Venice expands its day-tripper tax program in bid to combat overtourism

Venice expands its day-tripper tax program in bid to combat overtourism
Gondola sail in a canal in Venice, Apr. 18, 2025, Venice on Friday launches for a second year a pilot program to charge day-trippers an entrance fee. (AP)
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Updated 18 April 2025

Venice expands its day-tripper tax program in bid to combat overtourism

Venice expands its day-tripper tax program in bid to combat overtourism
  • A UNESCO body decided against putting Venice on its list of cultural heritage sites deemed in danger after the tax was announced
  • Opponents of the day-tripper fee say it has done nothing to discourage tourists from visiting Venice even on high-traffic days

VENICE, Italy: Venice is charging day-trippers to the famed canal city an arrivals tax for the second year starting Friday, a measure aimed at combating the kind of overtourism that put the city’s UNESCO World Cultural Heritage status at risk.
A UNESCO body decided against putting Venice on its list of cultural heritage sites deemed in danger after the tax was announced. But opponents of the day-tripper fee say it has done nothing to discourage tourists from visiting Venice even on high-traffic days.
Here’s a look at Venice’s battle with overtourism by the numbers:
5-10 euros (about $6-$11)
The fee charged to visitors who are not overnighting in Venice to enter its historic center during the second year of the day-tripper tax. Visitors who download a QR code at least three days in advance will pay 5 euros ($5.69) — the same amount charged last year throughout the pilot program. But those who make last-minute plans pay double. The QR code is required from 8:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. and is checked at entry points to the city, including the Santa Lucia train station, the Piazzale Roma bus depot and the Tronchetto parking garage.
54
The number of days this year that day visitors to Venice will be charged a fee to enter the historic center. They include mostly weekends and holidays from April 18 to July 27. That is up from 29 last year. The new calendar covers entire weeks over key holidays and extends the weekend period to include Fridays.
2.4 million euros
That is the amount Venice took in during a 2024 pilot program for the tax. The city’s top budget official, Michele Zuin, said last year the running costs for the new system ran to 2.7 million euros, overshooting the total fees collected. This year, Zuin projects a surplus of about 1 million euros to 1.5 million euros, which will be used to offset the cost of trash collection and other services for residents.
450,000
The number of day-trippers who paid the tax in 2024. Officials say 8,000 day-trippers paid in advance to enter the city on Friday, among the 77,000 who have already registered so far to enter the city this year. Another 117,000 have registered for exemptions, which apply to anyone born in Venice, those paying property taxes in the city, studying or working in the historic center, or living in the wider Veneto region, among others.
75,000
The average number of daily visitors on the first 11 days of 2024 that Venice charged day-trippers. That’s about 10,000 people more than the number of tourists recorded on each of the three important holidays during the previous year. City council member Giovanni Andrea Martini, an opponent of the measure, said the figures show the project has not deterred visitors.
48,283
The number of official residents in Venice’s historic center composed of over 100 islands connected by footbridges and traversed by its famed canals. The population peaked at 174,000 in 1951, when Venice was home to thriving industries. The number shrank during Italy’s postwar economic boom as residents moved to the mainland for more modern housing — including indoor plumbing which was lacking in Venice. It has been shrinking dramatically over recent decades as local industry lost traction, families sought mainland conveniences and housing prices rose. Activists also blame the “mono-culture” of tourism, which they say has emptied the city of basic services like shops for everyday goods and medical care.
51,129
The number of beds for tourists in Venice’s historic center, including 12,627 in the less regulated short-term rental market, according to April data from the Ocio housing activist group. The number of tourist beds surpassed the number of permanent residents in 2023, according to Ocio’s monitor. Anyone staying in a hotel within the city limits, including on the mainland districts of Mestre and Marghera, pays a lodging tax and is therefore exempt from the day-tripper tax.
25 to 30 million
The number of annual arrivals of both day-trippers and overnight guests roughly confirmed by cellphone data tracked from a Smart Control Room since 2020, according to city officials.


One killed in Ireland as Storm Amy hits northern Europe

One killed in Ireland as Storm Amy hits northern Europe
Updated 9 sec ago

One killed in Ireland as Storm Amy hits northern Europe

One killed in Ireland as Storm Amy hits northern Europe
  • More than 200,000 properties in Ireland and Northern Ireland were left without power

LONDON: London’s famed Royal Parks shut their gates on Saturday and road, rail and sea travel faced major disruption as a storm walloped the UK, Ireland and Scandinavia with heavy rain and high winds.

More than 200,000 properties in Ireland and Northern Ireland were left without power, and a man died in Letterkenny, northwest Ireland, on Friday in what police called a weather-related incident, without giving details.

Britain’s Met Office weather agency said a gust of 154 kph was recorded on Friday on the island of Tiree off Scotland’s west coast. In Scotland, many ferry services were suspended and roads and railway lines blocked by fallen trees.

Fraser Wilson of Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said engineers were working to restore power to about 62,000 customers.

“We expect because of the extent of damage to the network and conditions we are still going to be facing today that this will take some time,” he told the BBC. “This storm is not over by any means.”

In London, Hyde Park, Regent’s Park, Richmond Park and several other green spaces that are a magnet for locals and tourists were shut all day Saturday because of “severe wind gusts.”


UN rights chief hails chance to stop carnage

An Israeli army soldier behind a mounted machine gun in the vicinity of the Jordanian Field Hospital in Gaza City. (AFP)
An Israeli army soldier behind a mounted machine gun in the vicinity of the Jordanian Field Hospital in Gaza City. (AFP)
Updated 04 October 2025

UN rights chief hails chance to stop carnage

An Israeli army soldier behind a mounted machine gun in the vicinity of the Jordanian Field Hospital in Gaza City. (AFP)
  • Israel said Saturday its troops were still operating in Gaza City and warned residents not to return, despite calls from the families of Israeli hostages and Trump for an immediate halt to the fighting

GENEVA: UN rights chief Volker Turk on Saturday said US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan was a “vital opportunity” to stop bloodshed in the Palestinian territory, once and for all.”
Trump has called on Israel to stop the fighting in the Gaza Strip as Hamas said it was ready to release all hostages and start talks surrounding the plan to end the nearly two-year war.

Volker Turk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. (AFP)

Turk hopes the momentum from the US president’s peace plan will “pave the way for a permanent cessation of hostilities, followed by recovery and reconstruction,” his office said on X as it urged a resolution “in line with international human rights and humanitarian laws, and the much-needed two-state solution.”
He called the plan a “vital opportunity for all parties and influential states to pursue in good faith and stop — once and for all — the carnage and the suffering in Gaza, to flood the strip with humanitarian aid, and to ensure the release of the hostages and numerous detained Palestinians.”
The proposal details a gradual Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and the disarmament of Hamas.
The World Health Organization also welcomed the plan, particularly the prospect of reconstructing hospitals.
“The best medicine is peace,” the UN health agency’s chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus posted on X on Saturday.
Israel said Saturday its troops were still operating in Gaza City and warned residents not to return, despite calls from the families of Israeli hostages and Trump for an immediate halt to the fighting.
President Trump said that Hamas must move quickly on his plan for ending the war in Gaza, “or else all bets will be off.”
“I will not tolerate delay, which many think will happen, or any outcome where Gaza poses a threat again. Let’s get this done, FAST,” the president said in a post on Truth Social. 
Israel’s army said Saturday that it would advance preparations for the first phase of Trump’s plan.

 


Mutharika sworn in for second term as Malawi’s president

Mutharika sworn in for second term as Malawi’s president
Updated 04 October 2025

Mutharika sworn in for second term as Malawi’s president

Mutharika sworn in for second term as Malawi’s president
  • Malawi is facing acute food shortages, cost-of-living pressures, and a lack of foreign exchange that has crippled businesses and led to persistent fuel shortages, he said

BLANTYRE: Malawi’s Peter Mutharika vowed to root out government corruption and rebuild an ailing economy after he was sworn in on Saturday for a second term as president of the southern African nation.
Mutharika, 85, secured more than 56 percent of the votes last month, defeating outgoing President Lazarus Chakwera, 70, who received 33 percent. Voters rejected Chakwera after five years of worsening economic crisis in one of the world’s poorest countries.
The Sept. 16 vote marked the fourth presidential contest between Mutharika and Chakwera.
Mutharika took the oath of office in a stadium in the commercial city of Blantire packed with supporters dressed in the Democratic Progressive Party’s blue and white colors, as well as government officials and African heads of state.
In his inaugural address, he said his administration was inheriting a country in economic crisis.
Malawi is facing acute food shortages, cost-of-living pressures, and a lack of foreign exchange that has crippled businesses and led to persistent fuel shortages, he said.
“There is no money in government. Borrowing is extremely high, and nobody knows where the borrowed money has gone,” he said.
But he pledged improvements, saying: “We will fix this country.”
“I don’t promise you milk and honey. I promise you hard work, tough and painful decisions,” he said. “The honeymoon of looting government is over!“
Mutharika appealed to the international community to invest in Malawi, saying the country seeks partnerships, not handouts. 
He said he would soon send a delegation to America to discuss his country’s prospects, particularly in light of recent cuts in US foreign aid.
Mutharika said US President Donald Trump sent him a message of congratulations.
Mutharika praised the US, the UK and the EU for their support in fighting corruption,
Chakwera’s Malawi Congress Party stated in a press release that although the outgoing president was absent from the inauguration, he extended his best wishes to Mutharika, hoping for his success and good health.

 


UK home secretary criticized after saying ‘as a Muslim, I’ve never heard someone being called Jihad’

UK home secretary criticized after saying ‘as a Muslim, I’ve never heard someone being called Jihad’
Updated 04 October 2025

UK home secretary criticized after saying ‘as a Muslim, I’ve never heard someone being called Jihad’

UK home secretary criticized after saying ‘as a Muslim, I’ve never heard someone being called Jihad’
  • Shabana Mahmood was referring to Manchester synagogue attacker Jihad Al-Shamie
  • Council for Arab-British Understanding: Her comments have ‘escalated the risk to British Arabs’ with that name, both Muslim and Christian

LONDON: The UK’s home secretary has been asked to clarify her comments about the name Jihad, after British Arabs with the name warned that they face hate attacks after Thursday’s attack in Manchester.

Shabana Mahmood said in the wake of the synagogue attack: “As a Muslim, I’ve never heard someone being called Jihad.”

She was referring to the 35-year-old attacker Jihad Al-Shamie, a British national of Syrian descent who was killed at the scene.

Chris Doyle, director of the Council for Arab-British Understanding, called on Mahmood to issue an immediate clarification about her comments, which were widely reported in the media.

The name Jihad, which means to strive or to struggle, is a common Arabic name among both Christians and Muslims, Doyle said.

Mahmood’s comments have “escalated the risk to British Arabs called Jihad, who may suffer from hate attacks and abuse; several have reached out to CAABU about this,” a press release from the organization warned.

In his letter to her, Doyle highlighted prominent examples of the name: Jihad Azour, a Lebanese Christian former finance minister and current director of the International Monetary Fund’s Middle East and Central Asia Department; Hollywood actor Jihad Abdo; actor Jihad Saad; Syrian Christian economist Jihad Yazighi; businessman Jihad Salkini; and Syrian Christian former diplomat Jihad Makdisi.

“There are many, many others. The name of course, as you know, does not indicate any notion of war but the duty to strive to improve,” Doyle wrote, adding that some Arabs with the name, such as Abdo and Salkini, have adopted the anglicized nickname Jay due to hostility while living in the West.

British Arabs “working in all sectors of life” in the UK also have the name, Doyle said, warning that Mahmood’s comments have “very serious” implications on their lives.

“Several have reached out to me fearful of the impact of your words … What you said has inadvertently put them at risk from retaliatory attacks and abuse,” he added.

“These are names given to them at birth and have zero bearing as to what their political and religious beliefs may be.”

Doyle called on Mahmood to “put out an immediate clarification as soon as possible. I am sure you will agree the last thing we need is any further hate attacks or abuse.”


Far-right Briton Tommy Robinson accepts Israeli minister’s invitation

Far-right Briton Tommy Robinson accepts Israeli minister’s invitation
Updated 04 October 2025

Far-right Briton Tommy Robinson accepts Israeli minister’s invitation

Far-right Briton Tommy Robinson accepts Israeli minister’s invitation
  • ‘The UK and Israel are fighting the same battle — against the scourge of Islamic jihad,’ says self-described Zionist
  • He has faced widespread accusations of Islamophobia

LONDON: An Israeli government minister has invited British far-right activist Tommy Robinson to visit the country.

Robinson has faced widespread accusations of Islamophobia, and was sentenced to 18 months in prison last year after admitting to contempt of court over repeated false allegations against a Syrian refugee.

Amichai Chikli, Israeli minister for the diaspora and combating antisemitism, extended the invitation, describing the co-founder of the English Defence League as a “courageous leader on the front line against radical Islam.”

Chikli said: “At a time when Jews across Europe face rising antisemitism, it is vital to strengthen bonds with allies who refuse to be silent.

“He has proven himself a true friend of Israel and the Jewish people, unafraid to speak the truth and confront hate.

“Together with friends like Tommy Robinson, we will build stronger bridges of solidarity, fight terror, and defend Western civilization and our shared values.”

Robinson, who is expected to visit Israel in mid-October, organized a rally in London last month that was attended by more than 100,000 people.

He accepted the invitation on X, and said he would travel to Israel after his latest trial on Oct. 13.

“The UK and Israel are fighting the same battle — against the scourge of Islamic jihad. Their fight is our fight,” he said.

“I have accepted an invitation by the government of Israel to cover the cost of my flight and hotel stay for a few days.”

Declaring himself a Zionist, Robinson added: “If Muslims have 55 nations why can’t the Jews have one, especially their legitimate ancestral homeland?”

The activist was released from prison in May after a judge found that he had undergone a “change in attitude.”