, continued his path until the collision with the shopfront. He then fled the scene on foot through the historic centre, raising fear levels among bystanders.

Citizens help with quick arrests

Several locals joined forces to chase and restrain the man until police arrived. Modena mayor Massimo Mezzetti publicly thanked those who intervened, thanking them for their bravery during the chaotic moments. Officers from the Carabinieri, state police, and Guardia di Finanza responded rapidly, cordoning off the street with red and white tape while emergency teams treated the wounded on site. Paramedics transported victims to regional hospitals, including Maggiore in Bologna.

Background of suspect under scrutiny

Investigators question the detained man, who sustained injuries in the crash himself, at a local station. Records show he holds Italian citizenship, possesses no prior criminal history, and drove the small hatchback. Police continue to examine all possible explanations for the event, ranging from a traffic accident to deliberate action, without confirming any precise motive so far.

Community reacts to tragic events

Mezzetti described the episode as deeply disturbing and called for full clarity on what occurred. Emergency services maintained a strong presence in the area for hours afterwards to manage the scene and gather evidence. This incident has left residents in the northern Italian city shaken, with questions lingering about safety in popular urban zones.

Medical updates indicate varying degrees of harm among those struck, including a cyclist caught in the initial impact. Local media outlets report ongoing efforts to reconstruct the sequence using CCTV and statements from those present.

Wider questions arise from Modena events

Italian authorities focus on piecing together timelines from multiple sources to understand the full picture. The episode draws attention to risks in crowded city streets and the role of rapid public response in such crises. As details develop, Modena officials stress support for affected families while ensuring thorough probes proceed.

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New Spain Radars Could Catch Drivers Sooner

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Spain’s DGT is expanding the use of advanced radar technology as speed enforcement becomes more precise across the country. Credit : RVillalon, Shutterstock

A lot of drivers in Spain still react to speed cameras the same way. Spot the radar at the last second, hit the brakes quickly, slow down for a few seconds and then carry on.

The DGT’s newer radar systems may put an end to that habit.

According to reports, Spain’s traffic authority is introducing a new generation of 3D LIDAR speed cameras capable of detecting vehicles from around 200 metres away. In practice, that means many drivers could already have been recorded before they even notice the radar box sitting further down the road.

The technology is also said to be far more precise than older systems, particularly when identifying different types of vehicles including motorcycles, cars and heavy goods vehicles.

And while the DGT continues framing the rollout as a road safety measure, plenty of motorists will probably see it as another sign that avoiding speeding fines in Spain is becoming increasingly difficult.

The old ‘brake at the radar’ trick may stop working

For years, many drivers relied more on spotting speed cameras than actually watching their speed consistently.

Navigation apps helped too. Drivers shared radar locations online, warned each other about mobile controls and often treated fixed cameras as predictable points on familiar roads.

That mentality developed partly because older radar systems gave drivers a little room to react once the camera became visible ahead.

The newer LIDAR based systems reportedly work very differently.

Instead of simply measuring speed at one specific point on the road, the technology creates a more detailed three dimensional reading of traffic movement. The radar analyses not only speed but also the size and type of vehicle travelling through the area.

That allows the system to distinguish much more accurately between different vehicles sharing the same road.

Motorcycles are a particularly important example here.

Older radar systems sometimes struggled to detect motorbikes properly because of their smaller profile and the way riders move between traffic. The newer technology appears designed specifically to improve that accuracy.

And because the cameras can reportedly detect vehicles from around 200 metres away, drivers may no longer have enough time to react once they physically spot the radar itself.

For people who only slow down after seeing the camera, that changes things considerably.

Spain is investing heavily in smarter traffic surveillance

The DGT has spent years expanding traffic enforcement technology across Spain.

Fixed radars, mobile controls, section speed cameras and AI based traffic monitoring systems have all become increasingly common on Spanish roads, especially on routes with high accident rates.

Authorities argue the objective is reducing dangerous driving rather than simply increasing fines.

Speed remains one of the main factors linked to fatal accidents across Europe, particularly on secondary roads where collisions often happen at much higher impact speeds than drivers realise.

The DGT frequently points out that many motorists underestimate stopping distances and overestimate how much control they have while speeding.

That partly explains why traffic authorities continue investing in systems capable of monitoring roads more efficiently and with greater accuracy.

The newer LIDAR radars are also being presented as useful beyond catching speeding drivers.

According to reports surrounding the rollout, the technology could help identify broken down vehicles, unusual traffic situations or accidents more quickly by analysing movement patterns on the road in real time.

Traffic management centres may eventually use that information to improve congestion monitoring and react faster during emergencies. But realistically, most drivers are probably going to focus on one thing first : The fines.

Drivers in Spain are being warned to pay attention even on familiar roads

One reason these newer radar systems may catch more drivers is simply habit.

People tend to relax on roads they know well. They stop checking signs carefully, rely on memory and often drive slightly faster without fully realising it.

Tourist areas create another problem entirely.

Spain receives millions of foreign drivers every year, especially during summer. Many are using unfamiliar roads, rental cars and navigation apps at the same time. In those situations, it becomes very easy to miss sudden speed limit changes.

The DGT has repeatedly warned that relying entirely on GPS instructions instead of road signs is becoming increasingly common.

That behaviour can quickly become expensive if radar systems are capable of identifying speeding vehicles long before drivers notice the control point itself.

And unlike older radar setups that drivers often learned to recognise visually, newer systems may blend much more naturally into existing road infrastructure.

For motorists, the safest approach increasingly seems to be exactly what traffic authorities have been saying for years.

Do not drive according to where you think the radars are. Drive according to the speed limit the whole time.

That advice may sound obvious, but the newer technology suggests Spain’s traffic controls are moving towards something much more difficult to outsmart through habit alone. Because if these systems really can identify vehicles from 200 metres away with greater precision than older radars, then spotting the camera itself may no longer matter very much anymore.

By the time drivers see it, the photo may already have been taken.

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TikTok Now Lets Users Book Holidays Instantly

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TikTok Go lets users book hotels and travel experiences without leaving the app. Credit : newsroom.tiktok.com

TikTok is no longer just trying to influence where people travel. It now wants to become part of the booking process itself.

The platform has launched a new feature called TikTok Go in the United States, allowing users to book hotels, tours, attractions and travel experiences directly from videos they are watching inside the app. Instead of saving a post, opening Google afterwards and comparing prices across different sites, users can now go from “that place looks amazing” to making a reservation almost instantly.

The rollout involves major travel companies including Booking.com, Expedia, Trip.com, Viator, GetYourGuide and Tiqets, all of which are now integrated into the system.

And honestly, it probably says a lot about how people travel now. Because for a growing number of younger travellers, TikTok already replaced the old way of planning trips a long time ago.

People are already planning holidays through TikTok videos

Not that long ago, organising a holiday usually meant opening fifteen tabs at the same time.

People would compare hotel websites, scroll through TripAdvisor reviews, check blogs, search Google Maps and maybe watch a few YouTube videos before deciding anything.

Now a lot of people simply open TikTok.

Type ‘best hotels in Mallorca’, ‘cheap hidden beaches in Greece’ or ‘where locals eat in Madrid’ into the search bar and thousands of videos immediately appear. Some are polished. Others are messy, badly filmed and completely unplanned. Ironically, that often makes them feel more believable.

That is exactly why travel content works so well on the app. Watching someone casually walk through a rooftop hotel in Barcelona or film dinner at a tiny Italian restaurant feels less like advertising and more like getting advice from someone who has actually been there.

TikTok clearly understands the power of that kind of content.

The company says millions of users already use the app every day to discover where to stay, what to eat and which places are worth visiting. TikTok Go basically removes the final step between inspiration and spending money.

Users can now check availability, see prices and complete bookings directly through the platform after seeing a video they like.

Only adults over 18 can make reservations.

Travel companies do not want to lose younger customers

The interesting part is how quickly major travel brands signed up for this.

That alone says a lot.

Companies like Booking.com or Expedia are not experimenting with TikTok for fun. They know perfectly well where younger audiences spend their time now, and it is increasingly not on traditional travel websites.

A lot of people under 30 do not search for holidays the way previous generations did. They discover places through algorithms.

Someone watches one travel video. Then another appears. Then another. Suddenly they are mentally planning a trip to somewhere they had never even considered visiting twenty minutes earlier.

Travel companies want to be part of that exact moment.

Booking.com said the feature allows people to go from discovering their “dream accommodation” in a video to booking it within a few taps. GetYourGuide, which sells experiences and excursions worldwide, described TikTok as a huge opportunity to reach travellers at the exact moment they feel inspired.

For small businesses, the effect could be massive.

A family run hotel, local guide or independent restaurant that suddenly goes viral could potentially turn that visibility into immediate reservations instead of hoping people remember the name later.

That changes the dynamic completely.

Before, viral travel videos mainly created attention. Now they may directly generate bookings.

TikTok is slowly turning into much more than a social media app

What is happening here feels bigger than a simple travel feature.

Social media platforms increasingly want users to stay inside their apps for everything. Shopping, messaging, entertainment, payments and now travel bookings are all gradually being folded into the same ecosystem.

TikTok especially has become incredibly good at triggering impulse decisions.

People open the app without any specific goal. Then suddenly they are watching videos of luxury train journeys through Switzerland, hidden beaches in Croatia or tiny apartments in Tokyo and thinking, “I actually want to go there.”

The platform is trying to capture that exact emotional reaction before it disappears.

And realistically, it makes sense from a business perspective.

The longer users stay inside TikTok, the more valuable the platform becomes.

Of course, not everyone will love the idea of booking holidays through a social media app. Some travellers still prefer spending time researching carefully before making expensive decisions. Others may feel uncomfortable trusting travel recommendations that are heavily influenced by creators and algorithms. But the reality is that social media already shapes huge parts of modern tourism.

Restaurants become famous overnight because of one viral clip. Small destinations suddenly explode with visitors after trending online. Hotels now design spaces specifically to look good in TikTok videos.

The booking side was almost the only major part of travel that still happened elsewhere.

Now TikTok wants that too. At the moment, TikTok Go is only available in the United States. But if the feature performs well, it would be surprising if the company stopped there. Because the app already influences where millions of people want to travel. The next step is making sure they book the trip before they even stop scrolling.

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