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Climate activists target Messi’s mansion in Spain’s Ibiza

Climate activists on Tuesday spray-painted a mansion on the Spanish holiday island of Ibiza belonging to Argentina football star Lionel Messi to highlight the "responsibility of the rich for the climate crisis".

Climate activists target Messi's mansion in Spain's Ibiza
Civil disobidience collective Futuro Vegetal shows two activists holding a banner reading "Help the planet, eat the rich, abolish the police" after spray-painting the house of Argentine football star Lionel Messi in Ibiza. (Photo by Handout / Futuro Vegetal / AFP)

Campaigners from the group Futuro Vegetal released a video showing two members standing in front of the house near the cove of Cala Tarida on Ibiza’s western coast holding a banner that read: “Help the Planet – Eat the Rich – Abolish the Police.”

The activists then sprayed the white facade of the building with red and black paint.

In a statement, the group said they wanted to show “the responsibility of the rich for the climate crisis” by targeting the mansion which they said was an “illegal construction”.

Futuro Vegetal cited a 2023 Oxfam report that found that the richest one percent of the world’s population generated the same amount of carbon emissions in 2019 as the poorest two thirds of humanity, despite the fact that the most vulnerable communities are the ones suffering the “worst consequences” of this crisis.

Climate activists spray-painted a mansion on the Spanish holiday island of Ibiza belonging to Argentina football star Lionel Messi to protest the “responsibility of the rich” in the climate crisis. (Photo by Handout / Futuro Vegetal / AFP) 

Messi, who currently plays for Inter Miami in the US, reportedly bought the property on the Mediterranean island – which includes a spa with a sauna and a cinema room – in 2022 from a Swiss businessman for around €11 million ($12 million).

But the mansion lacked a certificate of occupancy, a document issued by a local government agency certifying it is in a liveable condition, due the construction of several rooms in the property without a licence, according to Spanish media reports.

Futuro Vegetal, which is linked to similar groups internationally, has staged dozens of similar protests, including one in 2022 where they glued their hands to frames of paintings by Spanish master Francisco de Goya at Madrid’s Prado museum.

Last year activists from the group spray-painted a superyacht moored in Ibiza with red and black paint that reportedly belonged to Nancy Walton Laurie, the billionaire heiress of US retail giant Walmart.

Spanish police in January said they had arrested 22 members of the Futuro Vegetal, including the two who staged the protest at the Prado as well as the group’s top three leaders.

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CRIME

Spain seizes more than one million ecstasy pills

Police in Spain on Tuesday said that they had seized more than one million ecstasy pills and other narcotics worth more than €25 million.

Spain seizes more than one million ecstasy pills

They called it the biggest ever seizure of synthetic pills in the country.

Officers arrested nine people as part of the operation in the southern city of Málaga and the holiday island of Ibiza suspected of belonging to “one of the main criminal organisations involved in the introduction of synthetic drugs in Spain, which operated in different parts of Europe,” police said in a statement.

Police said the gang was headed by Italian nationals based in Ibiza, which is known for its beaches and glittering dance clubs where party drugs like ecstasy are commonly found.

They seized 1,071,327 ecstasy pills, 73 kilogrammes (161 pounds) of MDMA — the primary psychoactive chemical constituent of ecstasy — 212 kilogrammes of ketamine, 20 kilogrammes of cocaine, 21 kilogrammes of “pink cocaine”, which is a mixture of synthetic drugs, 10 kilogrammes of hashish and six kilogrammes of marijuana.

“This is the biggest seizure of synthetic pills ever made in Span,” the statement said.

Police suspect the gang used vehicles with false bottoms to smuggle the drugs into Spain.

The country is a main entry point for drugs into Europe given its close ties with its former colonies in Latin America, a major cocaine producing region, and its proximity to Morocco, a top cannabis producer.

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