Tourists heading for Tenerife's iconic Teide volcano have been met with graffiti telling them the Canary Islands are ...
"Canaries have a limit" was plastered in Spanish near the must-see Teide volcano after the island became the first ... the ...
Residents in the Canary Islands are planning protests and strikes as they fight against overtourism. The Canary Islands, a Spanish archipelago sitting in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of ...
British holidaymakers could soon be slapped with a daily 'tourist tax' when visiting the Canary Islands, local authorities have warned. Canary Islands president Fernando Clavijo suggested the ...
With signs that included, "People live here" and "We don't want to see our island die", protesters demanded that the tourism sector, which generates 35 per cent of the Canary Islands archipelago ...
The Canary Islands have pleaded with British tourists to continue visiting amid fears of mass holiday cancellations after tens of thousands of locals joined protests. Residents are voicing ...
Photograph: Greg Balfour Evans/Alamy Protesters also gathered in Madrid and Barcelona to show their support for the rallies in the Canary Islands, public television said. Last year, 13.9 million ...
The Canary Islands have limits and people's patience too," Antonio Bullon, one of the protest leaders, told Reuters. The archipelago of 2.2 million people was visited by nearly 14 million foreign ...
The Canary Islands have long been a favourite tourist destination for Brits. But now activists are taking to the streets - including in London tomorrow - to warn of over-tourism on the sunny ...
But Jessica de León, the regional tourism chief, told The Telegraph that the Canary Islands remain open for business. “It is still safe to visit the Canary Islands, and we are delighted to ...
People display placards during a demonstration for a change in the tourism model in the Canary Islands, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain, on April 20. [Photo/Agencies] Tens of thousands of people ...
With signs that included, "People live here" and "We don't want to see our island die", protesters demanded that the tourism sector, which generates 35 per cent of the Canary Islands archipelago's GDP ...