The Mercury News

Spain invites Germans to visit Mallorca in post-virus trial run

Tourists have to complete health questionna­ire but will not be quarantine­d

- By Aritz Parra

Spain’s sunny, beautiful Balearic Islands will allow thousands of German tourists to fly in for a two-week trial that tests out how to balance the needs of Spain’s vital tourism industry with new regulation­s to curb the country’s coronaviru­s outbreak.

The trial that begins June 15 comes before the archipelag­o and the rest of the country re-open to internatio­nal tourism on July 1. The Spanish government is under heavy pressure to re-activate an industry that generates 12% of Spain’s GDP and provides 2.6 million muchneeded jobs.

Through an agreement with the German tour group TUI, other tour operators and several airlines, up to 10,900 Germans will be allowed into the archipelag­o, its President Francina Armengol announced Tuesday.

Asmanyasth­atmayseem in the coronaviru­s era, the figure represents only 0.41% of the visitors that the Mediterran­ean islands welcomed in the second half of June last year. The islands, which include Mallorca, Ibiza and Menorca, are a magnet for northern European visitors and others seeking sunny beaches, rocky coves and nightlife.

“We will be the first region (in Spain) to open to internatio­nal tourism under safe conditions,” said Armengol, adding that Germany had been chosen because that government has kept tight controls on its outbreak, just like the Balearic Islands have done.

Germany’s virus death toll — at 8,695 — is about five times less than Britain’s and four times less than Italy’s.

Germans, together with Moroccans and Italians, make up the largest group of foreign residents living in the islands, something that has prompted the joke that the archipelag­o is Germany’s 17th state. Restaurant menus are often translated into German and the daily Mallorca-Zeitung keeps tabs on the wide-ranging German community.

The visitors this month can come from all over Germany — not just from specific regions as initially announced — and can purchase tickets on a first-come basis until the maximum number of 10,900 is reached. No previous health checks are required to travel but all visitors will need to complete a questionna­ire during their flight that is aimed at identifyin­g possible infections.

The Germans will be exempt from Spain’s rule now that visitors need to quarantine for 14 days upon arrival. They will be able to stay, for a minimum of five nights, at designated hotels, tourism apartments and their own houses in the islands.

As they get off the plane, they will face temperatur­e checks and get informatio­n on Spain’s social distancing and mask-wearing rules.

Health authoritie­s will also give them a phone number in case they show symptoms, with strict contact tracing planned and tests for both suspected cases and their close contacts, said Iago Negueruela, the regional tourism minister.

Spanish authoritie­s imposed a strict lockdown in mid-March that helped curb its outbreak. The country has recorded more than 240,000 positive cases and over 23,000 confirmed virus-related deaths.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? The Spanish government will allow thousands of German tourists to visIt the Balearic island of Mallorca for a two-week period beginning in mid-June to test out how new tourism rules work in the coronaviru­s era.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES The Spanish government will allow thousands of German tourists to visIt the Balearic island of Mallorca for a two-week period beginning in mid-June to test out how new tourism rules work in the coronaviru­s era.

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