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PROTESTS

LATEST: Where are roads blocked in Madrid due to tractor protests?

Hundreds of tractors began converging on Madrid Wednesday for a new day of protests by Spanish farmers angered by what they say is unfair competition from outside the EU.

LATEST: Where are roads blocked in Madrid due to tractor protests?
Farmers in Alcobendas, north of Madrid. Photo: OSCAR DEL POZO/AFP.

Called by the Union of Unions syndicate, the demonstrators began gathering at dawn at various locations near the Spanish capital carrying signs demanding “fair prices” for their products, AFP correspondents said.

Five columns of tractors were seen heading to the city centre where demonstrators were due to gather in front of the agriculture ministry.

“We have to protest in Madrid, because that’s where everyone is. And we also have to upset things a bit,” said Jose Angel Lopez, a farmer from Pancorbo, a town about 100 kilometres (60 miles) south of the northern port city of Bilbao.

Officials said they had granted permission to some 500 tractors to enter the city for the latest in a string of protests that farmers and livestock breeders have been holding across Spain since February 1. What they want is to be able “to include the production costs in the end product so they don’t end up selling their goods at a loss,” top union representative Luis Cortes told TVE public television.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Why are farmers in Spain protesting?

Imported products should be subjected to “the same conditions that Spanish farmers have to face”, said Cortes, referring to goods imported from non-EU countries where farmers don’t have to face the same strict rules and regulations as they do within the bloc.

Demonstrators point to the red tape and the environmental requirements in the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and its forthcoming “Green Deal”.

A string of measures announced last week by Spain’s left-wing government did not go far enough to address the problems, Cortes said. Other protests convened by Spain’s three main agricultural unions Asaja, COAG and UPA were taking place simultaneously in other areas such as Málaga and Murcia in the south, Caceres in the west and Palencia in the north.

Last week, union representatives held talks with Agriculture Minister Luis Planas who pledged to ask the EU to simplify the CAP and to ask Brussels and the World Trade Organization to ensure that imported products respect the bloc’s agricultural rules.

He also pledged to improve legislation governing Spain’s agri-food chain so that producers are not forced to sell their products at a loss.

The European Commission has also made concessions in recent weeks to farmers protesting in several countries across Europe, ahead of elections to the European Parliament in early June.

Which roads are blocked in Madrid due to tractor protests?

The tractor routes, which for many started their journeys from as far away as Extremadura, Castilla-La Mancha, Valencia, Castilla y León, Andalusia and Catalonia, will access the capital from different roads linking them to Madrid.

The tractors will be split into five ‘columns’ of traffic and advance via the routes listed below, meaning that these roads will likely be cut off by police or severely delayed by traffic throughout the day:

Column 1 (southwest): Entering Madrid via Lusitana and continuing along Calle de Marcelo Usera, Puente de la Princesa, Glorieta de Legazpi, Paseo de las Delicias, Calle de Bustamante and Calle Comercio, Avenida de Menéndez Pelayo, Calle de O’Donnell and Calle de Alcalá and Plaza de la Independencia, and then onto Puerta de Alcalá.

Column 2 (north-east): Entering via Avenida de la Hispanidad, continuing along the A-2 towards Avenida de América, Avenida de América, Avenida de Logroño, Glorieta de Canillejas, Calle de Alcalá and Plaza de la Independencia, and then onto Puerta de Alcalá.

READ ALSO: How long will the farmers’ roadblocks in Spain last?

Column 3 (east): Entering via Calle Pirotecnia and Aurora Boreal, joining with Avenida de la Democracia, Plaza de Alosno, Calle de Casalarreina, Avenida de Daroca, the M-23, Calle de O’Donnell and Calle Alcalá before going up to Plaza de la Independencia, next to the Puerta de Alcalá.

Column 4 (north): Entering Madrid along Nuestra Señora de Valverde, continuing along Avenida de Llano Castellano and Calles Mauricio Legendre, Enrique Larreta and Mateo Inurria, Avenida de Pío XII, Príncipe de Vergara and Alcalá until it reaches Plaza de la Independencia, next to Puerta de Alcalá.

Column 5 (west): Arriving via Paseo Ruperto Chapí and Camoens, continuing along Calles Marqués de Urquijo, Alberto Aguilera, Carranza, Sagasta and Génova, Plaza de Colón, Calle de la Armada Española and Calle Serrano, until it enters Plaza de la Independencia, next to the Puerta de Alcalá.

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TOURISM

‘It’s become unliveable’: Spain’s Málaga plans protests against mass tourism

After recent protests in the Canaries and seemingly growing anti-tourism sentiment across Spain, locals in the Costa del Sol city of Málaga are also planning demonstrations in June against the 'touristification' of their city.

'It's become unliveable': Spain's Málaga plans protests against mass tourism

Locals in Málaga are set to take to the streets in protest against mass-tourism in June, demanding an end to the ‘touristification’ of their city.

This comes after large protests in the Canary Islands in recent weeks and growing anti-tourist sentiment around the country.

Tension among locals in places such as Barcelona, Valencia, the Balearic and Canary Islands, as well as Málaga, stems from frustration with the mass tourism model and its impact on their cities.

READ ALSO: Why Spain is a cheap mass tourism destination

Often, it is also about the post-pandemic influx of remote workers and digital nomads from abroad, many of whom come to Spain to enjoy a (relatively speaking) cheaper cost of living with high foreign wages and purchasing power than many local Spaniards struggle to compete with.

READ ALSO: Mass protests in Spain’s Canary Islands decry overtourism

In this sense, much of the building anti-mass tourism sentiment brewing in Spain is bundled up in a more general (and at times somewhat confused or misplaced) anti-foreigner feeling that views outsiders, whether it be traditional tourists or digital nomads, as exploiting Spain and the expense of Spaniards.

In cities such as Málaga, locals are being priced out of their own neighbourhoods as more and more properties are turned into short-term tourist rentals owned by landlords (many of them Spaniards or commercial multi-property owners) wanting to cash in.

A growing number of Malagueños have had enough and will take to the streets on June 29th under the slogan ‘for decent housing and against the processes of touristification and precariousness of life’.

The event’s aim is to protest the tourist model in the city: ‘Málaga has become an unliveable city for those of us who live there. It is over! For a Málaga to live in and not to survive’ are among the catchphrases expected to be used at the demonstration.

Organised by the Málaga Tenants Union, the protest will challenge the ‘exploitation of housing, work and life’ in the Andalusian city.

Locals would say this has been a long time coming. In many ways, Málaga has become a victim of its own success, particularly after it was voted as the best city for foreign residents in the InterNations Expat City Ranking 2023. In the post-pandemic period, scores of foreigners have moved to the city.

READ ALSO:  Why Spain’s Málaga is becoming a victim of its own success

So much so that eight out of 10 new residents moving to Málaga are currently foreigners, according to recent data from Spain’s National Statistics Institute (INE). Stats show that in 2022 Málaga welcomed a total of 56,242 inhabitants, of which 44,656 were foreigners and 11,586 were Spanish nationals.

In recent months the city has become inundated with anti-tourist stickers.

“This used to be my home” (antes esta era mi casa) , “go f*cking home” (a tu puta casa), “stinking of tourist” (apestando a turista), “this used to be the city centre” (antes esto era el centro) and “Your dead loved ones, mayor” (Alcalde tus muertos) are some of the hostile messages recently adorning walls and doors in Málaga.

READ ALSO: ‘Get the f*ck out of here’: Spain’s Málaga plastered with anti-tourism stickers

The growing foreign population, combined with the pre-existing mass tourist model, has inflated the local property market. Rental prices have increased by 16.5 percent compared since the end of 2022 and have now reached an average of €15.5/m2, stats from property portal Idealista show, while the cost to buy a home in Málaga has increased by 11 percent to an average of €3,049/m2, reaching a new historic high.

According to a study by HelloSafe, Málaga is the second most expensive province in the country when compared to the average salary, just behind Barcelona. It estimates that 81 percent of the average salary in Málaga is used on living and rent.

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