#Venexodus: Why residents are fleeing 'fragile' Venice, Italy

Venetians are protesting the policies that they say allow tourists to make their city 'unbearable.' Every year, the city of 55,000 loses about a thousand residents and receives more than 20 million visitors.

Venetians carry luggage behind Andrea Castelli, dressed as the Doge of Venice, in a theatrical protest calling for authorities to value the local community as well as tourists, in Venice, Italy, Nov. 12.

Manuel Silvestri/Reuters

November 12, 2016

Dozens of Venetians waved maroon and yellow flags and carried empty suitcases on Saturday during a symbolic demonstration to highlight an exodus of residents from the lagoon city, where tourist hordes can make everyday life challenging.

Images of narrow Venetian alleys clogged with visitors during the All Saints holiday weekend filled Italian papers last week, rekindling a debate about limiting access to the city through a booking system.

Venetians have long complained that food shopping and other daily errands have become increasingly tricky as the city focuses on meeting the needs of the more than 20 million tourists who are estimated to visit it every year.

"This is not a protest against tourism, it's a protest against the policies that the city has followed in the last 40 years," Venetian resident Andrea Castelli said.

"We don't want to leave the city, we are Venetian, we want to live here so we are asking the City of Venice to help us to stay in Venice," he added.

Donning a red cloak lined with ermine fur and a brocade cap, Castelli dressed up as the Doge, the historic leader of the Republic of Venice.

After leading a procession of people carrying a giant red cardboard suitcase and wheeling their own bags, the Doge climbed onto a gondola and symbolically left the city.

According to city resident Sebastian Giorgi, the city's population drops by about 1,000 per year.

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Protesters hung a banner that read "#Venexodus" on the Rialto bridge and glued to their trolleys signs that said "No Venetians? Don't call me Venice anymore."

An electronic display in a pharmacy's shop window showed the number of residents at 54,926. Next to it, a sign said Venice had a population of 174,808 in 1951 which had fallen to 60,704 by March 2008.

In addition to the congestion caused by tourists, Venetians blame short-term tourist rentals for inflating housing costs.

"Venice is a fragile city, fragile structurally and physically but also when it comes to its social fabric," resident Federico Permutti said.

"If you add to that the lack of housing for locals and a wild proliferation of accommodation offered to tourists, you can understand that the situation is unbearable for those who live here."

(Writing by Valentina Za; Editing by Helen Popper)