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Super-glue armed anti-tourist activists to flood Majorca TOMORROW & demand visitors ‘go home’ to kick off summer carnage

Published on April 04, 2025 at 04:06 PM

SPANISH activists are urging angry locals to vandalise key boxes outside rentals before the country's anti-Airbnb and tourism protests.

Locals in over 40 cities across Spain will take to the streets this Saturday, raging against Airbnb rentals and mass tourism that they say is ruining their hometowns.

Protestor holding a sign that says "Tourist Go Home" at a demonstration.

Up to 50,000 people are believed to have attended the march in Tenerife

Illustration of a map showing protests against overtourism in several European cities.

Locals on the Costas, Tenerife and other British hotspots have been told by activists to damage rental properties by supergluing their locks.

“Please vandalise all the locks you see. Go super glue mad,”; reads a message posted on a campaign site.

Below the post is a photo of several key boxes outside an apartment block in the Costa del Sol capital of Malaga.

Nearly 40 organisations from the Balearic Islands will take part in the protest in the Mallorcan capital of Palma.

Majorca, one of the centres of the protests last year, will host the first mass protests of the year this Saturday.

The slogan for Saturday's protests is: ‘Let’s end the housing business'.

Locals have been that theycannot afford to buy a home, blaming the government for allowing holiday rentals and accommodation construction to drive up housing costs.

Protests will also take place in Valencia, Andalucia, Madrid, as well as Tenerife and Costa del Sol, which are especially popular among Brits.

With the summer holiday season fast approaching, anti-tourism protestors are expected to take over the streets across Spain – as .

Malaga's protest on Saturday will be its third in less than 12 months.

In Majorca, after , foreign holidaymakers received so much abuse that organisers even had to apologise.

In Malaga, an anti mass-tourism demonstration in June.

They demanded an end to the problems associated with mass tourism, including pollution, traffic chaos and the lack of affordable housing for locals.

In street demos in Malaga, marchers held up banners, reading: ‘We feel strangers in our own city’ and ‘Malaga is for the people of Malaga, tourism forces us out.’

Some of the banners, in many cases pieces of cardboard the protestors had scrawled messages in felt-tip pen on, said: ‘One more tourist is one less local resident’.

Others read: ‘Padlocks out of our neighbourhoods’ in reference to apartments' coded key holders.

Before the march stickers were plastered over the front of tourist apartment blocks in Malaga with messages in Spanish reading: ‘F##k off from here' and ‘Stinking of Tourists'.

Others wrote: ‘This used to be my house' and ‘A family used to live here’.

Javier Barbero, a spokesman for the ‘Majorca Is Not For Sale' platform, who will take part in Saturday's demonstrations in Spain, said: “Majorca is no longer an attractive place to work.”

“The number of people quitting seasonal jobs in tourism and hospitality has shot up because it's not worthwhile.

“The same thing is happening with education, healthcare and security.

“Not only is the present at stake, so is the future of our children on the island,”; he said.

But the tourism industry, which rakes in billions across the globe every year, is responsible for keeping many of the Spanish towns and villages afloat.

The scheme to destroy Airbnb locks was also used by protestors in Italy last November.

, placing stickers reading ‘Less short lets, more houses for all’ on the safes that had keys for tourists to access their accommodation.

This had the desired outcome – the Italian government went on to ban metal key boxes in a move to clamp down on over-tourism.

Protest against tourism policies in Tenerife.

A graffiti against tourists is seen at the Guell Park in Barcelona, Spain

Anti-tourist protesters held up banners reading 'People live here' and 'We don't want to see our island die'

Tourists walking past graffiti that reads "Tourist Go Home."

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