Reimposition of quarantine hits Spain’s vital, already struggling tourism sector
The British government’s decision to pull Spain from
the list of safe countries and require returning holidaymakers to self-isolate
for a fortnight will come as a heavy blow to Spain’s lucrative and vital
tourist sector.
The country, which relies on tourism for 12% of its
GDP, was already expecting a bleak post-Covid summer.
But the UK decision – combined with the French
government’s advice against travelling to Catalonia, and Norway’s reimposition
of a 10-day quarantine requirement for people arriving from Spain – is likely
to torpedo Spain’s faltering tourist recovery.
Belgium has also banned non-essential travel to the
north-eastern areas of Huesca and Lleida, and recommended against travel to a
number of other Spanish areas.
More than 18 million Britons visited Spain last
year, accounting for one fifth of all foreign visitors.
“This is devastating news,” said Michelle Baker,
editor of the Round Town Times newspaper in Benidorm, a favourite resort among
British tourists.
“We were just getting back on our feet and this will
send us back into stagnation. It’s so unfair, we’re all wearing marks here and
there are only 14 cases in the whole of Alicante. The outbreaks are nowhere
near here.”
The Catalan hoteliers’ association, meanwhile, says
20% of reservations have been lost since the French announcement on Friday.
Anger and frustration within the tourist sector – not to mention the Spanish
government – is likely to be exacerbated as the UK’s move comes days after the
Scottish government announced that border health measures requiring people to
quarantine for 14 days on arrival into Scotland were to be lifted for those
arriving from Spain, only to reverse the decision last night.
The measure will also cause bafflement in a country
that went into one of Europe’s strictest lockdowns nine days before the UK, and
where the wearing of face masks in public places has been compulsory since 21
May.
But despite the success of the state of emergency,
which ended on 21 June, Spain has seen a resurgence of new infections over
recent weeks.
Spanish health authorities said this week that they
were dealing with 283 active outbreaks, many of them in the northeastern
regions of Catalonia and Aragón.
On Thursday, the government of the south-eastern
region of Murcia ordered the 32,000 inhabitants of Totana back into the second
phase of lockdown reduction after 55 cases were traced to a bar in the town.
Tourists at the airport in Palma de Mallorca,
Balearic Islands,
FacebookTwitterPinterest Tourists at the airport in
Palma de Mallorca, the Balearic Islands. Photograph: EPA
Two days later, the Catalan government ordered all
nightclubs to close for a fortnight and placed a midnight curfew on bars in and
around Barcelona and Lleida, both of which have seen a rise in new cases.
While health authorities have acknowledged that a
second wave may have hit, they insist all outbreaks are being swiftly detected
and isolated.
On Friday, the health ministry logged 922 new
Covid-19 cases – slightly down from 971 over the previous 24 hours.
María José Sierra, the deputy head of Spain’s centre
for health emergencies, said that while the curve had been flattened,
“community transmission” was being seen in north-eastern areas.
“It could already be a second wave, but that’s not
the most important thing,” Sierra told reporters on Thursday. “The most important
thing is that we keep following what’s going on, see what measures are
necessary, and take them early.”
She also said people needed to remember the
incidence of the virus had tripled in just two weeks, from 8.8 cases per
100,000 people on 3 July to 27.4 per 100,000.
“Obviously, the curve
is going up, but let’s wait to see what kind of situation we’re in,” she added.



