New rules in Balearics to see British holidaymakers hit with on the spot fines

Last month it emerged badly-behaved Brit tourists face being banned from the islands, which include Ibiza and Majorca, under controversial new proposals.

The islands’ Head of Tourism Jaume Bauza confirmed the idea of a blacklist was being considered as part of a package of tougher measures being prepared against anti-social visitors.

Today it was reported members of a working group set up to prepare modifications to an existing regional degree against excess tourism, want to see street drinking punished with fines offenders will have to pay immediately with their debit or credit cards.

Respected Majorca-based newspaper Diario de Mallorca said the proposal, with on-the-spot cash penalties charged through the use of card reading machines, was one of a number of new measures that has been put forward.

A document with the proposed modifications has been prepared by a law firm based in the Majorcan capital Palma with input from hoteliers, restaurateurs and bar and nightclub owners via their respective representative associations.

They include the Playa de Palma Hotel Association and the CAEB Mallorca Restaurants Association.A drunken tourism decree was agreed at the start of 2020 for certain areas like Magaluf in Majorca and the West End of San Antonio in neighbouring Ibiza.

It included fines of up to POUNDS 50,000 for holidaymakers caught leaping off their hotel balconies and limits on the amount of alcohol served with meals at all-inclusive hotels.

Elections at the end of May led to a new right-wing regional government taking power. It has already signalled its intention to change the name of the decree against excess tourism to that of the “responsible tourism” decree to avoid negative connotations.

It is also planning to eliminate the current situation where only some streets in certain resorts including Magaluf and San Antonio are affected by the rules, meaning action against offenders could potentially be taken in any of the four islands that make up the Balearics.

The regional government has yet to respond to the reports about on-the-spot fines for drinking alcohol in the street.
Mr Bauza appeared to confirm last month a proposal to put some anti-social visitors on a plane back home and ban them for returning for a certain period was being considered.

Holidaymakers who flout the rules can already be expelled from their hotels, such as those who jump between balconies in a dangerous practice known locally as ‘balconing.”

Mr Bauza said it would depend on the “crime or infraction committed” when asked about the blacklist proposal at a meeting of the Commission for the Promotion of Civism in Tourist Zones with representatives of the four councils affected by the current excess tourism decree.

Explaining that it would be “regulated in the decree” he was quoted by respected newspaper Diario de Ibiza as saying: “I’ve expressed the master lines and nothing’s being ruled out or confirmed at this stage.

“Then it will need to have a legal framework. “The main thing is to target companies as well, but above all those people who behave in a way that is not tolerable, here or anywhere.”

The party resorts of Magaluf and part of Playa de Palma east of the island capital which is also one of the areas covered by the excess tourism decree, have been rocked this summer by several alleged sex attacks involving foreign tourists including gang rapes.

A British 18-year-old was allegedly gang-raped at a hotel in Magaluf in the early hours of August 14. Five French nationals and a Swiss man were arrested and remanded in jail pending an ongoing judicial investigation and a further two suspects subsequently held in France on European Arrest Warrants.

The incidents put the spotlight on resorts like the Brit-popular Magaluf which has been trying to improve its international image in recent years.

Prostitutes and some pickpockets have had restraining orders slapped on them by the courts banning them from setting foot in Magaluf so the adoption of measures declaring certain individuals as ‘personas non grata’ is not new to the area.

Any attempts by the Balearic Islands’ government to blacklist anti-social tourists is set to come up against EU free movement legislation, where the holidaymakers are from EU member states.

Although the right wing Popular Party won the May elections in the Balearic Islands, Spain’s left-wing acting PM Pedro Sanchez is expected to successfully form a coalition national government later this week which would exclude the right.

In August it emerged four of the five tourists handed five-figure fines over the summer for climbing between balconies at hotels in Magaluf were British.

Calvia Council which is responsible for the party resort said on August 21 five foreign holidaymakers had been fined for ‘balconing’.

The five were handed fines of EUROS 36,000 (POUNDS 30,720) each and kicked out of their hotels.

READ MORE Inside the party island swarmed by Brits on a budget not giving up on holiday

The fines were levied under the regional government decree designed to stamp out drunken tourism approved just over three years ago.

Earlier the same month a firm offering British holidaymakers illegal booze cruises in Magaluf was hit with a near-POUNDS 140,000 fine levied under the same decree.

Council chiefs responsible for the Majorcan party resort said company bosses were caught “red-handed” as they escorted around 130 tourists who had paid nearly POUNDS 40 each onto a boat where loud music was going to be played and alcohol was on offer.

The pioneering excess tourism crackdown ended pub crawls, happy hours and 2×1 cheap drink offers in areas like Magaluf and San Antonio’s West End.

It also suspended the concession of new ‘party boat’ licences, with boats that were already licensed banned from embarking or disembarking tourists in the areas covered.

Calvia’s new mayor Juan Antonio Amengual said last month after it emerged the ‘singling-out’ of certain areas which critics of the regional government decree have complained about would be stopped: “What you find at the moment is that one side of the street you have the tough rules and on the other side you don’t.

“We want it all to be the same.”

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