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Protesters in southern Europe protest against overtourism

On Sunday, thousands of people marched through the streets in cities across southern Europe to protest against overtourism. They fired water pistols into shop windows, and set off smoke in Barcelona where the main demonstration took place.

Protesters in Barcelona chanted "Your holidays, My misery" while holding banners with slogans like "Mass tourism kills the City" and "Their greed brings us ruin".

The SET alliance – Sud d'Europa contra la Turistitzacio or Catalan "Southern Europe Against Overtourism" – brought together protesters from Portugal and Italy to argue that uncontrolled tourism is driving up housing prices and forcing residents out of their neighborhoods.

Last year, 26 million tourists visited Barcelona, which has a population of 1.6 millions.

Around 600 people participated in the demonstration, according to authorities. Some fired water pistols, others set off colored smoke, and some put stickers on hotel windows and shop windows saying "Neighbourhood Self-Defense, Tourist Go Home".

A agitated hotel worker confronted protesters outside the venue, saying that he "only worked" and wasn't the owner.

Similar demonstrations were held in other parts of Spain, including Ibiza and Malaga. In Italy, protests were held in Genoa, Naples Palermo Milan and Venice. Locals opposed the construction of 2 hotels which would add 15,000 beds to each city.

Barcelona's city council announced last year that it would ban apartment rentals for tourists by 2028 in order to make the city more livable for its residents.

"I am very tired of being an inconvenience in my own town." "The solution is to propose that the number of tourists visiting Barcelona be drastically reduced and that we adopt another economic model which will bring prosperity to the city," Eva Vilaseca (38), said at the demonstration held in Barcelona on Sunday, dismissing the counterargument, that tourism creates jobs and prosperity.

Spain and France are expected to see record tourism numbers this year.

Lisbon protests were scheduled to take place later in the afternoon on Sunday. (Reporting from Guillermo Martinez, Ana Cantero and Giulio Pieovaccari in Madrid; editing by Susan Fenton).

(source: Reuters)