Published On 9 Jul 20249 Jul 2024
Videos of Barcelona residents shooting water pistols at tourists at a city restaurant have been widely shared on social media. And it was not fake news. Residents in Spain’s most visited city did not mean to harm tourists, but they are conveying a message: “Tourists, go home.”
It was the latest in the series of protests against mass tourism in the country, which attracted 85 million visitors in 2023.
Barcelona, home to beautiful beaches and the world-famous Barcelona football club, attracts millions of tourists every year. But the record flow of visitors has impacted the housing sector, pushing rental prices higher and out of reach for some city residents.
Here’s more about Barcelona’s anti-tourism protests.
What happened?
- Around 2,800 anti-tourism protesters marched in Barcelona on Saturday, July 6, according to the police.
- Videos making the rounds on social media showed protesters carrying banners with slogans including “Tourists go home”, and “Barcelona is not for sale”.
- They were also seen using colourful plastic water pistols to spray water on the visitors in the tourist district of Las Ramblas.
- Protesters additionally cordoned off restaurants and hotels in the northeastern coastal city using red tape.
Why are there anti-tourism protests in Barcelona?
- Soaring housing costs are at the heart of the protesters’ concerns. According to property website Idealista, rent prices in Barcelona have increased by 18 percent over the past year.
- Over the past decade, rent rose by 68 percent and the cost of buying a house increased by 38 percent, making the city unliveable for locals. Apartments for tourists, including online rental sites, have strained the local housing market.
- To combat this, Barcelona’s Mayor Jaume Collboni, a Socialist, announced on June 21 that more than 10,000 tourist apartment rentals will be banned by 2028.
- This was not the first time a Barcelona mayor took such action. In 2017, former Mayor Ada Colau also introduced “anti-tourism policies”.
- Protesters are also opposed to a tourism-based economy, which they argue is making them poorer and also reliant on visitors.
- This is not the first time tourism has been highlighted as a problem in Spain. In April, 57,000 demonstrators marched in protest against tourism in the Canary Islands, the Spanish archipelago around 2,200km (1,370 miles) southwest of Barcelona, off the west coast of Africa.
- Spain’s Palma de Mallorca and Malaga also saw anti-tourism protests in May and June, respectively.