The Jerusalem Post

Spain to open for tourism in July

- • By JESSICA JONES

MADRID (Reuters) – Spain will reopen its borders to tourists in July and its top soccer division will kick off again in June, the Prime Minister said on Saturday, as one of the world’s strictest lockdowns starts to ease.

Pedro Sanchez’s dual announceme­nts coincided with calls for his resignatio­n over the lockdown’s impact on jobs and the economy from the farright Vox party, which called a protest through cities across Spain that drew thousands of horn-blaring cars and motorbikes.

“From July, foreign tourism will resume in safe conditions. We will guarantee tourists will not take any risks and will not bring us any risks,” Sanchez told a televised news conference, without giving further details.

Foreign visitors contribute around an eighth of Spain’s economic output and the government curbs – taken to contain one of Europe’s severest coronaviru­s outbreaks – have shuttered everything from hotels, bars and restaurant­s to beaches and leisure parks just as its tourism season gets under way.

Close to a million jobs were lost just in March, when the lockdown began, and the Bank of Spain has forecast the economy will contract by up to 12% this year.

Sanchez also said that another national money-spinner, top flight soccer division, La Liga, would resume on June 8.

Saturday’s protesters called on him and Deputy Prime Minister Pablo Iglesias – head of left-wing Podemos, the junior partner in Socialist Sanchez’s coalition – to resign over their handling of the crisis and, in particular, the economic fallout.

“It is time to make a big noise against the government of unemployme­nt and misery that has abandoned our self-employed and workers,” Vox said.

The government says the lockdown has allowed it to get the pandemic under control.

Restrictio­ns on movement are being gradually eased, though residents of Madrid and Barcelona, both national epicenters of the virus, have remained in lockdown.

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