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Welcome to the weekend issue of Brussels Edition, Bloomberg’s daily briefing on what matters most in the heart of the European Union. Join us on Saturdays for deeper dives from our bureaus across Europe.

MADRID — From dusk till dawn, the halls of the modern Terminal 4 at the Spanish capital’s Barajas airport are filled with long rows of people lying on the floor, trying to get some sleep. 

Some have blankets, others sleeping bags — or no cover at all. Many carry bags or suitcases with their belongings, heading to toilets along the hallways to wash. But they aren’t travelers — it’s a growing group of homeless people who have taken shelter at a major European hub for international flights.

The situation has sparked a public crisis, with officials trading barbs over whose responsibility it is to handle it. It highlights the challenges that the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez faces to contain a brewing housing crisis.

Several hundred homeless people live and sleep in the facilities of the Adolfo Suarez-Madrid Barajas Airport. Photographer: Europa Press News/Europa Press

Spain’s airport operator Aena, majority-owned by the government, estimates that there are around 400 people living in the terminal. Its head, Maurici Lucena, and Madrid Mayor Jose Luis Martinez-Almeida recently agreed to mandate a non-profit organization do obtain more precise numbers and information on who the homeless are. 

Part of the difficulty to resolve the crisis lies in politics. Almeida, a member of Spain’s largest opposition group, says that the airport is under the purview of the Socialist central government. The national administration argues Barajas is in Madrid and therefore it’s on Almeida to deal with it. Lucena is a former Socialist government official and a political appointee.

Aena has warned that the presence of the homeless at the airport is a security and health hazard, stressing that there have been fights and employees feel unsafe. It recently proposed restricting access to the airport at night, but the initiative was met with widespread controversy.

More broadly, Spain’s housing woes were triggered by a combination of factors, including a lengthy permit process, a scarcity of new land available for construction and a large influx of migrants. In the capital, the price surge is compounded by the arrival of wealthy foreign investors, mainly from Latin America, who have sparked a boom in demand for high-end property.

The problem that has been pushing local residents to the streets in protest is now on display on arrival for tourists flocking into country.

Rodrigo Orihuela, Madrid Bureau Chief

Weekend Reads
 

Ukraine Rebuilds Its Energy Grid With Lessons From the Frontline

Municipal workers conduct repair work on electricity supply following the guided airstrike on May 1, 2024 in Kharkiv, Ukraine.  Photographer: Global Images Ukraine/Global Images Ukraine

Attacks on power infrastructure have become a feature of Russia’s attempts to conquer Ukraine. Under fire, Ukraine has built a system that is more resilient — and greener — than what it had before, and created a blueprint for the future that the government and energy companies hope will attract at least some of the investment the energy sector requires, even if a US-brokered peace deal doesn’t come to fruition.

Europeans Plan Fewer Summer US Trips as Trump Backlash Grows

Europeans are planning 10% fewer trips to the US as the busy summer season approaches, in the latest sign that some international travelers are avoiding America as backlash grows against President Donald Trump’s policies. The drop in flight bookings from Canada to the US in the May-July period is even more pronounced, at 33% and Tourism Economics expects an 8.7% decline in US international arrivals for all of 2025.

The Obesity-Drug Battle Is Heating Up After Novo's CEO Ouster

The auditorium at an obesity conference in Spain last week was so packed that attendees sat on the floor and in the aisles, craning their necks to see around people squashed in front of them. On the stage, doctors detailed findings from a trial of Eli Lilly & Co.’s Zepbound against Novo Nordisk A/S’s Wegovy — the first head-to-head study of the blockbuster weight-loss drugs.

A Russian Soprano Charts a Return to the Top After Ukraine Backlash 

A protest outside the Berlin State Opera House in May. Photographer: Santiago Rodriguez and Vitsche

Under the gold-embossed ceiling of the Berlin State Opera house, concert-goers sip champagne as ushers in black suits direct patrons to their seats. Outside, the scene is less genteel. On the boulevard in front of the opera house, protesters chant slogans decrying Russian propaganda and argue with arriving ticket-holders. One holds a sign that reads in English: “Among dozens of world-class opera voices, you choose the voice of a Russian who supports Putin.” The demonstrators are there to protest the performance of one of opera’s biggest stars.

Harvard’s Foreign Students Are Stunned and Devastated by Trump’s Ban
 

A campus store on the Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US. Photographer: Mel Musto/Bloomberg

The US government’s decision to revoke Harvard’s Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification Thursday has thrust thousands of international students into limbo. Marie Chantel Montas, a third-year Ph.D. candidate at Harvard University from the Dominican Republic, was on a road trip with her husband when she got the news. With two more years before she gets her degree in population health sciences, Montas has no idea what her future holds.  

This Week in Europe

  • Monday: EU agriculture ministers meet in Brussels
  • Tuesday: EU European affairs ministers meet in Brussels
  • Wednesday: European Commission due to announce start-up strategy

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