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Brits hit with £640 fine warning for buying items from certain places in Spain

Brits hit with £640 fine warning for buying items from certain places in Spain

Daily Mirror7 hours ago

In a brutal new crackdown, Spanish authorities are said to be imposing hefty fines for tourists found to be buying souvenirs and other items from certain types of street vendors
A popular Spanish city has unveiled a brutal clampdown that could see Brits slapped with a hefty fine.
Police in Palma, the capital of Majorca, are reportedly imposing the first penalties against people found to have purchased products such as sunglasses, bags, and souvenirs from illegal street sellers. It comes as the town hall launched a new ordinance on May 26 - which strictly prohibits both residents and holidaymakers in the Litoral district (which spans from Can Pere Antoni to Arenal) from buying items from unauthorised vendors.

Often referred to as 'looky looky' men, tourist-riddled hotspots like Spain are rife with dodgy merchants that often sell counterfeit products such as fake designer handbags and scarves. Of course, selling knock-off goods has never been legal in Spain, and provisions to fine counterfeit sellers and their customers have been in place since 2018. However, Spain is cracking down on this with a set of bylaws updating existing regulations, arguing the black-market train 'harms legal establishments'.

According to Majorca Daily Bulletin, sellers themselves are subject to sky-high fines of between €750 and €1,500 (approximately £640 and £1,281 respectively). For tourists, fines start at €100 (£85) but can climb up to €750 (£640). Presumably, this will depend on the number of illegal goods being purchased.
"In one case, eleven sunglasses were seized from the seller as evidence of illegal vending, while the purchaser was fined for 'making a purchase from an unlicensed street vendor on the public way'," the publication states - citing a recent police report. "This doesn't say if the person fined was a tourist or a resident."
It is believed the Official Bulletin of the Balearic Islands regularly publishes pages with a list of offenders. However, many street vendors have no known address, which has cast the effectiveness of the steep fines into doubt.
The announcement comes just days after Palma has also unveiled ambitious plans to cut down the number of sunbeds on its beaches by a whopping 1,700 by next year. As previously reported, the city's council has allegedly green-lighted plans to reduce sun loungers by 20 per cent by 2026, citing both over-tourism and rising levels.
"There has been a loss of sand on the beaches, and we couldn't maintain the same number of sunbeds and umbrellas - and this has coincided with complaints from residents who feel they have less space," a spokesperson for the Department of Home Affairs of the Balearic Islands reportedly said. "The mayor [Jaime Martínez] is aware that the majority of residents don't use the sun bed service, so we decided to implement this redistribution."
The Local Es, a Spanish news site, claims this will impact several popular stretches of coastline, and will see Platja de Palma go from 6,000 sunbeds down to 4,436. The publication says Cala Major beach will go from 300 to 250 sunbeds, while Cala Estància will also have 18 fewer sunbeds by next year.

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