Home Australia Tourist sparks fury after strolling around Majorca’s capital in just tight green swimming trunks as furious locals demand his arrest and slam ‘shirtless morons’

Tourist sparks fury after strolling around Majorca’s capital in just tight green swimming trunks as furious locals demand his arrest and slam ‘shirtless morons’

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The man, who has not yet been identified, was seen walking around Palma with little on him except a red beach towel.

Mallorcans erupted in fury after snaps on social media showed a man walking through the center of Palma wearing nothing more than a pair of Speedos, socks and shoes.

The man, who has not yet been identified, was seen walking around Palma with little on him except a red beach towel.

He was seen walking down the busy street, with dozens of people around him, in the Jaume III neighborhood of Palma.

Social media users eviscerated the man online, with one saying: “Another moron who should be kicked off the island.”

“If the government and the police were serious, little by little they could improve Mallorca by banning all these types of idiots.”

The man, who has not yet been identified, was seen walking around Palma with little on him except a red beach towel.

He was seen walking down the busy street, with dozens of people around him, in the Jaume III neighborhood of Palma.

He was seen walking down the busy street, with dozens of people around him, in the Jaume III neighborhood of Palma.

Another called for their arrest: ‘Please arrest these almost naked people.

‘Or the shirtless, almost naked, bikini-clad imbeciles wandering through markets, cities and shops. Ukkk! Quality tourism can’t come soon enough!’

According to the UK’s FCDO, somewhere in Spain it is “illegal to be on the street wearing only a bikini or swimsuit.”

The department added on its website: ‘Being topless is also illegal in some areas of Spain.

“You could be fined if you are caught in a bathing suit on the promenade or adjacent streets.”

Party-goers from Palma, Llucmajor and Magaluf in Mallorca and San Antonio in Ibiza now face fines of between £500 and £1,500 (£430-£1,290) if their street drink

Party-goers from Palma, Llucmajor and Magaluf in Mallorca and San Antonio in Ibiza now face fines of between €500 and €1,500 (£430 and £1,290) if their street drinking “disturbs coexistence”.

The locals accused the drunken British of treating the

Locals accused the drunken Brits of treating the “beautiful” island without respect and claimed the authorities were not doing enough to help.

The photos are the latest to cause outrage in the Balearic Islands, as Magaluf businessmen have revealed they are fed up with the way British tourists treat their “beautiful” home.

Business owners claimed authorities were not doing enough to help, despite imposing stricter rules on alcohol consumption.

Sergio Taltavull, whose family owns the Casa Diego restaurant in Magaluf, told MailOnline: “It’s pretty bad. It’s about drinking and having fun. There are no families. We need more families. It’s about the culture of getting drunk and having fun.

‘The majority of tourists treat the island very badly. I have seen the degradation over the years, it is very bad.

The 32-year-old, whose restaurant was far from the chaos on the strip, said the government “had to introduce the rules”, adding: “It’s gone on too long and we have to live here.”

A video showed two British tourists fighting in a tourist complex in Mallorca.

A video showed two British tourists fighting in a tourist complex in Mallorca.

‘I have worked here all my life, I am from Mallorca. The island is paradise, but we have to change the tourist culture.

‘The government is trying, but let’s see if it works. We want more families, tourists and less drunk people and less partying. We want what we had before.’

Party-goers in the Majorcan areas of Palma, Llucmajor and Magaluf, as well as San Antonio in Ibiza, now face fines of between €500 and €1,500 (£430 and £1,290) if their alcohol consumption on the street “disturbs the coexistence, causes crowds or deteriorates the tranquility of life. the environment’.

Party boats can no longer come within one nautical mile (1,852 km) of designated areas and have been prohibited from picking up or dropping off passengers.

In a bid to toughen the islands’ 2020 legislation, shops selling alcohol in “excessive tourism” areas must now close completely between 9.30pm and 8am.

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