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The people of Spain still live under strict infection control rules. One of the rules is, among other things, that you are not allowed to travel from the region in which you live.
However, German tourists can travel to the holiday island of Mallorca, after the German authorities removed the Balearic region from the list of red zones.
Tourists must present a negative coronation test upon entering if arriving by plane or boat. If they drive a car, they do not have to submit a coronatest, writes El País.
“It makes absolutely no sense that in Spain we cannot move between regions, but any foreigner can come here and spread the infection,” Emilio Rivas, a Madrid resident, told Reuters news agency.
He warns home tourists: – Do not go through here
– Reserve boom
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There are many German tourists who are now heading to the Balearic Islands. This is confirmed by several charter companies to the Spanish newspaper El País.
– We have a booking boom for Easter, says spokesman Thomas Daubenbüchel of the Alltours company.
He says they installed 20 planes from Düsseldorf to Mallorca. All tickets were sold out in two days.
In recent days, several airlines have established several hundred flights from Germany to the archipelago.
Disappointing messages
I will not “lose” the summer
Although the tourism sector in Mallorca is happy that tourists are starting to arrive again, you have to be careful.
– We do not want to waste all the efforts we have made so far for five days, and then lose the summer. It would be catastrophic, says the deputy general manager José Luis Zoredai of the Exceltur company.
Easter usually marks the beginning of the Spanish tourist season.
Redd
In addition to the fact that Spaniards are not allowed to travel between different regions of the country at Easter, some are also afraid.
“Also, I am afraid to go anywhere in case I get infected by a Frenchman or a German,” 76-year-old Angelines Ruiz told Reuters.
The French authorities are considering opening the possibility of going to Spain, but have now entered the third wave of the pandemic and have reintroduced stricter infection control measures in several regions.
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Despite the fact that Germans no longer have to be quarantined when they return home after a trip to Mallorca, everyday life in the holiday paradise is not like it was before the pandemic.
Among other things, a limit has been introduced on the number of people who can live under the same roof, and all bars and restaurants close at 5 p.m., writes the AP news agency.
Even though you don’t need to be quarantined, German authorities still advise against unnecessary travel.