Fayna Bethencourt speaks after the arrest of Carlos El Yoyas
Fayna Bethencourt has decided to share her feelings after the capture of Carlos El Yoyas. The former Big Brother participant was arrested last week after two years avoiding justice. During this period, her ex-wife lived in fear of the possibility of encountering the man he used to abuse her. Despite the difficulty of reporting him, justice has finally been done and he is now being held in Brians 2 prison, where he will serve a sentence of five years and eight months for mistreatment, injuries, threats and humiliation.
Revealing interview with Fayna Bethencourt
Lecturasha magazine managed to interview Fayna, who has opened up after this event. In a shocking interview that makes the cover, the young woman admits that she still cannot feel calm: “I am in a state of emotional shock, reliving everything I have been through. I suffer from chronic anxiety, a consequence of what I experienced with this person. It is hard and now it has intensified, especially because of the repressed emotions. I couldn’t even speak due to the tension in my jaw caused by anxiety.
Fayna thanks the police for the arrest and justice, but she does not trust that this will be the outcome of her nightmare: “I don’t have the feeling that it is the end of the story, with him unfortunately it never is. I know that, at Just as he had the audacity to speak publicly when he was hiding, now he will throw poison against me and continue attacking me.
Furthermore, she is sure that living in the Canary Islands has protected her, making it difficult for El Yoyas to get close to her: “If I had lived on the Peninsula, I would probably be in a much worse situation or perhaps not at all. I have feared for my life in countless times.”
Statements by Carlos El Yoyas from prison
On the other hand, his ex-partner has also recently spoken from prison, six days after his admission. Carlos El Yoyas has communicated with the Telecinco program, TardeAR, sending a letter that was read on the air this Tuesday.
In the letter, he confirms Fayna’s fears by attacking her: “In 2017 I could not carry out activities with my children. Depression paralyzed me and with this sentence I have lost parental authority over my children, I consider my relationship with them lost. “She has taken away their phones so they can cut off all contact with me.”
Regarding his imprisonment, he admits that it is too early to know how he will cope: “The sentence is severe. I have the support of my family and, without them, the rest does not matter to me.”