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Brit tourist gives birth to premature baby in hotel garden amid horror Spain power outage with help of hero receptionist

Published on April 29, 2025 at 11:06 AM

A BRIT tourist gave birth to a 10-week premature baby in the garden of a Costa del Sol hotel during Spain’s massive power outage.

The newborn was in a critical condition this morning after suffering complications in the dead of night during .

Hotel Puente Real lobby.
A Brit staying at Hotel Puente Real sought help after her waters broke in the middle of the night
Hotel pool and buildings.
The woman gave birth 10 weeks early in the garden of the hotel
Bar patrons seated at a bar during a blackout.
This bar in Toledo, central Spain, soldiered on through the outage on Monday

A British woman in her early twenties sought help from a receptionist after her waters broke in the early hours of this morning.

The hotel worker tried to call a taxi but it was too late, so had to help the woman give birth in the garden of the hotel.

The receptionist even had to give CPR to the new-born, who initially didn’t have a pulse.

The alarming episode happened at the Puente Real Hotel in Torremolinos, at around 3am this morning.

Emergency medics rushed the new mother to hospital in an ambulance with a police escort.

She was 30 weeks pregnant when she went into labour – while a full term is 40 weeks.

The baby was said to still be in a “critical”; condition this morning.

A spokesman for the local emergency services confirmed this morning: “A British woman gave birth to a premature baby near reception at the Puente Real hotel in Torremolinos during the early hours of this morning in the midst of the crisis caused by the

“The receptionist of the establishment assisted her and even performed CPR on the newborn, who had no pulse.

“The receptionist tried to call a taxi and notify the emergency services, but there wasn’t enough time.

“The woman gave birth in the garden at the entrance of the hotel.

“It was a premature birth, as the girl was in the 30th week of gestation.

“The baby showed signs of asphyxia and had gone purple so the receptionist, following instructions from medical experts over the phone, performed CPR manoeuvres until it started to cough.

“The paramedics after they arrived were escorted by the National Police to the Materno Infantil Hospital in Malaga where the new-born was admitted in critical condition, although with a pulse.”;

Empty supermarket shelves in Spain or Portugal due to panic buying during a blackout.
Supermarket shelves sit empty across Portugal and Spain
A Police car officers (R) patrols under switched-off traffic lights during a massive power cut affecting the entire Iberian peninsula and the south of France, in Madrid on April 28, 2025. A
Police cars patrol traffic caused by dead traffic lights in Madrid
Customers at a Barcelona food shop during a power outage.
Food stands in Barcelona attempt to keep running during the blackout

The condition of the baby’s mum was not known this morning, although she was described as “remaining in bed”; at the Malaga hospital.

Spain and Portugal’s on Monday made the already-complicated birth even trickier.

across most of the two countries after a day of havoc.

Airports and hospitals shut down and trains screeched to a haltacross the peninsula on Monday – prompting to declare a national emergency.

Employees stand inside a supermarket without lights in Burgos on April 28, 2025, during a massive power cut affecting the entire Iberian peninsula and the south of France. A
Employees stand inside a supermarket without lights in Burgos
Large crowd waiting in a dark hallway at the Madrid Open tennis tournament due to a power outage.
Tennis fans were turfed out of the Madrid Open
A worker assists a customer with a torch at a supermarket during a power outage which hit large parts of Spain, in Barcelona, Spain April 28, 2025. REUTERS/Nacho Doce TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
A worker assists a customer with a torch at a supermarket during a power outage which hit large parts of Spain

Spain‘s train service came to a complete stop, leaving huge crowds stranded at stations, andMadrid’s underground network was evacuated.

Panic-buying shoppers stripped the shelves of groceries, fearing shortages of household goods.

Spain’s Interior Ministry deployed 30,000 officersto maintain order as both governments held emergency cabinet meetings.

Air traffic was slashed to “half capacity”; asfrom a number ofairports– with Lisbon cancelling all arrivals for hours.

The Spanish Prime Minister,PedroSanchez, said: “This is something that has never happened before.”;

People queueing for a bus during a power outage in Madrid.
Footage shows people forming huge queues at bus terminals
Panic buying in a grocery store in Spain or Portugal.
Supermarkets were swamped with people wanting to stock up in case of shortages

About 61% of Spain’s power was restored by Monday night, with electricity returning first to the Basque Country, Barcelona, and parts of.

On Tuesday morning, Spanish power company Red Eléctrica (REE) said 99.95% of the power is back on.

In, grid operator REN confirmed 85 out of 89 substations were back online, including the capital Lisbon.

On the streets, people celebrated.

Some cooked meals by candlelight and others flocked to plazas in impromptu gatherings.

The cause of the power cuts is still not known – with theories ranging from a Russian sabotage attack to a freak atmospheric event.

Portugal’s power network said on Monday that the most likely cause was a system failure caused by a phenomenon called “induced atmospheric variation”;.

This refers to changes in the Earth’s atmosphere in response to external factors.

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