
Spain makes Booking.com scrap 4,000 tourist rental ads
A tourism boom has driven the buoyant Spanish economy but fuelled local concern about increasingly scarce and unaffordable housing, a top priority for the minority coalition government.
"We have deleted a very small number of adverts in Spain at the request of the consumer ministry for supplying valid licences," Booking.com said in a statement.
The Amsterdam-based platform said the non-compliant adverts represented "less than two percent" of its 200,000 properties in Spain and that it had always collaborated with the authorities to regulate the short-term rental sector.
The consumer rights ministry on Thursday announced Booking.com had scrapped 4,093 illegal ads, most of them located in the Atlantic Ocean's Canary Islands, a top tourist destination.
Spain has also ordered online tourist accommodation giant Airbnb to take down more than 65,000 adverts for violating licence rules and has been in a legal battle with the US-based company.
The world's second most-visited country hosted a record 94 million foreign tourists in 2024, but residents of hotspots such as Barcelona blame short-term rentals for the housing crisis and changing their neighbourhoods.
"We're making progress in the fight against a speculative model that expels people from their neighbourhoods and violates the right to a home," far-left consumer rights minister Pablo Bustinduy wrote on social network Bluesky.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AFP
an hour ago
- AFP
Mass explosion video is AI-generated, not US attack on Iran
"Heavy water nuclear plant at Arak. I guess Trump wasn't bluffing after all - just part of the fireworks in Iran. Expect to see more surprises," 21, 2025 Facebook post sharing the clip of a mushroom cloud detonation over a residential area. Image A screenshot of a Facebook reel taken June 26, 2025 video, which also circulated in Spanish and in French, spread as violence escalated in the Middle East, with Israel bombarding Iran and the US military striking its nuclear installations before a ceasefire was reached. attacked three Iranian sites key to Tehran's nuclear program on the night of June 21, hitting targets in the provinces of Natanz, Isfahan and the mountain-buried Fordo. The strikes added to a 12-day Israeli campaign that also targeted the country's top military brass and saw Iran retaliate by firing waves of missiles at Israel. US President Donald Trump has insisted the operation was a "spectacular military success" that "obliterated" Iran's nuclear sites, despite an intelligence assessment that raised doubts and claims from the Iranian government that it had "taken the necessary measures" to ensure the continuation of its program. Arak's heavy water reactor was attacked June 19 by Israel, not the US military, according to the Israel Defense Forces (archived here). But the video of the massive blast circulating on social media is AI-generated. A Google reverse image search uncovered an identical video posted June 18 to YouTube by the Turkey-based account "@cmlacyn" (archived here). The video's title -- as well as comments from the author -- reference AI usage. The owner of the account, Cemil Aciyan, states in his bio that "all videos on this channel are produced with artificial intelligence" (archived here). a June 20 direct message on Instagram, Aciyan confirmed to AFP: "I created all the videos on my channel with artificial intelligence." A search on Aciyan's other social media platforms yielded results for the same video on Instagram with the caption: "It's not real, I produced it with artificial intelligence" (archived here). AFP has debunked a slew of online misinformation about Iran here.


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Cartooning for Peace: Israel and US play a dangerous game of ‘nuclear roulette' with Iran war
The war between Iran and Israel lasted twelve days, creating an imbalance of power in the Middle East. Following offensives against Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis – the so-called 'axis of resistance' – Israel opened a new front against Iran and its nuclear programme on June 12, asserting regional hegemony. The daily reciprocal strikes that followed left 1,054 dead in Iran, according to the Washington-based Human Rights Activists group, and 28 dead in Israel, according to officials there. US President Donald Trump chose military intervention on Sunday, when 125 aircraft, including seven B-2 stealth bombers, carried out a surprise attack on three Iranian nuclear sites. In response, Iran targeted a military base in Qatar, raising fears of a global conflict. On Tuesday, Trump finally announced a ceasefire, which was violated by strikes from both Israel and Iran until the end of the day. Each side is claiming victory: Israel and the United States congratulate themselves on having slowed Iran's nuclear program me for decades (which remains to be proven), while Tehran is glorifying its victory over 'Israel's weakness'. The Iranian regime, although greatly weakened, seems to be holding firm for the time being. Iranian society, for its part, fears increased repression. In this illustration, Brazilian cartoonist Thiago Lucas portrays US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu playing a risky game of 'nuclear roulette'. The two leaders launch missiles in the "hope" of hitting Iran's nuclear sites but, as in any game of chance, the outcome remains uncertain. Cartooning for Peace is an international network of cartoonists committed to promoting freedom of expression, human rights and mutual respect between people of different cultures and beliefs through the universality of press cartoons. Lucas was born in 1987 in Recife, the state capital of Pernambuco in the northeast of Brazil. He is a graduate historian from the Federal University of Pernambuco and has a postgraduate degree in the History of Brazil's Northeast from the Catholic University of Pernambuco. During his studies he developed research on caricature as a form of critical discourse on the 'drought industry' in his native country's northeast. His interest in cartooning started at the age of 14, when he began to follow the drawings published in the newspapers of Pernambuco. Since then, he has published in numerous venues, including magazines, websites, newspapers and textbooks, in addition to having participated in several exhibitions and graphic arts catalogues worldwide.


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Relatives of French detainees in Iran denounce 'forced disappearance'
French national Cecile Kohler, 40, and her 72-year-old partner Jacques Paris have been held in Iran since May 2022 on espionage charges their families reject. Their fate has been unknown since Israel targeted Tehran's Evin prison in an air strike on Monday, before a US-proposed ceasefire between the Middle East foes came into force. Iran's prison authority transferred inmates out of the prison after it was hit, the judiciary said on Tuesday, but it is not clear how many inmates were moved or who they were. "We don't know if they are still alive, we don't know where they are," Noemie Kohler said at a press conference in Paris. "We await proof of life immediately," she added. Anne-Laure Paris said she also had no idea where her father was. "In view of the gravity of the situation, I am addressing you today, for the first time, because I'm scared for my father's life," she said at a press conference. Chirinne Ardakani, the lawyer of the relatives, said: "Cecile and Jacques, state hostages arbitrarily detained in a cruel and inhuman manner in Iran, are missing." "In law, this is a forced disappearance," she added. They "could have been transferred to another prison", be buried "under the rubble" or they could have been moved "into secret detention locations", she said. A French junior minister said on Wednesday that France had been assured that the French couple had not been wounded during the Israeli strike. But Noemie Kohler said that this information "from the Iranian authorities" was "far from a guarantee". Rights groups say that Evin has been home to dozens of "political prisoners" innocent of any crime, including foreigners, and women who are kept in a separate wing. The prison is believed to have the capacity for hundreds of inmates.