Cape Verde: Island paradise with a dark side | DW Documentary
Endless beaches, majestic mountains and villages with multi-colored houses: Cape Verde has become one of the hottest new destinations for social media influencers. Here, tourists can enjoy a week at an all-inclusive resort for as little as €700, including travel.
But virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.
The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.
On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
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Video “Cape Verde: Island paradise with a dark side | DW Documentary” was uploaded on 07/02/2025 by DW Documentary Youtube channel.
For every Tourist, charge an Environmental Tax £10. Use this money to build water catchment beaver dams and Reforest. This will bring moisture back to the lands and create rain clouds again.
Ahhh perfect…the English have discovered the place. consider it ruined…
To the ones criticising tourism, can someone give an idea on how a serie of the dryest islands in the world can survive or give a minimum of life prospects to its population, without tourism? Do you know that without water they can´t have any agriculture or industry? Please iluminate me!
You should cover Hawaii next. It’s heart wrenching watching the island be milked for tourism even after all that devastation.
This is not a problem caused by tourists but by the government chosen by the local people
Hyper-Saline is the Official Water Industry Insider term for the brine the desal plants emmit. Thank you to the Production Team and the Commissioning Editor. DW it seems is the worlds finest global and local broadcaster. Wow in daily motion…
The improvement of the Turtle situation is heartwarming and an improvement.
where is cape verde?
Should go interview the cape verdes government what they do with all the tourism and fishery money, what do they do to their people?
20:02 Mainly Europeans ofc… they are part of dark side and the biggest contributor to it
I wanted to go but now I can’t anymore 😔
Our tour guide advised us that when the resorts first came, the employers were paid a fair wage…. It was the cape Verde government that made them reduce the wages by quite a lot!
I remember seeing a report recently about using water capture systems from fog. I wonder if this could work for Cape Verde? As sea fog comes up over land at night, the water in the fog coalesces on nets with droplets forming and running down into capture reservoirs. No moving parts, next to zero maintenance… maybe not enough to supply a city, but enough for smaller communities.
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
These volunteers are very amazing.
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It's almost as if capitalism is a major problem in the world.
This is what happened in Tenerife. They trained turtles to not be afraid of people and they would come for food. Then some tourists just killed entire turtle family
Heartbreaking, really.
The problem is the local government, making money with the tourism industry but I guess most is used to improve urban areas.
Rural areas and unhabited islands is for later.
Their wage is criminal.
This is the face of exploitation everywhere.
Why doesn't the Cape Verde government invest some of the tourism income to tackle some of these issues.
and the other problem they have its diaspora people never come back to their country to invest so that local people get jobs 😮😮😮😮they even have so many celebrities which are out there shame on them
The absolute heartbreak 💔
Please share this documentary far and wide
Neat…I’m dealing with Travelers Virus right now
So many people take advantage of Africa.
Not sure it's a good idea to change the diet of the turtles.
I saw a documentary a few years ago about a Deep Submersible Submarine investigating a Trench in a very remote area of the Atlantic Ocean. They found a a small mountain of TRASH at the bottom Miles and Miles from the surface.
Why does DW not like Cape Verde?
nothing new, this is standard all over this planet. gringos like vacations and exotic places
lolz the climate has always been changing
This is a job for ocean cleanup or blue ocean
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this is a story of all the places where there are these massive resorts .
for the natives residents, 2 words- birth-control" !
I mean that they need desalination is a no brainer, that they have to consider alternative energy sources is maybe worth more emphasing. Everything in life has its pros and cons. We must always decide for the lesser evil and this changes depending on the situation of the person making the observation. It would really be great if more of those all inclusive guests would actually consider investing in the local economy on their visit.
Mass tourism is a plague many visitors don't follow the rules of the locals I hope Cape Verde addresses it before it gets worse tourism must benefit the locals first not outsiders European ships are also part of the problem the Cape Verdean government is to blame they should leave their waters
They don't have a water issue there, they are surrounded by it. All they need is an installation to turn it into fresh water.
Omg can someone help that poor turtle wading through garbage?!
How big is that underwater cable?
I was so happy to see the project of cleaning the beach for the turtles. I googled it up and donated 5€.
já fui à ilha do sal. férias incríveis. que tristeza saber que havia tantos problemas. pior é saber que vão continuar….
Were there any attempts to speak with anyone from the local government? And what about international intervention to help?