The councilor spokesperson for the Valencia City Council, Juan Carlos Caballero, confirmed this Friday that the council is reviewing the Malaga ordinance, which will prohibit sexual elements or the use of underwear at bachelor parties held in the middle of the street. The councilor assured this morning at a press conference that they are already working to adapt the Malaga regulations in “those important issues that can prevent the disturbance of residents in major scandals that occur in public spaces.”
Gentleman did not want to advance the measures, but he did acknowledge that they are reviewing the issues that they consider important in their ordinance. He has also assured that they will seek consensus and listening to the neighbors to carry out this ordinance.
The Malaga City Council took the last step this Thursday after several months of processing a rule that aims to put a stop to bachelor parties in the city, prohibiting going naked on the street or carrying articles of a sexual nature, violations that from now on They may be sanctioned with fines of up to 750 euros.
The council has already definitively approved the modification of the Ordinance for the Guarantee of Citizen Coexistence and Protection of Urban Space, once all claims and suggestions presented within the established deadline have been resolved.
The rule, which has received the green light from the Commission on Social Rights and Citizen Participation, contemplates the prohibition, unless authorized, of “traveling or remaining on the road or public spaces without clothing or only in underwear; with clothing or accessories that represent the genitals of the human being, and with dolls or elements of a sexual nature”.
The Malaga council justifies the modification of this ordinance due to the proliferation, in recent years, of certain behaviors linked mostly to private celebrations, as is the case of bachelor and bachelorette parties, with the exclusive use of underwear or erotic content in public spaces. The objective of the municipal government is to have a new regulation that allows “preserving public space as a place of meeting, coexistence and civility.”