Connect with us

Balearic Islands

Spain’s Mallorca considering ‘range of measures to control tourism’ as summer season starts

Published

on

THE temporary ban on establishing new beds for tourists continues in Mallorca and its surrounding islands.

The Balearic government is working to control overtourism on the Spanish archipelago. 

It had enforced the accommodation moratorium in place since February 2022, where 90,000 holiday rental accommodation beds were placed in an exchange pool. This means, accommodation places can be exchanged but new places could not be created.

“We advocate containment, not decrease,” President Marga Prohens said.

The island councils are still deliberating on the maximum number of accommodation beds allowed per island. 

READ MORE: Anti-tourism in Spain latest: Outrage in Mallorca as ‘foreign property speculators pose as locals to buy homes at cheaper prices’

This comes as the Balearic government is considering a range of measures to control tourism as the busy summer season approaches. Stricter measures against illegal tourist accommodation have been proposed, including penalties of up to €500,000.

The number of tourists choosing to stay in second homes rented out illegally instead of in hotels or licenced holiday rental properties has increased by 25% in the last five years, as reported by the Balearic Statistics Institute. 

This is four percent higher than those tourists staying in the regulated accommodation.

However, it was decided a potential increase in the tourist tax will not be implemented. 

Prohens said she is working to ‘defend the general interest’ on the islands, which are facing a major housing crisis.

Housing stock in the Balearics will need to increase by between 93,800 and 230,400 new units by 2040, a recent report by the Balearic Statistics Institute stated, if it’s to support the influx of immigration.

Thirty-seven organisations from the Balaerics took part in the nationwide protest on April 5, where hundreds of thousands of people demanded that housing in Spain be treated as a human right not a commodity. 

Mallorca’s hospitality industry is already under threat, with restaurant and nightclub owners worried they won’t have enough staff to work the holiday season. Staff are unable to find accommodation, with what rentals there are rented out at maximum prices. 

READ MORE:

Balearic Islands

Historical Controversy erupts in Palma Council over Spanish Civil War cruiser’s role in Malaga bombing

Published

on

By

A HEATED debate in Palma’s city council has reignited historical tensions surrounding one of the darkest episodes of Spain’s Civil War.

Officials clashed over the legacy of the cruiser Baleares and its alleged role in the 1937 bombing of fleeing civilians from Malaga – an event now widely recognised as a war crime.

The controversy unfolded during a recent full council session when the Councillor for Urban Planning, Oscar Fidalgo, emphatically denied claims that the Baleares was involved in the infamous attack on civilians escaping along the coastal road from Malaga to Almeria, known as La Desbanda. “Not a single shot was fired from the warship during the Desbanda in Málaga,” Fidalgo stated. “The cruiser was undergoing testing at the time.”

READ MORE:

His remarks sparked immediate backlash from left-wing councillors, especially from the Socialist Party (PSOE), who argued that the statement contradicts documented historical accounts. PSOE councillor Pepe Martinez challenged Fidalgo’s claims by citing passages from El Crucero Baleares 1936–1938, a book by historians Jeroni Fullana and Eduardo Connolly, which details the ship’s participation in the tragic events.

Martinez, who brought a copy of the book from the Cort library along with additional volumes from his personal collection, handed them to Fidalgo on the council floor. “Get informed and read historians so you don’t make a fool of yourself in the eyes of the people of Malaga,” Martínez urged.

Evacuation Of Civilians, During The Spanish Civil War
Evacuation of civilians from a nationalist bombardment during the Spanish Civil War

The dispute ties directly into a broader legal and political battle over a monument in Palma’s Parc de Sa Feixina, erected in the 1940s to honor the 765 mostly Mallorcan crew members of the Baleares who perished when the ship was sunk by Republican forces in 1938.

Left-wing groups have long campaigned for the monument’s removal, arguing that it serves as a relic of Francoist propaganda. The Supreme Court has currently protected the monument from demolition, while the Constitutional Court has yet to issue a final ruling.

In the latest plenary session, PSOE tabled a motion calling for the withdrawal of the monument’s protected status from the city’s heritage register. The proposal was voted down by the conservative Partido Popular (PP) and far-right Vox party, who maintain that the monument has already been stripped of explicit Francoist symbols under a 2010 agreement led by then-Socialist mayor Aina Calvo.

Fidalgo criticised PSOE for what he described as political inconsistency. “They spent public money to remove the symbolism and settle the debate, and now they’re asking us to do the opposite of what the judges are saying,” he said.

Despite mounting evidence and ongoing scholarly debate, Fidalgo stood firm. “There is no serious historian who supports these claims,” he said. “What I say in this plenary session hurts you, but it is my opinion and that of relevant historians. You have hit a nerve with me. I stand by everything I have said.”

The debate has left no clear resolution in sight, with legal questions over the monument’s future still pending in Spain’s highest court – and the historical truth about Baleares’ actions during the Civil War continuing to divide opinion nearly a century later.

Continue Reading

Balearic Islands

Booze cruise: Shambolic seaborne saga as yacht thieves have to call coast guard for help after getting lost off Spain’s Mallorca

Published

on

By

IN a tale that sounds more like a deleted scene from Pirates of the Caribbean: The Poundshop Years, two homeless men have been nicked after commandeering a 12-metre yacht from a posh Mallorca marina – and then getting hopelessly lost at sea.

The dynamic duo, aged 53 and 59, allegedly swiped the sailboat – gloriously named Peregrin Tuk (yes, like the Hobbit) – from swanky San Antonio de la Playa Yacht Club in Can Pastilla. CCTV footage reportedly caught the pair setting sail like they were off on a jolly around the Med… except it went pear-shaped fast.

READ MORE:

Several hours later, the amateur Argonauts had to ring up the Spanish coast guard from the Cabrera area, utterly baffled as to where they’d ended up. Enter the Guardia Civil, who promptly hauled them back to shore in a patrol boat. 

The men were marched before a judge in Manacor on Tuesday, with the case now sailing its way to Palma’s courts.

Meanwhile, the fuming yacht owners are absolutely seething:

“They’ve destroyed it. They’ve vandalised it. They’ve turned it into a floating bin.”

Apparently the boat’s once-pristine interior now resembles the aftermath of a budget stag do, complete with mystery stains and ‘several large bottles’ of booze the owners insist weren’t theirs.

And it’s not just the sea-bound squatters in hot water – the yacht club’s security is also under fire, with the owners demanding to know how two tipsy treasure hunters managed to pinch a boat without so much as a raised eyebrow.

Continue Reading

Balearic Islands

Booze Cruise: Shambolic Seaborne Saga As Yacht Thieves Have To Call Coast Guard For Help After Getting Lost Off Spain’s Mallorca – Olive Press News Spain

Published

on

booze-cruise:-shambolic-seaborne-saga-as-yacht-thieves-have-to-call-coast-guard-for-help-after-getting-lost-off-spain’s-mallorca-–-olive-press-news-spain

IN a tale that sounds more like a deleted scene from Pirates of the Caribbean: The Poundshop Years, two homeless men have been nicked after commandeering a 12-metre yacht from a posh Mallorca marina – and then getting hopelessly lost at sea.

The dynamic duo, aged 53 and 59, allegedly swiped the sailboat – gloriously named Peregrin Tuk (yes, like the Hobbit) – from swanky San Antonio de la Playa Yacht Club in Can Pastilla. CCTV footage reportedly caught the pair setting sail like they were off on a jolly around the Med… except it went pear-shaped fast.

READ MORE:

Several hours later, the amateur Argonauts had to ring up the Spanish coast guard from the Cabrera area, utterly baffled as to where they’d ended up. Enter the Guardia Civil, who promptly hauled them back to shore in a patrol boat. 

The men were marched before a judge in Manacor on Tuesday, with the case now sailing its way to Palma’s courts.

Meanwhile, the fuming yacht owners are absolutely seething:

“They’ve destroyed it. They’ve vandalised it. They’ve turned it into a floating bin.”

Apparently the boat’s once-pristine interior now resembles the aftermath of a budget stag do, complete with mystery stains and ‘several large bottles’ of booze the owners insist weren’t theirs.

And it’s not just the sea-bound squatters in hot water – the yacht club’s security is also under fire, with the owners demanding to know how two tipsy treasure hunters managed to pinch a boat without so much as a raised eyebrow.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Spanish Property & News