Spain reopens borders for 10,000 Germans in tourism pilot project

Hundreds queued for flights to Mallorca as Spain tests new coronavirus measures

German tourists carry their luggage to a bus upon arrival at the Palma de Mallorca airport, as part of a tourism pilot program before officially reopening the borders after the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Palma de Mallorca, Spain June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Enrique Calvo
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Hundreds of holidaymakers have queued to take part in a tourism pilot in Spain as it attempts to recover from the coronavirus pandemic.

Spain reopened its borders to a select group of German tourists on Monday in a project which will bring 10,000 holidaymakers to the Balearic Islands to find out how mass tourism can work in a time of coronavirus.

Dozens of mask-wearing sunseekers queued at Duesseldorf Airport on Monday to board tour operator TUI's flight to Palma de Mallorca, eager to test arrangements for socially distanced holidaymaking two weeks before Spain fully reopens.

Hotels are limited to running at 50 per cent occupancy and will have infra-red cameras at their entrances to measure guests' body temperatures.

The government has limited the number of test participants to to 10,900.

"It'll be quieter than normal," said one face-mask wearing holidaymaker, ready in a short-sleeved shirt.

"But it's a good feeling that it's all starting up again. That we can travel again."

On Sunday cleaners clad in protective face coverings wiped surfaces and laid out cutlery on buffet tables at a hotel in Palma de Mallorca, where newly installed floor markings directed guests to observe social distancing while moving around.

"Holidaymakers can be happy that the beaches in Palma have never been so empty," said Aage Duenhaupt, a spokesman for German travel company TUI.

"But there won't be parties in the same way this year. And we have rejigged the sport offerings in the hotels. There'll be more individual sports and no team activities."

European nations eased border controls on Monday as the number of coronavirus cases declined, but Spain's continued closure, a patchwork of quarantine rules and remote-working mean pre-crisis travel levels are a long way off.

Spain, one of the world's most popular tourist destinations, started closing to international tourism after the epidemic triggered the declaration of a state of emergency on March 14. But the government has been under growing pressure to reopen a sector that employs one in eight Spanish workers.

In 2019, Germans made up a third of international tourists to the Balearic Islands, an archipelago off Spain's east coast that includes the iconic party island of Ibiza.