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Spanish TV on Monday aired a video of officers smashing the windows of an apartment over the weekend to dislodge occupants holding a party that violated virus restrictions.
The fact that several of the partygoers were reportedly foreigners fuelled resentment over the seemingly haphazard nature of travel restrictions in Europe during the pandemic, with many Spaniards taking to social media to vent their anger.
Durante este fin de semana, hemos intervenido en un total de 353 fiestas y reuniones ilegales en domicilio.
En algunas de ellas había un número de personas superior al permitido, escondidas en lugares inverosímiles, sin usar mascarillas ni otras medidas de seguridad.#COVID19 pic.twitter.com/zldTUvumdO— Policía Municipal de Madrid (@policiademadrid) March 29, 2021
While Spaniards are not allowed to leave their own regions until April 9 to avoid a resurgence of coronavirus infections over Holy Week, similar restrictions do not apply to international tourists, who can still fly into Spain on presentation of a negative Covid test.
And with its 11:00 pm curfew and bars and restaurants open, Madrid has drawn scores of visitors from countries under tighter lockdowns.
According to online travel company Kayak, searches for flights to Madrid from neighbouring France are up 142 percent in March over the same time last year, at a time when flight searches overall are sharply down.
Le preguntamos a turistas franceses en Madrid qué piensan de la gente que está pasándolo muy mal por culpa del Covid en hospitales. Ojo a la reacción ?? pic.twitter.com/Am4dehOm8F
— CTXT (@ctxt_es) March 27, 2021
“These images worry me,” Health Minister Carolina Darias told reporters Monday when asked about the pictures of revellers in Madrid.
“The image of our country is that of responsible people who respect the rules,” she said.
With Madrid in the middle of a crucial campaign ahead of regional elections on May 4, the laissez-faire attitude of the authorities, who for months have insisted on minimising Covid restrictions, has drawn sharp criticism.
‘Alcohol tourism’
But Madrid’s conservative regional leader Isabel Diaz Ayuso said it was up to Spain’s leftist central government to tighten entry rules.
“We cannot spread the idea that in Madrid there exists ‘alcohol tourism’,” she said in an interview with private television La Sexta.
Madrid has been the only major European capital to maintain social life practically unrestricted since a nationwide lockdown was fully lifted in June 2020, with cinemas and theatres also open.
While the policy has been applauded by the hospitality sector, it is seen as one of the reasons why Madrid has consistently had one of Spain’s highest incidences of coronavirus.
Photo: Gabriel Bouys/AFP
Madrid municipal police said they broke up 353 illegal parties over the weekend, down slightly from 384 in the previous week.
In many cases, the raids are sparked by complaints of noise from neighbours of Airbnb rental flats where the parties are held.
“We need citizen cooperation now more than ever,” the central government’s chief representative to the Madrid region, Jose Manuel Franco, said Monday.
He urged people to keep reporting the illegal parties to the authorities.
? “España es la vida loca”, dicen los turistas que han tomado Madrid. ? Así han llenado este fin de semana las calles de la capital. Nos invitan incluso a una fiesta ilegal. ??
Hoy en @MadridDirecto hemos sido testigos. #MD1047 pic.twitter.com/8eWEJ3Nx62
— fernando lópez ® (@fernandolg88) March 7, 2021
Amid the furore over the lack of travel restrictions for foreign tourists, Spain on Saturday announced anyone crossing the land border into the country would have to present a negative PCR test, as had already been the case for those arriving by air.
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