On November 14, Carlos Navarro ‘El Yoyas’ should have gone to prison to serve a firm sentence of almost six years in prison for habitual abuse and injuries to his ex-wife and two children. This was ordered by the Criminal Court number 5 of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, which also had to issue a search and arrest warrant after Navarro disregarded the judicial request.

Since then, his victim, Fayna Bethencourt, has not rested. The Canarian woman has been patiently waiting all these months for the Police to finally arrest her abuser, but despite the fact that both the security forces and she herself have received clues about her whereabouts, Navarro is still on the run. Still, she doesn’t plan on giving up, and she’s sure that her ex-partner will pay for everything she’s done.

This is how firm and forceful the Canary Islander is in a new interview she gave to Semana magazine, where she without hesitation trusts that Justice will reach the end. Slowly, as she is seeing firsthand, but without pause. It is the only way, as she herself confesses, that both her family and her can continue with her life.

At the moment, the Police only know that he is “on the peninsula” and nothing more, regardless of the fact that Navarro has spoken on several occasions with journalists or that he has been seen around his parents’ house, in a town. close to Barcelona.

“I think there is little interest in finding him, because, if not, they would have already found him,” laments the former Big Brother contestant, who fears that her ex could somehow travel to Gran Canaria and harm her children again. or her. “What has saved me is the geographical distance, but it doesn’t mean that it will save my skin forever.”

Fayna does not hesitate to point out the “circle that protects” Carlos Navarro, both from his family and the journalists who give him a voice. “He is very damned. “He exhausted every possible avenue,” she reminds them. “He has that help. It is striking, because taller towers have fallen, but this person is still missing.”

Despite everything, the canary insists: she is not afraid. Now, she needs to move on with her life. “It’s like carrying a kind of weight on my back that doesn’t allow me to close the page,” she explains, comparing it to a vulture constantly flying overhead. She “continues to psychologically mistreat Me from a distance through the media and in front of the entire country.”

The sentence also includes the payment of compensation of 12,000 euros that the Canary Islander hopes will one day arrive, for the well-being of her children. Two teenagers who are already aware of everything that happens around them, especially in a case as high-profile as theirs. “The media pressure has been very strong. On an emotional level it has been quite hard,” she confesses.

Even so, he is clear that they will get justice done once and for all. For her, and for all those people and families in the same situation. “I was on my knees for 16 years until I started to wake up. “I have fallen a thousand times in my life, but I always end up getting up.”