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Leopoldo Cejas. General secretary of the Satse Canarias nursing union, points out that the data is "a surprise and a blow." Leopoldo Cejas. General secretary of the Satse Canarias nursing union, describes as a "surprise and blow" the data that reveals that attacks on nursing staff in the Canarian Health Service increased by seventy-eight percent in 2023. 430 attacks These 430 attacks represent "a spectacular increase" that had never been observed. The issue is even more serious if we add those that are not reported. Thus, only 38 complaints have been forwarded to the prosecutor's office, which makes the rest remain "an anecdote." Cejas points out that many professionals think that it is not worth reporting and are afraid of meeting the aggressor again. System deficiencies He points out that, now, the verbal attacks are of great virulence, with concrete threats. Physical attacks have also increased, although to a lesser extent. The largest number, 34 percent, occurs in primary care, an area for which Cejas requests a permanent security presence.
He points out that the causes of the attacks lie, for the most part, in the deficiencies of the system itself, while a minority is due to not giving the user some satisfaction, such as a discharge. Sports recipe In another order of things and regarding the so-called "sports recipe", Cejas understands that it has been "sold poorly", because it has been related to pathologies, "which is Europe Mobile Number List typical of physiotherapists." Remember that the recommendation of physical exercise and its monitoring can be done by sports instructors, "but therapeutic exercise is a different thing, for which there are already professionals."Daniel Arencibia, a lawyer specialized in migration, points out that this translates into a situation of begging for many people who arrive on the islands. A legal study prepared by the immigration lawyer, Daniel Arencibia, highlights that the sentences of migrants, who arrive in boats acting as bosses, are harsher in the Canary Islands than in the Peninsula due to the disparity in criteria of the prosecutor's office.

Begging in the streets Arencibia points out that, while on the peninsula sentences of two years are requested, in the Canary Islands it is increased to three, which is relevant for criminal records and for the fact that, for the former, suspension of the sentence is requested, while In the Canary Islands they are forced to beg on the streets during the long process. profit motive He considers that Spain should assume the approach of the European return directive, but "what the State cannot do is keep them stuck on the island in a situation of begging." He states that this is a consequence of the different interpretation of the profit motive by the prosecution: "It does not seem plausible to think that these people are motivated by money, which in many cases does not even reach a thousand euros." He states that many of those who consider themselves boat owners are former fishermen who have lost their livelihoods in their countries of origin due to the presence of large multinationals that have depleted the waters: "The Ministry of the Interior has to make an effort against the "True mafias, who are getting rich, and not against fishermen. is being done in other territories.
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