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BRITS hoping to leave the UK travel chaos are facing having their Spanish holidays ruined due to the huge storms sweeping the country.

Beach bar owners have said their Easter hopes have been ruined following the damage done on the back of storms over recent weeks which had already left resorts with repair bills running into hundreds of thousands of pounds.

Storms have caused chaos across popular parts of Spain
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Storms have caused chaos across popular parts of SpainCredit: Solarpix
Beach bars in Marbella have been damaged just as they hoped to welcome Brits
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Beach bars in Marbella have been damaged just as they hoped to welcome BritsCredit: Solarpix
The popular beach resorts are colder than some parts of the UK
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The popular beach resorts are colder than some parts of the UKCredit: Solarpix

Miguel Muncharaz, manager at iconic Marbella beach bar and restaurant Trocadero Playa, admitted: “This last storm has devastated this place. Only the structure is left.

“It’s a disaster. There’s no way we’ll be able to get everything back to the way it was before Easter.”

Tourists hoping to relax in the sun after mayhem leaving home were facing more disappointment after arriving to find Spain chillier than parts of Britain and their favourite stretches of sand washed away.

Midday temperatures on most of the Costa Blanca were due to reach just 12C, colder than London and just a touch warmer than Manchester.

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The start of the day in the Costa del Sol was marked by grey skies and drizzle and it was raining in the Majorcan capital Palma with temperatures nudging just 10C at 11am.

Storms over the past few days have left many beaches on the Costa Blanca and Costa del Sol, the most popular stretches of Spanish coastline with British holidaymakers, looking like they’ve been hit by a bomb.

Costa tourist chiefs admitted they were in a race against time to refill eroded beaches with dredged sand in time for Easter week when the weather is expected to be a mixed bag of sunshine some days and rain others.

Debris including upturned deck chairs and sun loungers by the shoreline and beach showers yanked out of their stands litter the beach in the upmarket Costa del Sol resort of Marbella.

British tourist Dave Prentice, who owns a holiday home in Villajoyosa near Benidorm where at least four beaches have been badly damaged by the force of the waves, said: “I’ve been coming here for years and this is the worst I have seen the coastline at this time of the year.

“I was hoping to go back home with a tan but since I got here last week all I’ve seen is rain and more rain.”

The head of the Costa del Sol Tourist board Francisco Salado has called for the Malaga coast to be declared a disaster zone because of the damage caused by recent strong winds and sea swells.

Tourism chiefs in the area are hoping to put the coronavirus pandemic behind them this year and see foreign holidaymakers returning in the sorts of numbers they were getting pre-Covid.

Mr Salado said: “The beaches are our biggest tourist attraction and we rely on them being in good condition.”

Estepona’s mayor Jose Maria Garcia Urbano said long-term measures to protect the coastline were needed,

“Replacing the sand is a medicine whose effects last a few weeks and sometimes just a few days,” he said in an open letter.

It comes just days after hotels on the Balearic Islands - which include Ibiza, Majorca and Menorca - warn they may not be able to reopen during the busy summer season due to supply issues.

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The bad weather greeting newly-arrived Brits in Spain came after days of mayhem at UK airports which saw some passengers miss flights because of huge queues - leading to the boss of Manchester Airport quitting.

And airlines including BA and easyJet have been forced to cancel hundreds of flights in recent days.

Spain is usually a hot holiday destination for Brits at this time of year
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Spain is usually a hot holiday destination for Brits at this time of yearCredit: Alamy
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