Protestors have targeted tourists in Spanish travel hotspots

Warning for Irish holidaymakers as tourists in Lanzarote and Tenerife told to 'go home'

by · Irish Mirror

Tourists in Lanzarote and Tenerife have been ordered to "go home" by locals. Holidaymakers have reportedly been "forced to flee" as 'Go Home Tourist!' signs have been erected in Spanish hotspots by the 'Canary Islands Have a Limit' group.

Tourists at Tenerife's Playa de las Americas and Troya beaches were met by demonstrators who chanted "more tourists, more misery". It comes as protests continue to sweep Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, Lanzarote, La Palma, and El Hierro, reports Birmingham Live.

Demonstrators are opposing tourism, and are now uniting over 20 factions under the 'Canary Islands have a limit' campaign. In the Playa de las Americas in Tenerife, a resort popular with Irish holidaymakers, protesters appeared on the beach while tourists were sunbathing and chanted: "This beach is ours."

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"We need a change in the tourist model so it leaves richness here, a change so it values what this land has because it is beautiful," said Sara Lopez, 32, in Gran Canaria. Hundreds of protesters took to the streets of Valencia on Saturday to call for more affordable housing, saying tourist flats push up prices.

8,000 protesters took part in demonstrations in the Canaries. One woman was carrying a cardboard poster which said: "Tourists, go f*****g home." Other posters borne by protesters said: "Enjoying a day at your pool? That water could be going on food' as well as "Macrotourism destroys Canary Islands" and "The Canaries have a limit. More trees, less hotels."

Another in Spanish said: "The Canaries Don't Live off Tourism. Tourism lives off the Canaries." There were no reports of any violence but protesters, whose banners included one in English which said 'Go Home Tourist' are said to have been mocked and taunted.

Victor Martin, a spokesman for Canarias Se Agota, which translates into English as 'Canary Islands on the Brink', said: "The hunger strike is indefinite and will continue until the two macro hotel projects we're fighting against are stopped for ever and the regional agreement agrees in writing to sit down and talk to us about a tourist moratorium."

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