periperi
New Member
Look, I hate to start this topic, but I know itºs available in some format in german-language forums, and we need to be aware, and supporting each other.
Serious concerns about safety, particularly for peregrinas, on the portuguese route exist.
Iºve just done the portugués for the second time (started in Porto in June, in Lisboa in September), and have personally experienced, and had my peregrina buddies experience, serious unpleasantness in their caminho experience.
Firstly, there is a known issue of a flasher near the bridge at San Pedro de Rates. From the MO, it sounds like there might be two of them (an older guy who just flashes, perhaps with accompanying self-pleasuring, and a second, younger guy who last year had a knife. This may be the same guy that followed my peregrina mate up the road in a car this year too.)
Second, this month a pair of late 20s peregrina buddies experienced flasher/other activity occuring in Valença, and across the border (perhaps by the same individual on one occasion). Worryingly, when they tried to report it, they were passed between the Spanish and Portuguese police, and were finally unable to make a report because none of these police spoke any of the langues spoken by my friends. More seriously, when they tried to report these via albergue hospitalleros, they were met with polite but unhelpful information/consolation.
Third, my own experience was of serious assault just after Porrino, and of someone (I thought it was the hospitallero) repeatedly following me into the shower/bathroom in Rubiaes. I canºt report the first issue, but when I tried the issue of the second to the attenon of relevant people (eg, hospitalleros in Ponte de Lima) it was dismissed with the comment that Portuguese are friendly people, and the hospitallero at Rubiaes is a nice chap, I must have encountered a rogue local. Fine. But what to do about it?!
Also, and noting that my previous experiences on this route may have influenced this, I donºt really consider that the route south of Porto is safe for women (maybe slightly younger, but not necessarily attractive women!). People are often attracted to a camino for psychological/philosophical reasons, and feeling unsafe for hundreds of kilometres isnºt necessarily best practice in dealing with this!
Itºs an absolute shame- I really believe in the geography and history behind the Portuguese route and would love to see it working properly. To this end, practical suggestions, are
-that albergues should keep an incident log and act as a main contact between peregrina/os and police (one factor behind my friends not taking further action after their experience with the flasher, despite having important identifying details such as car registration number, was the knowledge that the hospitallero had been dismissive of their experience, and that making a police report would mean being unable to meet the albergue curfew)
-that we need group caminhos of less-travelled sections of the way, to raise awareness amongst locals (eg, a basic issue was that in one park I was directed away from fuente, but locals hadnºt realised that a drinking water source 5 metres away would have met my -quite desperate!- needs)
And just to qualify, my friends are quite beautiful late 20-somethings but travelling in a pair, and Iºm in my mid 30s (perhaps taken for younger/older as a sozinhu peregrina?). And we all strongly feel that just because we are women in Portugal & Spain, we shouldnºt feel that we are easy prey.
As peregrinos, we keep an eye (both critical and supportive) on our community, but we don´t exist in a bubble. We can´t (and shouldnºt) control locals, but we should be kept safe on caminho.
Any comments, suggestions on how to make the route safer?
Serious concerns about safety, particularly for peregrinas, on the portuguese route exist.
Iºve just done the portugués for the second time (started in Porto in June, in Lisboa in September), and have personally experienced, and had my peregrina buddies experience, serious unpleasantness in their caminho experience.
Firstly, there is a known issue of a flasher near the bridge at San Pedro de Rates. From the MO, it sounds like there might be two of them (an older guy who just flashes, perhaps with accompanying self-pleasuring, and a second, younger guy who last year had a knife. This may be the same guy that followed my peregrina mate up the road in a car this year too.)
Second, this month a pair of late 20s peregrina buddies experienced flasher/other activity occuring in Valença, and across the border (perhaps by the same individual on one occasion). Worryingly, when they tried to report it, they were passed between the Spanish and Portuguese police, and were finally unable to make a report because none of these police spoke any of the langues spoken by my friends. More seriously, when they tried to report these via albergue hospitalleros, they were met with polite but unhelpful information/consolation.
Third, my own experience was of serious assault just after Porrino, and of someone (I thought it was the hospitallero) repeatedly following me into the shower/bathroom in Rubiaes. I canºt report the first issue, but when I tried the issue of the second to the attenon of relevant people (eg, hospitalleros in Ponte de Lima) it was dismissed with the comment that Portuguese are friendly people, and the hospitallero at Rubiaes is a nice chap, I must have encountered a rogue local. Fine. But what to do about it?!
Also, and noting that my previous experiences on this route may have influenced this, I donºt really consider that the route south of Porto is safe for women (maybe slightly younger, but not necessarily attractive women!). People are often attracted to a camino for psychological/philosophical reasons, and feeling unsafe for hundreds of kilometres isnºt necessarily best practice in dealing with this!
Itºs an absolute shame- I really believe in the geography and history behind the Portuguese route and would love to see it working properly. To this end, practical suggestions, are
-that albergues should keep an incident log and act as a main contact between peregrina/os and police (one factor behind my friends not taking further action after their experience with the flasher, despite having important identifying details such as car registration number, was the knowledge that the hospitallero had been dismissive of their experience, and that making a police report would mean being unable to meet the albergue curfew)
-that we need group caminhos of less-travelled sections of the way, to raise awareness amongst locals (eg, a basic issue was that in one park I was directed away from fuente, but locals hadnºt realised that a drinking water source 5 metres away would have met my -quite desperate!- needs)
And just to qualify, my friends are quite beautiful late 20-somethings but travelling in a pair, and Iºm in my mid 30s (perhaps taken for younger/older as a sozinhu peregrina?). And we all strongly feel that just because we are women in Portugal & Spain, we shouldnºt feel that we are easy prey.
As peregrinos, we keep an eye (both critical and supportive) on our community, but we don´t exist in a bubble. We can´t (and shouldnºt) control locals, but we should be kept safe on caminho.
Any comments, suggestions on how to make the route safer?