Benidorm to get Spain’s TALLEST lux skyscraper as resort cements its surprising place as world’s No1 high-rise hotspot

A BRIT holiday hotspot will soon be home to an enormous new skyscraper that will be the tallest of its kind in Spain.

Benidorm’s skyline will reach new heights with the tallest residential tower of its kind in the country – standing an incredible 754ft across 64 floors.

Rendering of Benidorm's tallest residential tower.
TM Grupo Inmobiliario

Benidorm is giving itself a makeover with a new €27.5 million skyscraper[/caption]

Rendering of Benidorm's TM Tower overlooking the city and coastline.
TM Grupo Inmobiliario

The new project is aimed at upmarket residents, with more than 64 floors[/caption]

Aerial view of Benidorm, Spain, showing high-rise buildings and beaches.
Getty

The TM Grupo Inmobiliario project will be the tallest residential building in Spain when complete[/caption]

It is the latest major development as the resort town – which welcomes more than 832,000 Brits every year – tries to give itself an upmarket makeover.

The seaside resort, which already lays claim to the most skyscrapers per capita in the world, has received approval to build its tallest building yet.

The council gave the green light for the construction of the luxury skyscraper.

Property developer TM Grupo Inmobiliario is heading up the project.

The building plans outline various facilities for residents, including gyms, pools, a private cinema and a sky bar with an observatory for star-gazers.

Construction has been slated to begin this year with a completion date of 2028.

The luxury building comes with a €27.5 million (£23,907,950) price tag.

The high-rise will also mark the 900th anniversary of the foundation of Benidorm.

Prior to the 1950s, the Spanish coastal town was little more than a fishing village.

Once complete, it will be the fourth-tallest building in Spain, relegating TM’s previous project Intempo (202m) to fifth spot.

The building falls behind Madrid‘s Torre de Cristal (816ft), Torre Moeve (813ft) and Torre PWC (774ft).

Despite being labelled as “brash and overbuilt” by critics, Benidorm has developed Manhattan-inspired zoning laws, which reward slenderness with height.

Since the 1960s, the skyline has been nicknamed Beni-York and has been celebrated by urbanists for its efficiency.

José Luis Camarasa, the city’s chief architect from 1981 until 2024, told El Pais about “building coefficients”.

“The slimmer and more slender a building, the higher it can go,” he explained.

“That is why our current reference is New York.”

Spa treatment on a balcony overlooking the ocean.
TM Grupo Inmobiliario

The new skyscraper will include 260 flats[/caption]

Illustration of a luxury residential building's amenities, including a pool table and outdoor seating area overlooking the ocean.
TM Grupo Inmobiliario

Building plans show gyms, pools, a private cinema and a sky bar[/caption]

Under a recent urban plan, 65 per cent of Benidorm’s land must be public and only 10 per cent can be developed.

“It’s the famous anecdote of the pack of cigarettes placed lengthwise,” Camarasa said.

“If you lift it and stand it up, it has the same density.”

Once described as “hugely high-rise and vaguely Vegas” in a guide book, Benidorm has one of the densest collections of skyscrapers in Europe, reducing urban sprawl.

“In these 50 years, 30,000 homes have been built,” Camarasa said.

“That figure, during the boom years, would have been reached in just a few years in any coastal town in Alicante.

“My dream has always been to beat the record of the Shard in London (1017ft),” he added.

The new TM tower will not beat the Shard, but it will add a new peak to the skyline for sunset lovers to enjoy.

World’s top 10 tallest buildings

1. Burj Khalifa – Dubai, UAE → 2722ft

2. Merdeka 118 – Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia → 2227ft

3. Shanghai Tower – Shanghai, China → 2037ft

4. Makkah Royal Clock Tower – Mecca, Saudi Arabia → 1971ft

5. Ping’an International Finance Centre – Shenzen, China → 1965ft

6. Lotte World Tower – Seoul, South Korea → 1820ft

7. One World Trade Centre – New York, USA → 1368ft

8. Guangzhou Chow Tai Fook Finance Centre – Guangzhou, China → 1738ft

9. Tianjin Finance Centre – Tianjin, China → 1738ft

10. CITIC Tower – Beijing, China → 1732ft

September 2, 2025
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How hols hotspot Portugal SHUT DOOR on illegal migrants with cops on beaches, detention centres & deportations in DAYS

CHEERING rang out from the shore of a secluded Algarve beach as a rickety boat packed with 38 migrants pulled up during sunset.

But their jubilation was short-lived as, in a stark contrast to the UK, Portuguese authorities acted quickly and firmly – wanting to stamp out any chance their nation could be used as a gateway to Europe.

Migrants arriving by boat on a beach, giving thumbs up.
Migrants cheer as they arrive on Boca do Rio beach in Portugal’s Algarve
Paulo Lourenço
Migrants sitting by the roadside near a police officer.
Darren Fletcher

All 38 migrants were given aid before being detained by police[/caption]

Migrants giving thumbs up upon arrival at a beach.
The migrants – from Morocco – gave a thumbs up before calling home to let them know they’d made it
Paulo Lourenço
Boat motor at night.
Darren Fletcher

The boat 38 migrants arrived on in the Algarve from Morocco[/caption]

Top officials in the southern European nation told us their message could not be clearer to those looking to travel unlawfully – do not come here, or you will be caught and removed.

Politicians and cops told us they want to “send a message” to any illegal migrants – and warned how failing to act quickly would simply foster “resentment” and anger for locals.

Portugal has been determined to nip in the bud any chance it could be caught up in the same migrant chaos as the UK and other European nations.

Rapid deportations, new detention centres, and 18,000 illegal migrants lined up to be expelled are just some of the tough new measures being deployed in the holiday nation, which welcomes 300,000 Brit tourists every year.

And it appears Portugal’s tougher stance is successfully shutting the door on illegal movement – with just eight boat landings since 2019.

Meanwhile, in the UK, there have been more than 190,000 migrant arrivals detected after crossing the English Channel in small boats since records began in 2018.

Overall migration has also dropped sharply in Portugal – down from a net gain of 63,000 in 2019 to under 21,000 in 2024.

And this year, they have toughened up measures even further to stop any surge before it starts.

The Algarve coast has been deemed a “gateway to Europe” and is just 700km from Morocco – meaning it could quickly become a lucrative route for smugglers.

But Portugal appears to be stamping out any chance of the situation spiralling with an even tougher sweeping crackdown on illegal immigration.

Earlier this year, the nation’s parliament introduced tighter rules as part of a series of wider measures to restrict migration, as the “situation had become unsustainable”.

In what one senior politician labelled a “much-needed” strategy, Portugal launched a major campaign to eject thousands of people living there without proper authorisation.

And migrants who arrive illicitly will also be detained in temporary custody and given a 20-day window to voluntarily leave – or be booted out.

Cristóvão Norte, of Portugal’s ruling Social Democratic Party, served a warning Sir Keir Starmer might want to take heed of – delay enforcing an efficient policy makes the problem bigger, not smaller.

‘Hope the UK finds its own approach’

The national counsellor told how the government is building two new detention houses – and how illegal migrants will be expelled swiftly.

“I wouldn’t say that is a tough approach, I would say it’s a much-needed one, that’s different,” he told The Sun.

“Just want to stress that these kinds of changes are necessary, and being delayed makes the problem bigger, not smaller.

“Everyone is treated with respect and children are protected and taken care with all consideration.

“We had an empty policy, unarticulated from top to bottom. This new path is a good approach. I hope the UK finds its own.”

It serves to highlight a glaring disparity with Britain, where the PM is facing growing pressure to take a harder line on immigration.

Shocking figures show a record number of people claimed asylum in the UK since Labour came to power – with a massive 32,000 currently living in taxpayer-funded hotels.

The embattled PM has been warned he will lose the next election if his Government fails to get a grip on the illegal migrant crisis – particularly with boat crossings across the Channel.

It’s sparked riots across the UK, largely outside hotels where migrants – many of them economic – are being housed at the taxpayer’s expense.

But while dinghies continue to arrive on Kent’s shores at a spiralling rate, for those living in Portugal’s Algarve, it’s now a rare vision.

‘Felt like an invasion’

Local business owner Paulo Lourenço was making his way home one evening earlier this month when he spotted a boat making its way to shore.

He told The Sun: “I am at sea every day, I know every boat here – and this one was not normal.”

Concerned Paulo, who runs dolphin watching trips with Salema Tours, made a detour to the remote Boca do Rio beach and was horrified by what he saw.

Footage obtained by The Sun showed the moment a group of 38 migrants cheering and giving thumbs up as they pulled up on a tiny wooden boat.

Paulo said: “It felt like an invasion.

“I had a strange feeling. Really strange. Like an angry feeling, to be honest with you. 

“I noticed they came to our country illegally and didn’t know what would happen – you don’t know if they are good people.

“They asked to borrow my phone to make a WhatsApp call – and they cried as they spoke to the family to tell them they had made it here.”

A politician pointing towards something on a boat.
Darren Fletcher

Cristóvão Norte, President of PSD Algarve, warned migrants, ‘Do not come here – or you will get caught’[/caption]

Migrants giving thumbs up upon arrival at a beach.
Paulo Lourenço

Another migrant gives a thumbs up after reaching the Algarve[/caption]

Man in a light blue hoodie on a beach.
Darren Fletcher

Paulo Lourenço called the GNR police after spotting the boat approaching the shore[/caption]

Beach warning sign: danger of drowning, beach without lifeguard.
Darren Fletcher

Boca do Rio beach is an unmanned, secluded beach on the Algarve[/caption]

Small green boat in harbor.
Darren Fletcher

The small, wooden boat that 38 migrants came ashore on[/caption]

Paulo called authorities on his way to the largely deserted bay, and the migrants – 25 men, six women and seven children – were met by National Republican Guard police (GNR) after a treacherous 50-hour journey from Morocco.

Major-General Jorge Ludovico Bolas, who led the operation that evening, told The Sun how the GNR worked “effectively” after receiving an initial call at around 8pm on August 8.

He said: “Fortunately, we were fast arriving after the alarm, and we were able to meet them on the beach and not allow them to spread all over and run away.

“I believe some of them wanted to be captured because they were so thirsty and needed some aid. They wanted us to help them.”

Portugal seeks to prevent these arrivals from becoming regular routes, ensuring that each case is handled swiftly, in strict compliance with the legislation in force, while at the same time guaranteeing respect for human rights.


António Leitão Amaro

After being given aid and some hospital treatment, the migrants were dispersed to temporary centres in Porto, Lisbon and Faro.

A court has ordered that they return to Morocco voluntarily within 20 days – or be forcibly repatriated within 60 days, giving authorities a chance to coordinate arrangements with their homeland and, if possible, confirm their identities.

Major-General Bolas added: “I don’t know what they were expecting to happen.

“But I think the judicial decision was good in giving a message to Moroccan migrants, saying that we are not a good choice for them.”

Since the incident in the Algarve – the first in around four years – Major-General Bolas said measures have been ramped up to deter any more boats coming across.

Maritime and coastline surveillance has been intensified, with more police boots on the ground and boat patrols sent out to keep a watchful eye.

Sweeping crackdown

It comes as part of a major crackdown in Portugal, with Prime Minister Luis Montenegro vowing to end the country’s “wide-open doors” policy when he took office last year.

In May, a new campaign was kick-started to expel people unlawfully living in the country – with an estimated 18,000 expected to be given their marching orders.

While boat crossing are low, illegal migrants enter Portugal across their EU-mandated open border with Spain sometimes with the help of people smugglers and forged documents.

Most undocumented migrants in Portugal are believed to be from South America, especially Brazil, as well as people from Africa.

Back in 2023, around 200,000 people were thought to be living in Portugal without a residency permit – around half of them were from Brazil.

Mr Norte, president of the Faro Municipal Assembly and head of PSD Algarve, said the new tighter rules were triggered by “reality”.

He said illegal immigration “grows resentment” and insisted it is being “addressed properly”.

Mr Norte told The Sun: “Open doors without any integration device, housing and education guarantee, was producing profound changes in Portugal, mainly in Algarve and Alentejo.

“We need foreign people, yes, but we need integrated people, who can observe rules, respect our main framework of living and have their life project.

“We can’t have all at once, many being exploited, because our public services and society isn’t ready nor wants that.”

We had an empty policy, unarticulated from top to bottom. This new path is a good approach. I hope the UK finds its own.


Cristóvão Norte

António Leitão Amaro, minister of the presidency, also highlighted the government’s firm stance on illegal migration.

He said that, although incidents of boats reaching the coast are “rare”, the situation is continually – and closely – monitored by authorities and moves can be made to stop them before they reach the shore.

Mr Amaro told The Sun: “The change in policy was motivated by the need to restore the State’s control over immigration and respond to a situation that had become unsustainable.

“It was necessary to strengthen the entities and instruments for border control, combating illegal immigration, and fighting human trafficking.

“The government also launched the construction of two detention centres, since the national capacity was extremely low compared to the country’s real needs and was completely exhausted.”

At least £21million (€25m) has also been invested in the modernisation and renewal of border control technology.

He added: “The phenomenon of illegal sea arrivals seen in the United Kingdom is practically non-existent in Portugal.

“Portugal seeks to prevent these arrivals from becoming regular routes, ensuring that each case is handled swiftly, in strict compliance with the legislation in force, while at the same time guaranteeing respect for human rights.”

Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaking.
Reuters

Sir Keir Starmer is facing growing pressure to take a tougher stance on the UK’s illegal migrant crisis[/caption]

Beach with rocky shoreline and cliff.
Darren Fletcher

The spot the migrants landed on at the remote beach[/caption]

Migrants being assisted by Portuguese police after landing on a beach.
Darren Fletcher

GNR police at the scene on Boca do Rio beach[/caption]

Headshot of Major General Jorge Ludovico Bolas in a Guarda Nacional Republicana uniform.
Darren Fletcher

Major-general Jorge Ludovico Bolas led the operation to detain the migrants[/caption]

Woman in blue dress holding a danger drowning sign at a beach.
Darren Fletcher

The Sun’s Katie Davis at the unmanned Boca do Rio beach[/caption]

Despite the government’s stance, opinion among locals near Vila do Bispo is divided.

Two women who were on the beach when the boat arrived, too concerned to give their names because of their views, said they had pity for the migrants.

Speaking beside where the boat arrived, they told The Sun: “If they had come an hour or two later, nobody would have been here.

“We feel sorry for them. It’s really sad. Movement is normal. People want a better life.

“We are just the door to Europe, the gateway. The situation in Portugal is difficult. We are in a very economic problem.

“I mean, we have immigrants taking a lot of jobs. But the thing is, the jobs are so bad that the Portuguese don’t want them.”

Yet Portugal’s approach would likely be applauded by many fed-up Brits, who have taken to the streets to protest in recent weeks and demand Sir Keir up his game.

Illustration of Europe map highlighting migrant crackdown measures in various countries.

Both the public and politicians are turning up the heat on the PM amid fury at more than 200 hotels being used across the UK for migrants despite Labour’s manifesto pledge to end this.

The increase has been driven by a continued rise in small boat crossings – with more than 50,000 people coming across the Channel already under Labour.

Almost everyone who comes on a small boat then goes on to claim asylum – with 64 per cent being granted refugee status at the initial stage.

Labour has claimed they have returned 24,000 people since they came to power last summer – and this week they said the UK is ready to deport 100 migrants as part of their new deal with France.

The UK is grappling with a sharp rise in migration, particularly through small boat crossings across the English Channel.

It has placed immense pressure on the asylum system, with thousands of asylum seekers housed in hotels, costing the government billions annually.

In response, the UK government is trialling measures such as a “one-in, one-out” agreement with France, which has again proved controversial.

‘We’ll deport all illegal migrants’, vows Farage

by Martina Bet, Political Correspondent

NIGEL Farage has vowed to detain and deport every single illegal migrant in Britain – and ban them for life from ever returning.

The Reform UK boss unveiled his mass deportation blueprint — dubbed Operation Restoring Justice — promising detention camps, five deportation flights a day and a lifetime ban on ever coming back.

He said the crackdown could see up to 600,000 people deported in the first parliament alone, with savings of £17billion over five years and more than £42billion over a decade.

In a fiery speech at an aircraft hangar in Oxfordshire, the Reform UK leader blasted the crisis as an “invasion” and as a “growing threat to our national security”.

He said: “I think there is now as a result of this a genuine threat to public order and that is the very last thing that we want and I want.”

Under his plan, Britain would quit the European Convention on Human Rights, scrap the Human Rights Act and disapply the 1951 Refugee Convention – making deportation a legal duty.

He thundered: “We have to leave the ECHR, no ifs, no buts.

“It may have been a good idea 80 years ago. Frankly, it isn’t today.

“We have to repeal the Human Rights Act of 1998 brought in by a Blair government…

“Off the back of it, we will, for a five-year period, disapply the 1951 Refugee Convention and any other barriers that can be used by lawyers in this country to prevent deportations, to prevent the right thing from happening.

“We will create a legal duty for the Home Secretary to remove those that come illegally, and crucially, we will detain all illegal migrants who come, and we will do so immediately.”

READ MORE HERE

August 31, 2025
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The dark world of ‘Sovereign Citizens’ ready to KILL… with fears anti-establishment extremists will spark carnage in UK

GUNSHOTS echoed through the crisp morning air – a foreign sound in the normally idyllic countryside – as a routine warrant execution turned deadly. 

In the blink of an eye, two policemen were shot dead in cold blood and a third was left hospitalised, with the alleged shoot – self proclaimed “Sovereign Citizen” Dezi Freeman – still on the run.

Suspect Desmond Filby, also known as Desmond Freeman.
Reuters

Dezi Freeman remains on the run after allegedly shooting two Australian cops dead[/caption]

Security camera image of a person carrying a rifle.
Sovereign Citizen believer Gavin Eugene Long shot six cops in the US in 2016
Police officer with her mother.
Constable Rachel McCrow was killed along with two others by a Sovereign Citizen family in Australia
Mugshot of a man suspected of kidnapping.
Self-titled ‘Chief Judge of England’ Mark Christopher led a plot to kidnap a coroner in Essex

The man-hunt for the “homicidal Bear Grylls” still rages – and the spotlight has once again been shined on the “cult-like” belief shared by hundreds of thousands worldwide.

While most common in the United States and Australia – it is believed tens of thousands of Brits also lean towards the ideology that has been linked to numorous acts of violence.

Police are struggling to locate the radical, self-proclaimed sovereign citizen in the Victorian high country, fighting against the harsh environment and winter weather. 

The 56-year-old fugitive is part of a growing number of people who self-identify as Sovereign Citizens, a group of anti-establishment and anti-government individuals, conspiracy theorists and tax protesters.

Adherents to the extreme libertarian ideology believe they have a right to live under their own laws without any government interference.

And many have shown they are willing to kill or be killed in pursuit of that goal.

Chillingly, experts fear the movement – that has taken root Down Under and in parts of the US – also threatens to take hold in the UK.

Sovereign Citizens hold deeply anti-government beliefs which often coincide with conspiracy thinking. 

Their main tenet is that governments have been replaced by a corporation that controls people through birth certificates, licences and other identification documents. 

The movement was born in the US in the 1970s and believers have since been labelled as “anti-government extremists” by the FBI.

Dr William Allchorn from the American International University in London, said there are two main groups active in the UK – the Sovereign Citizens and the slightly distinct “Freeman on the land” movement.

“These groups reject government authority, legal systems and taxation,” he said. 

“Members often employ pseudolegal arguments to challenge legal obligations, such as refusing to pay taxes or contesting fines.”

He explained there are tens of thousands of people in the UK who adhere to these beliefs.  

Dr Allchorn added there had been evidence of cross communication between groups, in both “ideological overlap and informal collaboration”. 

While the UK has not experienced widespread violence, Dr Allchorn said “the potential for escalation” existed – pointing to the double cop killing this week in Australia.

“This … underscores the potential for violent actions stemming from sovereign citizen ideologies,” he said. 

The UK has seen some clashes – such as a sovereign citizen-linked group led by the self-proclaimed “Chief Judge of England” Mark Christoper trying to kidnap a coroner in Essex.

The risk of violence among sovereign citizen communities is not limited to Australia, according to Dr Joe McIntyre from the University of South Australia, who called the movement a “global phenomenon”. 

A winding road through a wooded area.
EPA

The shooting happened in Porepunkah – an alpine town 310km north-east of Melbourne[/caption]

Police officers at a staging area near a police helicopter.
EPA

Police continue to search for Freeman, four days after the shoot out[/caption]

Dezi Freeman, identified as the alleged gunman in a fatal shooting of two police officers.
Freeman was known to police prior to Tuesday’s shoot out
Arrest of Dezi Freeman at an anti-government protest.
7NEWS

Freeman was arrested in 2021 at an anti-government protest[/caption]

“The potential for violence has been present for a long time,” he said. 

“The UK is in no different position to Australia on this. 

“Though there is a slightly different emphasis on types of crime, we’ve seen the same growth, the same radicalisation and it’s becoming increasingly problematic with the rise of generative AI.”

Dr McIntyre said the groups had a “cult-like” appeal. 

“Psychologically, there is something deeply captivating when you’ve got a community of righteous warriors around you trying to save society from the corrupt government,” he said. 

Professor Christine Sarteschi from Chatham University said the groups would continue to rise in popularity, but governments are beginning to take them more seriously. 

“Australia, for example, is taking the group more seriously,” she said.  

“[They] are being seen for what they are – disruptive, combative people who will not follow the laws of their country.”

People are motivated to join these groups for various reasons, including “a belief the legal and political systems are corrupt or unjust” and a desire to “reject external authority”. 

“The movement has integrated with other anti-establishment and conspiracy-driven ideologies, such as anti-vaccination and far-right groups,” Dr Allchorn said. 

“Online platforms have helped facilitate the spread of these ideologies and allowed individuals to connect, share resources and reinforce their beliefs across borders,” Dr Allchorn added.

Victorian Police tactical vehicle in the rain.
EPA

A Mount Buffalo National Park entrance is closed off as the man hunt continues[/caption]

Victorian Police tactical vehicle during a manhunt.
EPA

Armed heavy vehicles are being used to assist in the hunt for Freeman[/caption]

Back in Australia, Freeman remains on the run, however his alleged fatal attack is not the first incident to end in police officers losing their lives Down Under. 

In 2022, couple Gareth and Stacey Train alongside Gareth’s brother Nathaniel Train, shot dead constables Rachel McCrown and Matthew Arnold and their neighbour Alan Dare, on a Queensland property. 

The incident has since been linked back to a notorious American sovereign citizen Donald Day Jr, who was a “close confidant” of the Trains family

Day Jr has since been arrested and charged with inciting violence online and making interstate threats. 

And there have been a number of killings linked to the movement in the US, such as Gavine Eugene Long who shot six police officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana – killing four.

The Christmas parade car ramming attack in Waukesha, Wisconsin, that killed 6 and injured 62 was also carried out by a soverign citizen Darrell Edward Brooks Jr.

Screenshot of Stacey and Gareth Train in a video.
YouTube

Conspiracy theorists Stacey and Gareth Train shot dead two Queensland police officers in 2022[/caption]

Nathaniel Train, smiling.
Not known, clear with picture desk

Gareth Train’s brother Nathaniel assisted in the cop killing[/caption]

Photo of Constable Matthew Arnold.
Not known, clear with picture desk

Constable Matthew Arnold tragically died in the 2022 shoot out[/caption]

Who are Australia’s ‘Sovereign Citizens’ ?

“SOVEREIGN citizens” – often called SovCits – are part of a fringe movement that falsely claims individuals can opt out of Australian law and government authority.

Followers often argue they are not bound by taxes, licences, fines, or court rulings.

The movement has existed in Australia for decades, borrowing heavily from conspiracy theories in the US.

While always on the margins, SovCits became more visible during the Covid pandemic, when mistrust in government and police surged.

Although many adherents are non-violent, police say confrontations can escalate when SovCits refuse to recognise authority.

Some have clashed with officers over property disputes, traffic stops, and legal orders.

The Australian Federal Police has warned the movement has “an underlying capacity to inspire violence.”

A 2023 AFP briefing note said SovCits are becoming more organised, using social media to spread their views and recruit supporters.

Authorities say numbers remain small but pockets of activity have been reported in regional areas.

Most activity involves disruptive legal claims and anti-government rhetoric — but some adherents have been linked to armed standoffs and violent threats.

August 30, 2025
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