Thousands of Spanish protesters marched through Barcelona over the weekend to express anger at mass tourism and its impacts on Spain’s most visited city.
But these protesters weren’t armed with signs. Bystanders dining in restaurants in the popular La Barceloneta neighborhood were soaked when some protesters sprayed them with water guns.
Video showed diners being forced to change tables at some restaurants to escape the protests on Saturday, while other restaurants were symbolically taped off by the demonstrators.
Carrying banners reading “Tourists go home,” protesters called for a reduction in the number of foreign visitors to Barcelona, stopping in front of hotels and restaurants to confront tourists.
“I have nothing against tourism, but here in Barcelona we are suffering from an excess of tourism that has made our city unliveable,” one of the demonstrators told the French news agency AFP.
The ire of the Spanish protesters is not because of tourists themselves, rather the drastic rise of short-term housing costs they say attracts tourists.
Local authorities say the cost of housing has risen 68% in the Spanish city over the past decade, becoming one of the main points of contention for the disgruntled residents.
Last month, the Mayor of Barcelona Jaume Collboni said that by 2028, he would stop renewing the thousands of tourist licenses that permit landlords to rent out accommodation to foreign visitors. The move would make the homes, which are currently advertised on platforms such as Airbnb, available to locals, according to Collboni.
The latest protest comes after similar large-scale demonstrations in other tourist hotspots across Spain. A protest in Málaga, in the southern part of the country, drew some 15,000 people to rally against over-tourism in June, while the island of Palma de Mallorca saw more than 10,000 people march against the impact of mass tourism in May.
According to Spain’s national statistics office INE, the first five months of 2024 alone saw more than 33 million tourists visit the country, which represents an increase of 13.6% compared to the previous year.
Anti-tourism sentiment is spreading throughout other European countries. Earlier this year, Venice, Italy became the first city to impose a fee on daily visitors in an effort to curb large influxes of outside visitors.