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Andorra Housing Union Plans Rally During Macron's Plaça del Poble Speech Amid Rental Crisis

SHA demands rent controls and indefinite contracts after fruitless talks with minister, urging citizens to protest peacefully on 28 April while government defends current policies.

Synthesized from:
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Key Points

  • SHA plans peaceful rally during Macron's 28 April speech in Plaça del Poble over Andorra's rental crisis.
  • Union demands rent controls, indefinite contracts, and public housing after failed talks with Housing Minister.
  • Government defends current policies, allows protest during paid holiday closures.
  • Opposition supports rent limits; SHA predicts family evictions in 6-7 months.

Housing tensions in Andorra continue to mount as the Sindicat d’Habitatge d’Andorra (SHA) plans a peaceful rally during French co-Prince Emmanuel Macron’s public speech at Plaça del Poble on 28 April, following an unproductive meeting with Housing Minister Conxita Marsol.

SHA spokesperson Rebeca Bonache called the Tuesday session at Prat del Rull purely informational. Marsol, representing Demòcrates per Andorra, rejected the union’s proposed changes to rental deregulation laws, advising SHA to seek support from other parliamentary groups. She argued that current steps, including contract extensions, suffice without deeper market controls. Around 20 supporters protested outside, holding signs reading “Work to live, not survive” and “For dignified housing, regulate rents now.”

Bonache outlined key demands: indefinite rental contracts with narrow exceptions, a public rent index, required mediation, protections against evictions, fixes for “child trap” loopholes, a national housing registry, more public housing stock, oversight of property sales, and fines for vacant homes. Without progress, she predicted family evictions within six to seven months, calling for ongoing campaigns to rekindle 2023 protests amid luxury builds and soaring costs.

SHA has rallied citizens to join the 12:45 address—part of Macron’s second official visit, 27-28 April, with wife Brigitte—using placards, whistles, or chants to draw attention. “Everyone who can should come so the co-Prince learns what’s happening with housing,” Bonache said, noting the two paid free hours as a unique chance. The group disavowed any boycott and plans a larger 16 May event at 19:30 from Kilometre 0 roundabout, titled “Against Programmed Expulsion,” with route details pending. Opposition Partit Socialdemòcrata supports rent limits to 2030, loophole closures, and aid programs. SHA’s parish-level “expulsion calculator” forecasts sharp rises ahead.

Government spokesperson Guillem Casal, speaking after Wednesday’s Council of Ministers, endorsed peaceful protests as a legal right, with approvals handled by Interior Ministry and police. He described the 12:00-14:30 non-essential closures on 28 April—covering shops, offices, and industries, exempting health, tourism, fuel, and essentials—as routine, paid, non-recoverable holidays that prior visits proved harmless to business. “It’s a standard measure lasting just over two hours,” Casal said.

Macron arrives by helicopter at Estadi Comunal on 27 April afternoon, then visits FEDA headquarters and Ràdio Andorra in Encamp for credential handovers from roughly 15 ambassadors alongside Episcopal co-Prince Josep-Lluís Serrano Pentinat, plus a meeting with Head of Government Xavier Espot on key challenges. Dinner at Andorra Park Hotel follows, including youth representatives. On 28 April, school visits to Lycée Comte de Foix and Escola Andorrana de Santa Coloma run 8:30-10:30, suspending classes at Lycée and featuring anthem singing by younger pupils at Santa Coloma, with traffic curbs on nearby streets. A Casa de la Vall session from Plaça Príncep Benlloch includes joint seating of co-princes, honors, anthem, and book signing. The 20-minute Plaça del Poble speech precedes lunch at former Hotel Rosaleda, brief media, and Meritxell sanctuary for the Seven-Arms Cross award before El Tarter departure. Authorities expect no extra security beyond norms and advise public transport use.

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Original Sources

This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: