Brit holidaymakers in Magaluf asked to sign good behaviour contract as Majorca party resort cracks down on rowdy groups
BRIT holidaymakers in Magaluf face being asked to sign good behaviour contracts this summer as Majorca cracks down on rowdy groups. Tourists could also be fined £50,000 for jumping off balconies in new measures designed to stamp out drunken tourism in party resorts. Hotels who fail in a new legal obligation to kick out guests […]
BRIT holidaymakers in Magaluf face being asked to sign good behaviour contracts this summer as Majorca cracks down on rowdy groups.
Tourists could also be fined £50,000 for jumping off balconies in new measures designed to stamp out drunken tourism in party resorts.
Brits could be asked to sign good behaviour contracts as part of a crackdown on rowdy guests[/caption]
A document has been sent to hotels as part of the clampdown[/caption]
Hotels who fail in a new legal obligation to kick out guests engaging in the dangerous practice, known locally as balconing, have also been told to expect the same type of fines.
A document drafted by the Majorca hotel federation FEHM has been sent to its member hotels in Magaluf and the nearby S’Arenal resort.
ROWDY
It states: “The hotel management informs clients that it is forbidden to engage in practices which endanger life, health and physical integrity in this establishment, for example by passing from a balcony or window to another and jumping from unsuitable locations into the swimming pool.
“Guests who carry out these dangerous practices will be expelled immediately by hotel management, with the assistance of the forces of law and order if necessary.”
‘Guests who carry out these dangerous practices will be expelled immediately by hotel management’[/caption]
Police officers watch young British tourists at Punta Ballena, in Magaluf[/caption]
Holidaymakers will be asked to sign the document[/caption]
Brits are also facing huge fines for misbehaving[/caption]
The move is part of a drive to crack down on drunken behaviour[/caption]
A woman slumps on a step after a night out in Magaluf[/caption]
Holidaymakers where hotels decide to implement the change will be asked to sign and date the document and record their passport and room numbers at check-in.
The code of conduct also highlights the fines that can be levied on guests who break the rules and warns them: “We also inform you that taking drinks of any kind outside the hotel is strictly prohibited.”
Maria Jose Aguilo, vice-president of the FEHM which has 900 member hotels in Majorca, said the association was recommending the introduction of the document but confirmed it was “optional.”
She told local paper Ultima Hora: “The only objective here is to offer more legal protection in case of claims.”
BALCONING
Officials at the association said was too early to say what the take-up by hotels would be.
The new decree against drunken tourism was announced on January 17 and took effect following its publication in an Official State Gazette five days later.
It was approved by regional MPs on Tuesday. Only far-right wing party Vox voted against ratifying the decree, branding it “discriminatory” and “botched” and predicting it would lead to job losses.
The decree covers Magaluf, S’Arenal and the West End part of San Antonio in Ibiza which is also popular with British holidaymakers.
Resorts popular among Brit holidaymakers are being targeted[/caption]
Club night in the party resort of Magaluf[/caption]
It bans pub crawls and drink offers like happy hours in those areas.
The decree, valid for five years, also limits the number of alcoholic drinks served in restaurants and hotels as part of all-inclusive offers to three at lunch and three at dinner.
Party boat operators are banned from picking up and dropping off revellers in the areas the law covers.
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And shops in the resorts will be banned from selling alcohol between 9.30pm and 8am.
A regional government spokesman confirmed after its introduction: “The new rules establish a penalty regime which puts special emphasis on serious and very serious misdemeanours.”
“Those practices which are dangerous and cause risk to life or endanger the integrity and health of clients or the tourists who engage in them, will be considered serious misdemeanours.”