The Oakland Press

Spanish resorts languish while Madrid hosts Europe’s parties

- By Aritz Parra

MADRID » In Madrid, the real party starts at 11 p.m. after the bars close — and curfew kicks in.

That’s when young, polyglot groups of revelers from Italy, the Netherland­s, Germany and, most noticeably, France, join their Spanish contempora­ries in Old Madrid’s narrow streets to seek illicit fun. Most are in their early 20s, eager to party in the Spanish capital like they haven’t been able to do for months at home under strict lockdowns.

With its policy of open bars and restaurant­s — indoors and outdoors — and by keeping museums and theaters running even when outbreaks have strained hospitals, Madrid has built a reputation as an oasis of fun in Europe’s desert of restrictio­ns.

Other Spanish regions have a stricter approach to entertainm­ent. Even sunny coastal resorts offer a limited range of options for the few visitors that started to arrive, coinciding with Easter week, amid a set of contradict­ory European travel rules.

“It’s a real privilege for me to go into bars because in France you can’t. Here I can go to restaurant­s, share time with friends outside of home, discover the city,” Romy Karel said. The 20-year-old Berliner flew to Madrid last Thursday from Bordeaux, the southern French city where she’s studying social sciences.

“I can’t remember when was the last time I did this,” she said.

The visitors are bringing some vital business to locals and giving politician­s much to debate about before a polarized regional election. Isabel Díaz Ayuso, the regional president of Madrid who is running for reelection, is trying to attract votes beyond her conservati­ve supporters by campaignin­g under the slogan of “freedom.”

Outside the capital, efforts to jumpstart tourism are drawing mixed results. In part, that’s due to a patchwork of rules at regional, national and even European levels that curb domestic nonessenti­al travel in many countries while leaving a loophole for those seeking a Spanish holiday.

Although Germany has banned all domestic tourism and discourage­d travel abroad, the government allows trips to Spain’s Balearic Islands, which have a low infection rate. Bookings of flights and hotels followed even though many were disappoint­ed to find on arrival that bars and restaurant­s were shut at night.

 ?? FRANCISCO UBILLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Passengers wearing face masks arrive at Palma de Mallorca Airport on the Spanish Balearic Island of Mallorca, Spain, on Saturday.
FRANCISCO UBILLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Passengers wearing face masks arrive at Palma de Mallorca Airport on the Spanish Balearic Island of Mallorca, Spain, on Saturday.
 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tourists and locals have drinks at a bar in downtown Madrid, Spain, on Friday.
BERNAT ARMANGUE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tourists and locals have drinks at a bar in downtown Madrid, Spain, on Friday.

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