Tag Archives: Spains

Princess Leonor, Spain’s future Queen, turns 18: Her life in pictures – Euronews

  1. Princess Leonor, Spain’s future Queen, turns 18: Her life in pictures Euronews
  2. Spain’s Crown Princess Leonor turns 18 and is feted as the future queen at a swearing-in ceremony The Associated Press
  3. Spain’s Princess Leonor swears oath as republican ministers boycott ceremony The Guardian
  4. Spain’s Princess Leonor swears allegiance to divided nation on her 18th birthday Reuters
  5. Spain’s crown princess turns 18 with gala event as ‘representative of a modern country open to the world’ EL PAÍS USA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Majority of Spain’s World Cup-winning players refuse to play upcoming matches amid fallout from unwanted kiss – CNN

  1. Majority of Spain’s World Cup-winning players refuse to play upcoming matches amid fallout from unwanted kiss CNN
  2. The mutiny continues! Spain’s World Cup winners refuse to join squad for Nations League fixtures – even after Jorge Vilda was sacked and Luis Rubiales resignation Goal.com
  3. Spain squad to continue strike despite Rubiales, Vilda exits – ESPN ESPN
  4. Spain’s Women’s World Cup winners not returning despite Luis Rubiales resignation and Jorge Vilda firing CBS Sports
  5. Spain’s players want structural changes, won’t play until they occur USA TODAY
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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FIFA president says World Cup kissing scandal ‘spoiled’ Spain’s celebration – Fox News

  1. FIFA president says World Cup kissing scandal ‘spoiled’ Spain’s celebration Fox News
  2. Spanish government faces setback in efforts to suspend soccer chief Rubiales after tribunal ruling CNN
  3. England captain Leah Williamson hits out at ‘conditioned behaviour’ of Spanish FA president Luis Rubiales that ‘completely overshadowed’ Jenni Hermoso’s Women’s World Cup triumph Goal.com
  4. Kiss and yell: A dreadfully familiar story, from Spain Times of India
  5. Luis de la Fuente: Spanish men’s national team manager apologizes for applauding Luis Rubiales’ defiant speech CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The Cult of Luis Enrique: How Spain’s World Cup turned to shambles

“There is just one person in the country who gets to decide all this, which is exciting and motivating,” said Luis Enrique when announcing Spain’s World Cup in November.

“Our idea is never going to change. We will attack, want the ball, play in their half, defend near halfway, press high, take lots of risks. If we have the bravery to stay faithful to that idea, I will consider that we have done our best.”

This “idea” had previously driven a young Spain side to within a penalty kick of the Euro 2020 final, and brought qualification for two Nations League final fours.

It was always going to be the plan for this tournament. Everybody involved got behind Enrique’s plans, from the president of the Spanish football federation Luis Rubiales through to the entire 26-man squad.

When Spain beat Costa Rica 7-0 in their World Cup opener, it really seemed possible that a group of emerging stars and fading veterans with no real superstars but an unyielding belief in their coach could actually go on and win the competition.

Tuesday’s 1,000+ passes, one shot on target, and defeat to Morocco put an end to that idea. And now Thursday’s decision by Rubiales not to extend Luis Enrique’s contract has ended his connection with the national team.

That is a big change, given Spain’s World Cup 2022 from start to finish has been dominated by one person — it has been all about the cult of Luis Enrique.


Everything that Spain did coming into the tournament was at the service of Luis Enrique’s idea.

First, the policy of going for younger players who would follow his instructions. It was no coincidence that a lot of them were from Barcelona, including their young stars Pedri and Gavi, and older veterans Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba.

So despite the lack of top-quality centre-backs, there was never going to be a recall for Sergio Ramos, even though he was included on the 55-man pre-tournament longlist and has been playing regularly for Paris Saint Germain.

Other experienced options such as Thiago Alcantara, Iago Aspas or Borja Iglesias might have been good choices, and all three had been in Luis Enrique squads before, but fell by the wayside. “I follow what the players do with their clubs, but I trust more what I see here when I work with them,“ the Asturian explained earlier this year.

So the final squad for this World Cup contained not very much experience or other ideas about how to play. There were nine players aged 22 or under, and just six of the 26 had previous experience of a World Cup.


Spain’s players react to their penalty shoot-out defeat to Morocco (Photo: Getty)

The Spanish federation, including Rubiales and sporting director Jose Francisco Molina, were 100 per cent behind the plan. Luis Enrique had more power than any national coach in Spain’s history. He is also the best paid coach in the federation’s history, but Rubiales has often reminded reporters that he could have earned more at a top club.

The federation also facilitated all Luis Enrique’s plans for preparation for the tournament. This included the raised platform to watch training at their Qatar University base, and investing in the walkie-talkie systems so the coach could instruct his players one to one to correct movements, positioning and decision-making during training sessions.

This was a public demonstration of who was in ultimate control of every detail — Luis Enrique even made it public that he had decided the team were going to play in red shorts and socks, not the blue they traditionally wore.

There was also no pushback from his bosses when Luis Enrique announced, after consultation with his son, that he would be doing hour-long Twitch streams live at night during the World Cup. Bypassing the traditional media made life tougher for Rubiales and the federation’s communications team, and angered influential media voices in Madrid.

There was just one leader: Luis Enrique. Millions of people watched his Twitch streams, meaning he dominated the image of the squad. The team would live or die by how his ideas translated into reality.


Hammering Costa Rica 7-0 in their opening game, their biggest ever World Cup win, reinforced Enrique’s power. Not just with all the goals scored, or the 82 per cent possession. Costa Rica did not manage one shot at goal (on or off target) in the entire 90 minutes. It was as close to a perfect performance as possible, and widely hailed as Spain’s best since their golden era from 2008 to 2012.

When Spain did not have a game, the Spanish public watched Enrique’s Twitch stream instead. Everyone was fascinated by how many eggs he eats for supper (six, three boiled, three fried), if he prefers boxers or underpants (“A thong,” he smirked) or the hardest peak he has every climbed in his other favourite sport of cycling (Angliru, in his native Asturias).

Luis Enrique’s confidence in himself and his team also came through very clearly during these streams. “Nobody plays better football than us, that’s for sure,” he said when asked whether his team were the best at the World Cup.

This conviction that the plan was going to work was contagious among players, who believed what their charismatic leader was telling them. “If Luis Enrique told me to jump off a cliff, I’d jump,” said Pedri in an interview with Mundo Deportivo. The Canary Islander replied “why not” when asked if Spain could win the World Cup, the same answer Aymeric Laporte gave when he was asked that question soon after arrival in Doha.


Enrique after Spain were knocked out by Morocco (Photo: Dan Mullan via Getty Images)

After being a substitute for the Costa Rica game, and scoring when he entered late on, Morata told Marca that he did not care whether he started against Germany: “I am a soldier for Luis Enrique,” he said, while recalling how the boss had stood with him when Spain’s own fans were whistling him during Euro 2020.

The comparisons with the all-conquering 2008 to 2012 side featuring Xavi and Iniesta ramped up. However these comparisons of the very young 2022 team with the best generation in Spanish football history made some around the current players very uneasy.

Maybe Pedri or Gavi had the talent to one day match Xavi and Iniesta’s achievements, but elsewhere in the team the level was not the same. “We don’t have a Casillas, or a Puyol,” one agent told The Athletic amid all the euphoria of the Costa Rica game.

However, within the squad everyone remained on message with their coach: “For me, Spain is the best team at this World Cup,” midfielder Koke said before they faced Germany in their second outing of the tournament.


La Roja were almost certainly going through to the last 16, and their position was even stronger when Morata put them 1-0 up against Germany.

Before that game, Luis Enrique said the Germans were the only team capable of matching Spain’s ‘idea’, and La Roja’s domination of possession and territory in the first hour of the game showed there really was no competition.

In the last 20 minutes, Germany needed to score to stay in competition, while Spain were pretty sure they were going through no matter what. When Germany abandoned their patient approach and their battering ram sub striker Niclas Fullkrug equalised late on, it was not seen as a big problem by Enrique or his players. There was no doubt.

A similar thing happened against Japan in game three. Spain went ahead again, Morata heading in Azpilicueta’s cross. Again they relaxed, with the Japanese scoring two quick goals to turn the game on its head.

With Costa Rica momentarily beating Germany in the other game, there was a moment when Spain were out of the tournament. Still Spain kept hitting sideways passes without making any clear chances to equalise. 

The 2-1 defeat to Japan generated plenty of anger — artificial or not — among a substantial section of the Spanish media who had been biting their tongue when all was going well for Luis Enrique. Among these was El Chiringuito host Josep Pedrerol, who produced another another of his overwrought videos: “Japan have shown us that to win we have to work more, press more, and stream less,” Pedrerol said gravely. Nobody was surprised. Pedrerol has a long history with Enrique, dating back to the 1990s when Pedrerol was a reporter and Enrique a player. 

Enrique was also angry after the game. He did not let it all show in public, but did use the word “collapse” various times during  post-game media duties. He said Japan “could have scored five” if they had needed to.

Cesar Azpilicueta and Pau Torres were among the players who admitted they had not been able to match Japan’s intensity when it was dialled up after half-time. Pedri, characteristically, had the most honest and perceptive analysis of what had gone wrong: “We did not have enough rhythm with the ball to move them from side to side.”

Enrique and his staff’s analysis of the Japan game highlighted the things they needed to correct, minor details which he used the final training sessions to get across to the players. That included permission to hit the ball long from the back, if required. But generally the message was to maintain full faith in what they had been doing all along.

The mood among the players was still generally positive, and fully supportive of their coach. The training sessions were fun, while there was also plenty to do around the camp, including table tennis, table football, pool and darts at their accommodation at the University campus.

The families of players and staff were also invited into the camp on Sunday. Pedri brought his brother and parents into the press conference room where they played at taking questions from their son sitting in the media seats. The squad’s ‘porra’ World Cup predictions league continued, with Gavi going top of the table, with Luis Enrique joking that he had taken advice from his future father in law King Felipe, as it was reported that Spain’s heir to throne Princess Leonor was a big admirer of the Barca midfielder.

Some close to certain squad members were by now worried at the lack of edge in the performances. “How they approached the Japan game has to be a warning,” said one source, who did not want to be named to protect relationships. “They have to learn from that. We will see against Morocco and whoever comes next.”

There was no sign from Enrique or those around him that this warning had been taken on board. He said the team’s style of play was not negotiable, and everyone inside and outside the camp knew there was no turning back.

“Even if it sounds utopian,” Enrique said at that pre-Morocco press conference, “I only care that we do things well, then the normal thing is we win the game.”


In Tuesday’s match in the last 16 at the Qatar University Stadium, it was Morocco who brought the intensity and conviction needed.

Walid Regragui’s side had a singularity of purpose and determination in what they were doing. A slow-paced Spain lacked the zip and drive to punch holes in a superbly organised Morocco defensive set-up.

Enrique’s selection of Marcos Llorente at right-back suggested an attacking intent to push players forward and overload. The Asturian had clearly stated to the players before the game that they needed to be more ruthless with their passing, break lines and switch the play.

But they could not find the positive aggression required to really take the game to Morocco. They did not take the necessary risks in possession, as if afraid of getting caught on the counter-attack, or assuming that eventually things would just work out.

That led straight to Spain having 77 per cent possession but just one shot on target over the 120 minutes. After Pablo Sarabia had hit the post right at the end, there was no confidence and little belief as they went into the penalty shoot-out. None of Enrique’s top-three takers — Sarabia, Carlos Soler and Busquets  — were able to score from the spot.

After the avalanche of goals against Costa Rica in the first game, the chances had just stopped coming. Spain’s idea made them an outlier — no team could match their ability to hold the ball and dominate possession and territory. But it had not done them much good.


They were knocked out of the competition having scored only two goals in their final three games — from 3,480 touches of the ball.

Even so, after the Morocco game Enrique was still insisting that his team had done what he had asked them, and the idea had not in itself been mistaken.

“We created enough chances to win, we shot 11 times at goal, although maybe we could have generated more,” he said. “This is sport. The players have done 100 per cent of the instructions I gave them. I have not one reproach for this group of players.”

Llorente also refused to admit on TV that he was disappointed with how the game had gone.

“When you work every day with an idea, and you go through with it, and things do not go for you, then I do not think disappointment is the word,” he said. “In the end, the attitude was 10 out of 10 by all the team, not just today, every week, every day. We wanted more, obviously, this team had bigger objectives.”

No member of the team said they had adopted the wrong approach or tactics, just that the idea they had for the game had not worked out as expected. The way they played should have created more chances, or they should have been able to take one of the ones they did create.

The players were not angry or upset at their coach, or even having second thoughts about what they should have done themselves. They believed they had dominated the game and were far superior, even after being eliminated. They were bitterly disappointed and upset, especially those who had missed penalties, but it had just been one of those things — bad luck for them, credit to Morocco, but no fingers being pointed at their boss.

“The group were fully behind the mister, 100 per cent with the coach, I can assure you of that,” a source close to senior players, who asked not to be named to protect his relationship, told The Athletic. Another agent in the same situation admitted that while he personally might have doubts about the approach taken during the tournament, his client still believed in Enrique’s idea.

Such apparently blind faith in the coach and his idea is understandable, given the make-up of the squad. The younger members, whether Gavi, Pedri, or fellow teenagers Nico Williams and Alejandro Balde, lack the experience to really question their boss. Others like Unai Simon or Dani Olmo were faithful to a national coach who had picked them, when another might not have. Older players — national captain Busquets, Alba, Azpilicueta, Morata, Mario Asensio or Koke — have seen Enrique stick with them even as they have had issues with form or contracts at club level.

Some voices close to players say the problem is not so much the style of play as the lack of leaders or experienced characters who would take initiative themselves and not just pass it on. Very little was done on instinct, it was all done as agreed in advance, in service to the idea of play.

Ramos is the name who comes up most in conversations. Some around the squad say that he might have intervened and tried to change up tactics when they were not working. But Enrique was never going to call him back for this tournament, their relationship having broken down before Euro 2020, and the PSG centre-back is now almost 37. All the other big characters and contrary voices within the squad had also been weeded out.

Nor were there any competing voices among Enrique’s staff. His initial number two was Robert Moreno, but their relationship broke down completely during the Asturian’s time away from the job when his daughter was ill in 2019. Moreno’s replacement Jesus Casas left after Euro 2020, with his relationship with Enrique having deteriorated. He was replaced by former physio Rafa Pol, who stepped up to be official number two. Over the four years there was no move to bring in fresh ideas or energy from outside to challenge the central idea.

Casas is now Iraq national coach, and tweeted just after the Morocco game that: “The people you surround yourself with influence your behaviour. Choose those who help you to see what you have to see, not what you want to see. Think that common sense is the art of solving problems, not bringing them up.”

That tweet was soon deleted, but goes to the idea that it was all about Luis Enrique and his one idea — no dissenting voices or opinions allowed.


Outside the dressing room, Spain’s elimination from the World Cup brought more debate.

Enrique’s critics in the Madrid media resurfaced, especially those who always hated him anyway. In Barcelona there was less of a rush to criticise — Catalan daily Mundo Deportivo were generally disappointed but understanding, while running a story about how the world’s media were raining criticism’ on Spain and Enrique’s style of play.

The manner of the exit — on penalties after being unable to turn domination of possession into goals or even clear chances to score — was certainly reminiscent of previous disappointments for Spain at the last two World Cups.

More supportive Spanish pundits remembered that this style of play had got them success before that, when the team with Xavi and Iniesta pulling the strings had also struggled to score many goals, but their dominance of possession and territory had always paid off eventually.

That led to a debate about the actual quality of the current group of players. Gavi and Pedri are still far off the level of peak Xavi and Iniesta, and Spain have no Kylian Mbappe or Neymar or Harry Kane.

Some around the camp — but not the squad members themselves — said it was futile to try and get the current group to play like that team of Xavi and Iniesta. “It’s not fair on them,” said one source, who asked not to be named to protect his relationship.

Enrique was aware of this. When appointed, just after Spain went out of the 2018 World Cup with 1,000 passes but one goal in 120 minutes against Russia, he spoke about wanting to modernise their style and be more ‘vertical’.

When announcing this year’s squad in November he said they would take risks. “We will not die of fear,” he said that day. He even included a ‘Plan B’, of a sort, in young, pacy, tricky wide attackers in Williams, Ansu Fati and Yeremy Pino. Williams did make a difference off the bench against Morocco, but it was not enough.

The player who showed most independent thought after the Morocco game was Manchester City’s Rodrigo, who said repeatedly on Monday evening that Spain had “deserved” to progress to the quarter-finals, while also pointing out that they lacked the type of players who they had needed to win the game.

“Maybe we don’t have the players to open up these types of teams, we need more speed and one v one on the wings,” he said.

Enrique might well have agreed, but after the team went out of the World Cup he was never going to make any public criticism of his players.

“I have thanked the players for their efforts, their ability to manage the game,” Luis Enrique said after Monday’s game. “We created the best chance of the game in the 120th minute, which hit the post. I told them to keep going, it’s okay, life goes on, it is an experience they will have forever and hopefully will be useful to them in the future.”


One place where there was not blind faith in Luis Enrique, at least after the Morocco game, was among his bosses within the Spanish federation.

Twelve months ago Rubiales and Molina were keen to extend Enrique’s contract past its end after this World Cup. But the Asturian himself preferred to wait until after these finals, and then decide on his future.

That was allowed due to recognition of how Luis Enrique had come into a difficult situation after 2018, and managed a transition from Iniesta and Ramos generation, to a new emerging group led by Pedri and Gavi. Galvanised by the ‘idea’ of collective play, they had since done well at Euro 2020 and in the Nations League.

There was also a personal bond with Rubiales and Molina which had been strengthened during Enrique’s enforced absence from the job for six months in 2019 when his daughter was terminally ill. And there were no obvious high-level replacements ready and waiting to step in as Spain’s next senior coach.

Directly following the elimination by Morocco, there was a contrasting view discussed at the highest levels of the federation that the team had not progressed at all in four years. The players were mostly different, but the style was very similar. The 1,000 passes and one shot on target against Morocco led some to recall that it was “like 2018 against Russia all over again”.

The rough edges of Enrique’s personality, especially his awkward relations with the media in Madrid, had been palatable when the team’s results were good. Now it was not so easy. The federation hierarchy were aware that his exit would take pressure off them now.

So as the team flew back to Spain on Wednesday, it was not at all clear what would happen. Enrique said he wanted to think and talk to his family before deciding if he wanted to sign a new contract and stay on in the job. It was impossible — even for those who had worked close with him for the last four years — to predict whether he would decide to stay or not.

There was no clue to his intentions from the photo he posted on Instagram from the team bus on the way to the airport to catch the plane back to Spain on Wednesday. “Well, it was not to be,” an accompanying message said. “We are sorry not to have been able to make you happy… football always surprises you. Thanks so much for your support these 23 days… life goes on.”

It may have been a surprise for Enrique to learn on Thursday morning that there would be no new contract and the federation had promoted the under-21s coach Luis de la Fuente to the top job. More changes at the federation were also coming — Enrique’s close ally Molina was leaving the sporting director role.

The word from the federation was that the decision to replace Enrique was solely down to the team’s results. There were no regrets about having supported him through his term in charge, and they were grateful for all he had done.

Spain’s story at World Cup 2022 was all about the cult of Luis Enrique; the cult’s leader ultimately paid for their failure.

Additional reporting by Gregg Evans.

(Top image: Eamonn Dalton for The Athletic, images: Getty Images)



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Morocco: 18 migrants die in attempt to enter Spain’s Melilla | Migration News

Deaths occurred during attempted mass crossing into Spanish North African enclave by some 2,000 migrants, officials say.

Moroccan authorities said that 18 migrants were killed and dozens of migrants and police officers were injured in a “stampede” of people trying to cross into the Spanish North African enclave of Melilla.

A spokesperson for the Spanish government’s office in Melilla said about 2,000 people attempted to enter the North African city on Friday morning and during a violent two-hour skirmish about 130 successfully breached the border between Morocco and the Spanish enclave.

Morocco’s interior ministry said in a statement that the casualties occurred when the refugees and migrants tried to climb an iron border fence separating the two territories. Five migrants were killed and 76 injured, and 140 Moroccan security officers were injured, the ministry said.

Thirteen of the injured migrants later died in the hospital, raising the death toll to 18, according to Morocco’s official news agency MAP, which cited local authorities. The Moroccan Human Rights Association reported 27 dead but the figure could immediately be confirmed.

Spanish officials said 49 Civil Guards sustained minor injuries. Four police vehicles were damaged by rocks thrown by some migrants.

Images on Spanish media showed exhausted refugees and migrants laying on the pavement in Melilla, some with bloodied hands and torn clothes. Those who succeeded in crossing went to a local migrant centre, where authorities were evaluating their circumstances.

The incident at the border crossing was the first since Morocco and Spain mended diplomatic ties in March.

“A large group of sub-Saharans [Africans] … broke through the access gate of the Barrio Chino border checkpoint and entered Melilla by jumping over the roof of the checkpoint,” the Spanish government’s delegation in the area said in an earlier statement.

“All of them [are] men and apparently adults,” it added. The migrants arrived at the crossing at about 6:40am local time (04:40 GMT) and the crossing took place at 8:40am (06:40 GMT).

Melilla and Ceuta, Spain’s other tiny North African enclave, have the European Union’s only land borders with Africa, making them a magnet for migrants.

Morocco deployed a “large” number of forces to try to repel the crowd from the border and “cooperated actively” with Spain’s security forces, the Spanish delegation said in a separate statement.

In March this year, Spain ended a year-long diplomatic crisis by backing Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara, going back on its decades-long stance of neutrality.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez then visited Rabat, and the two governments hailed a “new stage” in relations.

The dispute began when Madrid allowed Brahim Ghali, leader of Western Sahara’s pro-independence Polisario Front, to be treated for COVID-19 in a Spanish hospital in April 2021.

A month later, some 10,000 migrants surged across the Morocco border into Spain’s Ceuta enclave as Moroccan border guards looked the other way, in what was widely seen as a punitive gesture by Rabat.

Rabat calls for Western Sahara to have an autonomous status under Moroccan sovereignty, but the Western Saharan Polisario movement wants a United Nations-supervised referendum on self-determination as agreed in a 1991 ceasefire pact.

In the days just before Morocco and Spain ended their diplomatic crisis, there were several attempted mass crossings of migrants in Melilla, including one involving 2,500 people, the largest such attempt on record.

The restoration of Spanish ties with Morocco has meant a drop in arrivals and the number of migrants who reached the Canary Islands in April was 70 percent lower than in February, government figures show.

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Djokovic must comply with local health rules to compete in Madrid Open, Spain’s prime minister says 

Austria will implement a wide-ranging Covid-19 vaccine mandate, which includes fines for unvaccinated adults, from February 1.

The government announced last November that a vaccine mandate was necessary to address the low vaccination rate in the country. The first draft of the law was published in December, and a revised draft was published Monday and is now going through parliament. 

Everyone age 18 and over living in Austria must be vaccinated against Covid-19, according to the latest draft. A few groups of people are exempt, such as pregnant people, people recovered from a Covid-19 infection (who are exempt for 180 days from a positive PCR test), and people who cannot be vaccinated without endangering their health. 

“The mandatory vaccination isn’t coming in a sudden way, instead it is coming in a phased approach,” Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer told public broadcaster ORF Sunday.

No fines will be issued during the initial phase, which lasts until mid-March, said Nehammer. From March 15, law enforcement will start checking if people are adhering to the new law, for example by examining their vaccination status during traffic controls.

People face fines of up to €600 ($685) if they don’t possess a vaccine certificate or an exemption. So-called “reminder dates” can also be set, on which people are reminded through a letter to get vaccinated.

In the third stage of the mandate, these reminder dates will be followed up with “vaccine dates.” People who haven’t got shots or an exemption by then will be issued with fines.

There will be two “vaccine dates” each year. A person can be given a maximum of four fines annually, which would total €2,400 ($2,741).

The vaccine mandate is planned to last until January 31, 2024 and it will be continually assessed until then, according to the Austrian health ministry. 

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Volcanic lava in Spain’s La Palma engulfs more houses

LA PALMA, Spain, Oct 9 (Reuters) – Buildings near the volcano on the Spanish island of La Palma were engulfed by rivers of lava early on Saturday, with the drama of the red-hot eruption intensified by the spectacle of flashes of lightning.

The magma destroyed at least four buildings in the village of Callejon de la Gata, Reuters witnesses said.

There were a series of 37 seismic movements on Saturday, with the largest measuring 4.1, the Spanish National Geological Institute said.

The Cumbre Vieja volcano began erupting on Sept. 19 and has destroyed more than 800 buildings and forced the evacuation of about 6,000 people from their homes on the island. La Palma, with a population of about 83,000, is one of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic.

Lightning flashes were seen near the eruption early on Saturday. A study published in 2016 by the journal Geophysical Research Letters found lightning can be produced during volcanic eruptions because the collision of ash particles creates an electrical charge.

The lava from the volcano has engulfed over 150 hectares (370 acres) of farm land, most of it used for the cultivation of bananas that are one of the main crops on the island.

Airlines flying to the Canary Islands were advised to load extra fuel in case planes had to change course or delay landing because of ash, said a spokesman for Enaire, which controls the navigation in Spanish airspace.

La Palma’s airport has been closed since Thursday because of ash, Spanish air traffic operator Aena (AENA.MC) said. read more but the other airports in the archipelago remained open.

Reporting by Silvio Castellanos, Juan Medina, Graham Keeley; editing by Frances Kerry and Jason Neely

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Volcano erupts on Spain’s La Palma island, spewing lava and forcing thousands to evacuate

Lava continued to flow slowly from a volcano that erupted in Spain’s Canary Islands off northwest Africa, but the head of the regional government said Monday that he expected no injuries to people in the area after some 5,000 were evacuated. Lava was flowing on the island of La Palma toward the sea, moving at 2,300 feet per hour, according to the Canary Islands Volcanology Institute.

The lava was moving in two streams through a mostly unpopulated area, Canary Islands government chief Ángel Víctor Torres told SER radio. Some 20 isolated houses were destroyed, SER reported.

Mount Cumbre Vieja erupts in El Paso, spewing out columns of smoke, ash and lava as seen from Los Llanos de Aridane on the Canary island of La Palma on Sunday, September 19, 2021.

DESIREE MARTIN/AFP via Getty Images


“We’re not expecting any other eruption,” Torres said, adding that air traffic in the area was not affected.
  
“There will be considerable material damage,” he said. “We hope there won’t be any personal injuries.”
  
The eruption opened two fissures about 650 feet apart. Officials said the lava streams would likely merge before reaching the sea.

The lava crept into the town of Los Llanos de Aridane, which lies close to the volcano. Town Mayor Noelia García said people had been evacuated from houses all the way down to the shoreline.
  
Experts said the eruption could last for weeks or even months.

Lava flows behind houses following the eruption of a volcano in the Cumbre Vieja national park at Los Llanos de Aridane, on the Canary Island of La Palma, September 20, 2021.

BORJA SUAREZ/REUTERS


People on La Palma largely live from farming. 

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez was due to visit the affected area Monday after canceling his trip to New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly.

The volcano erupted on Sunday after a weeklong buildup of seismic activity. The Canary Islands Volcanology Institute reported the initial eruption near the southern end of the island, which saw its last eruption in 1971. 

Huge red plumes topped with black-and-white smoke shot out along the Cumbre Vieja volcanic ridge, which scientists had been closely watching following the accumulation of molten lava below the surface and days of small earthquakes.

Authorities had evacuated more than 5,000 people by Monday morning, but Spain’s Civil Guard said the previous day that it could need to evacuate up to 10,000 residents in total.

A house burns due to lava from the eruption of a volcano in the Cumbre Vieja national park at Los Llanos de Aridane, on the Canary Island of La Palma, September 20, 2021.

BORJA SUAREZ/REUTERS


La Palma, with a population of 85,000, is one of eight volcanic islands in Spain’s Canary Islands archipelago off Africa’s western coast. At their nearest point, the islands are 60 miles from Morocco.

A 4.2-magnitude quake was recorded before the volcanic eruption, which took place in an area known as Cabeza de Vaca on the western slope as the ridge descends to the coast. As the eruptions continued two open mouths belched bright red magma into the air that then flowed in tight streams down the mountain slope.

Carlota Martín was at an agricultural plot her family has in Todoque, just downhill from the eruption site, when she heard a huge explosion.

“When we saw the column of smoke, we thought it could not be real, but it kept growing and we knew we had to get out of there,” she told The Associated Press. “You leave, but you are also looking back because you want to see what will happen. Nobody knows how the lava flows will descend, but our plot and lots of houses in the area could be in the way.”

Smoke rises at the Cumbre Vieja volcano on the island of La Palma in the Canaries, Spain, on Sunday, September 19, 2021.

Jonathan Rodriguez / AP


The last eruption on La Palma 50 years ago lasted just over three weeks. The last eruption on all the Canary Islands occurred underwater off the coast of El Hierro island in 2011. It lasted five months.

Volcanologist Vicente Soler of Spain’s Higher Council said “the material appears to be very fluid, the lava flows will reach the sea sooner or later.” The scientific committee of the Volcano Risk Prevention Plan said part of the island’s southwest coast was at risk for landslides and rock falls.

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Volcano erupts on Spain’s La Palma island, spewing lava and forcing thousands to evacuate

Lava continued to flow slowly from a volcano that erupted in Spain’s Canary Islands off northwest Africa, but the head of the regional government said Monday that he expected no injuries to people in the area after some 5,000 were evacuated. Lava was flowing on the island of La Palma toward the sea, moving at 2,300 feet per hour, according to the Canary Islands Volcanology Institute.

The lava was moving in two streams through a mostly unpopulated area, Canary Islands government chief Ángel Víctor Torres told SER radio. Some 20 isolated houses were destroyed, SER reported.

Mount Cumbre Vieja erupts in El Paso, spewing out columns of smoke, ash and lava as seen from Los Llanos de Aridane on the Canary island of La Palma on Sunday, September 19, 2021.

DESIREE MARTIN/AFP via Getty Images


“We’re not expecting any other eruption,” Torres said, adding that air traffic in the area was not affected.
  
“There will be considerable material damage,” he said. “We hope there won’t be any personal injuries.”
  
The eruption opened two fissures about 650 feet apart. Officials said the lava streams would likely merge before reaching the sea.

The lava crept into the town of Los Llanos de Aridane, which lies close to the volcano. Town Mayor Noelia García said people had been evacuated from houses all the way down to the shoreline.
  
Experts said the eruption could last for weeks or even months.

Lava flows behind houses following the eruption of a volcano in the Cumbre Vieja national park at Los Llanos de Aridane, on the Canary Island of La Palma, September 20, 2021.

BORJA SUAREZ/REUTERS


People on La Palma largely live from farming. 

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez was due to visit the affected area Monday after canceling his trip to New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly.

The volcano erupted on Sunday after a weeklong buildup of seismic activity. The Canary Islands Volcanology Institute reported the initial eruption near the southern end of the island, which saw its last eruption in 1971. 

Huge red plumes topped with black-and-white smoke shot out along the Cumbre Vieja volcanic ridge, which scientists had been closely watching following the accumulation of molten lava below the surface and days of small earthquakes.

Authorities had evacuated more than 5,000 people by Monday morning, but Spain’s Civil Guard said the previous day that it could need to evacuate up to 10,000 residents in total.

A house burns due to lava from the eruption of a volcano in the Cumbre Vieja national park at Los Llanos de Aridane, on the Canary Island of La Palma, September 20, 2021.

BORJA SUAREZ/REUTERS


La Palma, with a population of 85,000, is one of eight volcanic islands in Spain’s Canary Islands archipelago off Africa’s western coast. At their nearest point, the islands are 60 miles from Morocco.

A 4.2-magnitude quake was recorded before the volcanic eruption, which took place in an area known as Cabeza de Vaca on the western slope as the ridge descends to the coast. As the eruptions continued two open mouths belched bright red magma into the air that then flowed in tight streams down the mountain slope.

Carlota Martín was at an agricultural plot her family has in Todoque, just downhill from the eruption site, when she heard a huge explosion.

“When we saw the column of smoke, we thought it could not be real, but it kept growing and we knew we had to get out of there,” she told The Associated Press. “You leave, but you are also looking back because you want to see what will happen. Nobody knows how the lava flows will descend, but our plot and lots of houses in the area could be in the way.”

Smoke rises at the Cumbre Vieja volcano on the island of La Palma in the Canaries, Spain, on Sunday, September 19, 2021.

Jonathan Rodriguez / AP


The last eruption on La Palma 50 years ago lasted just over three weeks. The last eruption on all the Canary Islands occurred underwater off the coast of El Hierro island in 2011. It lasted five months.

Volcanologist Vicente Soler of Spain’s Higher Council said “the material appears to be very fluid, the lava flows will reach the sea sooner or later.” The scientific committee of the Volcano Risk Prevention Plan said part of the island’s southwest coast was at risk for landslides and rock falls.

Read original article here

Volcano erupts on Spain’s La Palma island, spewing lava and forcing thousands to evacuate

Lava continued to flow slowly from a volcano that erupted in Spain’s Canary Islands off northwest Africa, but the head of the regional government said Monday that he expected no injuries to people in the area after some 5,000 were evacuated. Lava was flowing on the island of La Palma toward the sea, moving at 2,300 feet per hour, according to the Canary Islands Volcanology Institute.

The lava was moving in two streams through a mostly unpopulated area, Canary Islands government chief Ángel Víctor Torres told SER radio. Some 20 isolated houses were destroyed, SER reported.

Mount Cumbre Vieja erupts in El Paso, spewing out columns of smoke, ash and lava as seen from Los Llanos de Aridane on the Canary island of La Palma on Sunday, September 19, 2021.

DESIREE MARTIN/AFP via Getty Images


“We’re not expecting any other eruption,” Torres said, adding that air traffic in the area was not affected.
  
“There will be considerable material damage,” he said. “We hope there won’t be any personal injuries.”
  
The eruption opened two fissures about 650 feet apart. Officials said the lava streams would likely merge before reaching the sea.

The lava crept into the town of Los Llanos de Aridane, which lies close to the volcano. Town Mayor Noelia García said people had been evacuated from houses all the way down to the shoreline.
  
Experts said the eruption could last for weeks or even months.

Lava flows behind houses following the eruption of a volcano in the Cumbre Vieja national park at Los Llanos de Aridane, on the Canary Island of La Palma, September 20, 2021.

BORJA SUAREZ/REUTERS


People on La Palma largely live from farming. 

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez was due to visit the affected area Monday after canceling his trip to New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly.

The volcano erupted on Sunday after a weeklong buildup of seismic activity. The Canary Islands Volcanology Institute reported the initial eruption near the southern end of the island, which saw its last eruption in 1971. 

Huge red plumes topped with black-and-white smoke shot out along the Cumbre Vieja volcanic ridge, which scientists had been closely watching following the accumulation of molten lava below the surface and days of small earthquakes.

Authorities had evacuated more than 5,000 people by Monday morning, but Spain’s Civil Guard said the previous day that it could need to evacuate up to 10,000 residents in total.

A house burns due to lava from the eruption of a volcano in the Cumbre Vieja national park at Los Llanos de Aridane, on the Canary Island of La Palma, September 20, 2021.

BORJA SUAREZ/REUTERS


La Palma, with a population of 85,000, is one of eight volcanic islands in Spain’s Canary Islands archipelago off Africa’s western coast. At their nearest point, the islands are 60 miles from Morocco.

A 4.2-magnitude quake was recorded before the volcanic eruption, which took place in an area known as Cabeza de Vaca on the western slope as the ridge descends to the coast. As the eruptions continued two open mouths belched bright red magma into the air that then flowed in tight streams down the mountain slope.

Carlota Martín was at an agricultural plot her family has in Todoque, just downhill from the eruption site, when she heard a huge explosion.

“When we saw the column of smoke, we thought it could not be real, but it kept growing and we knew we had to get out of there,” she told The Associated Press. “You leave, but you are also looking back because you want to see what will happen. Nobody knows how the lava flows will descend, but our plot and lots of houses in the area could be in the way.”

Smoke rises at the Cumbre Vieja volcano on the island of La Palma in the Canaries, Spain, on Sunday, September 19, 2021.

Jonathan Rodriguez / AP


The last eruption on La Palma 50 years ago lasted just over three weeks. The last eruption on all the Canary Islands occurred underwater off the coast of El Hierro island in 2011. It lasted five months.

Volcanologist Vicente Soler of Spain’s Higher Council said “the material appears to be very fluid, the lava flows will reach the sea sooner or later.” The scientific committee of the Volcano Risk Prevention Plan said part of the island’s southwest coast was at risk for landslides and rock falls.

Read original article here