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Moment ‘mini-tsunami' sweeps SIDEWAYS across tourist beach injuring 8 injured as freak wave drags sunbathers over rocks

Moment ‘mini-tsunami' sweeps SIDEWAYS across tourist beach injuring 8 injured as freak wave drags sunbathers over rocks

The Sun2 days ago
THIS is the shocking moment a "mini-tsunami" swept sideways across a tourist beach - leaving eight people injured.
Freak waves dragged bathers towards rocks as they took a dip in the sea in the Costa de la Luz in Spain.
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A 60,000-ton cargo ship has been blamed for stirring the water and causing the freak waves to rip through the Spanish beach - but sideways.
Footage showed dark-coloured water speeding towards the beach before hitting a large rock in the water and rebounding back onto the sand.
A woman sunbathing on the beach could be overheard yelling: 'The rock, the rock,' as she scrambled to escape the wave.
Many people were hurt after they were smashed against rocks to the left.
The bizarre water waves, dubbed "mini-tsunami" by the beachgoers, left sunshades scattered over the sand.
A huge cargo ship - thought to be the one that caused the freak waves - was seen in the background.
One witness said afterwards on social media: 'It passed very close to the shore and caused a strong wave that swept several people away.
'People were literally thrown to the ground.'
Another blamed the cargo ship, saying: "It was a huge ship and then it caught the expansive wave like a tsunami, which absorbs the water and then expels it very forcefully.'
Watch terrifying moment massive freak waves batter Peru sweeping away boats & swamping seaside towns
One of the bathers hurt had to be hospitalised.
The woman, identified only as 28-year-old Rocio, said from her hospital bed: 'I've got a broken foot and I'm waiting to be operated on.
'I was coming out of the water with a paddleboard when the wave hit me from the left and knocked me to the ground.
'I couldn't see anything and got trapped under the board. I only found out what had happened and that a ship was to blame when I got to hospital.'
She told a Spanish TV station: 'I've got to have an operation on my foot and I've got a long period of rehabilitation ahead of me.
'It's the last thing I wanted at the start of the summer.'
An investigation into the incident has been launched, with local authorities trying to find whether the cargo ship had breached rules and came too close to the beach.
The local harbour master's office said overnight, a new speed limit in the area for this type of vessel had been set at 11.5 knots to avoid another "mini-tsunami".
Last year, massive freak waves swept away boats and swamped seaside towns in Peru.
Footage captured the monster swells battering the coast of the South American country on the Pacific Ocean.
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Jet2 profits prepare to take off on summer holiday boom

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My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris

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Avoid the heatwaves with these 15 great ideas for a coolcation

Times

time4 hours ago

  • Times

Avoid the heatwaves with these 15 great ideas for a coolcation

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In town the Skagen Harbour Hotel supplies the former and the Skagen Bakery has all the cakes you'll ever want ( while the Skagens Museum celebrates the Danish art scene's long love affair with the area's sparkling seaside light (£16; B&B doubles from £173. Fly to Aalborg Dip into Lake MontriondNearly 30 miles east of Geneva, on the northern edge of the Alps, Morzine is a place of fragrant forests and lush meadows, and it's the perfect summer venue for an energetic family of hikers and/or bikers — not least because when you've had enough uphill work you can throw yourselves into Lake Montriond. Squirrelled away up a nearby valley it offers a lifeguarded, child-friendly swimming area, as well as paddleboard rental (£17 an hour; and on a sunny day in August the water temperature can hit 25C. Stay at the characterful and recently refurbished Hotel du Lac, at the western end of the lake, and you can be first in for a dip each morning B&B doubles from £220. Fly to Geneva or take the ferry to Calais and drive Europe's largest national park Many hotels in Iceland may now be full for summer, but you can still hire a camper van at Keflavik, the main airport. What's more, if you head eastwards, towards Vatnajokull, you'll find the crowds thinning too. This is Europe's largest national park, where a vast ice-cap glacier and its many tongues interact with extinct and active volcanoes. Expect thunderous waterfalls, soaring peaks and abrupt canyons carved out by sudden floods. 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But time on board is essential too — it's by far the safest way to spot polar Eight nights' full board from £3,735pp ( Fly to Svalbard A riviera with a differenceSure, there's plenty of sand at Huuhanranta, but this mile-long beach on what is jokingly referred to as the Saimaa Riviera is the very opposite of the Côte d'Azur. A freshwater strand on one of Europe's biggest lakes, three and a half hours' drive from Helsinki, it has nothing on its shoreline but picnic spots, local kayakers and the odd hammock slung between its pine trees. Visit it as part of an easy-going, family-friendly week at the nearby Koskenselka holiday park. Its superior lakefront cabins have private saunas, just in case you need to warm up before your morning swim. Details One night's self-catering for four from £138 ( Fly to Helsinki Where will you be going to keep cool this summer? Let us know in the comments below

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