Times of Malta

Residents protest as Venice launches €5 fee

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Venice yesterday began charging day-trippers for entry, a world first aimed at tackling mass tourism but opposed by protesters objecting to treating the historic Italian city as a museum.

Under a trial scheme, visitors exploring Venice for the day have to buy a €5 ticket, with inspectors carrying out spot checks at key entry points.

Considered one of the most beautiful cities on the planet, Venice is a top tourist destinatio­n – but is drowning under the weight of the crowds.

Around 13,000 tickets had been sold by late morning, the mayor’s office said, either purchased online or at the new ticket office at the Santa Lucia train station.

The “Venice Access Fee” is initially being introduced on 29 busy days throughout 2024, mostly weekends from May to July.

This is not a museum, you shouldn’t have to pay

There is no limit to the number of tickets available. Instead, the goal is to try to persuade day-trippers to visit during quieter times.

“I think it’s good, because it will perhaps slow down the numbers of tourists in Venice,”

nd said Sylvain Pelerin, a French tourist who has been visiting for more than 50 years.

Overnight visitors, who already pay a tourist tax, minors under the age of 14 and others are exempt.

But some residents are strongly opposed to a measure they say curbs fundamenta­l rights to freedom of movement.

Around 300 people protested near the station yesterdaym­orning, holding up signs such as “Stick it to the ticket!” and “Venice is not for sale!”

“This is not a museum, it’s not a protected ecological area, you shouldn’t have to pay – it’s a city,” Marina Dodino, from the local residents associatio­n ARCI, told AFP. (AFP)

 ?? PHOTOS: MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP ?? A woman holds a banner reading ‘Venice is not sold, it is defended’ as protesters take part in a demonstrat­ion against the new Venice Access Fee in Venice, yesterday. Inset: a woman holds a ticket reading ‘Welcome to Veniceland’.
PHOTOS: MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP A woman holds a banner reading ‘Venice is not sold, it is defended’ as protesters take part in a demonstrat­ion against the new Venice Access Fee in Venice, yesterday. Inset: a woman holds a ticket reading ‘Welcome to Veniceland’.

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