Spain's tourist crisis continues as locals in two British holiday hotspots lash out (Image: Getty) Thousands of Spanish locals have taken to the streets to protest against overtourism in two popular holiday hotspots. The number of anti-mass tourism protests have been growing in the world's second-largest tourist destination country. function loadOvpScript(){let el=document.
createElement('script');el.setAttribute('src','https://live.primis.
tech/live/liveView.php?s=114945&playerApiId=v114945');document.getElementById('ovp-primis').
appendChild(el)}window.top.addEventListener('primisPlayerInit',e=>{try{if(e.
detail&&e.detail.playerApiId==="v114945"){if(window.
document.getElementsByClassName('jwplayer')[0]){e.detail.
float('disable')}}}catch(e){}});window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded',()=>{setTimeout(()=>{if(typeof flagTcfLoaded!=='undefined'&&flagTcfLoaded===!0){loadOvpScript()ExpressApp.Log('[Load] OVP flagTcfLoaded',new Date())}else{document.
addEventListener("tcfLoaded",()=>{loadOvpScript()ExpressApp.Log('[Load] OVP tcfLoaded',new Date())})}},1500)}) Thousands of locals gathered in the Spanish cities of Malaga and Cadiz on Saturday, accusing tourism of depriving the local population of affordable housing. Under the slogan "Malaga to live, not to survive," nearly 5,500 people, according to the sub-prefecture, gathered in the historic centre of the large Andalusian city of 570,000 inhabitants, a mecca for "sol y playa" (sun and beach) tourism.
At the call of around fifty loca.
