Will Pedro Sánchez pay a price for power cuts and cancelled trains?

Date:

An old Spanish refrain advises el martes, ni te cases ni te embarques — don’t get married or start a journey on a Tuesday.

Daniel Avecilla may now be wary of setting off on a Monday, too. On a Monday last month, April 28, he was stuck on a train for ten hours, one of tens of millions of people affected by a catastrophic power cut that paralysed Spain and Portugal.

Exactly a week later, the young man from Cadiz was among thousands of passengers stranded on a railway platform after thieves stole copper cables from the Seville to Madrid high-speed line. Avecilla scoffed at the government’s claim that it had been “a serious act of sabotage”, saying: “Well, put more security on the track.”

Passengers were stranded when an electric high-speed train was halted by the major electricity blackout

JAVIER SORIANO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Spain’s infrastructure woes and the Socialist-led government’s ability to deal with them are now in the…

Read more…

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Tampa RV giant Lazydays to delist from Nasdaq

Tampa-based Lazydays Holdings Inc., one of Florida’s most recognized...

Granite Geek: New Hampshire might get access to ‘balcony solar’

I had solar panels put on my roof six...

TSX Today: What to Watch for in Stocks on Monday, November 10

Despite firm gold and silver prices, Canadian stocks...

While BNB and DOT Struggle Under Market Pressure, BlockDAG’s Presale Soars Past $435M!

As market-wide fear grips the sector, the Binance Coin...