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British tourists who go topless in France this summer risk being fined as cities bring in regulations designed to protect public decency.
Perpignan, near the Spanish border in the Pyrénées-Orientales department, has become the latest city to introduce new regulations to ban bare chests.
Cavaillon, a town in Provence, brought in similar measures earlier this summer.
Those caught out by the regulations can be fined up to €38 (£31).
Such sanctions are not uncommon in seaside resorts – Cote D’Azur locations such as Cannes and St Tropez have long enforced a ban on shirtless men and women wearing bikinis, if they are walking around the town rather than lying on the beach.
But the actions of Perpignan and Cavaillon mark a shift – as inland cities also start to take a stand against semi-nudity in public.
“We’re not saying there has been a general moral decline,” Pierre Parrat, Perpignan’s head of security told Montpellier-based newspaper Midi Libre. “But some people have complained.
Mr Parrat referred to a recent rugby match in Perpignan where English supporters were bare-chested.
“This is one of the key principles of public life, which has been a little forgotten,” commented Jean-Marc Pujol, the city’s mayor. “This is about education. People have the freedom to wear what they want, but respect for others is also important.”
However, while the fines – which apply to men and women – could theoretically be applied in any case of semi-nudity, in reality they will only be imposed if the offenders refuse to cover up once spoken to by police.
Perpignan’s anti-toplessness law is also a temporary measure, and will only be in force between August 1st and September 30th.
source: dailymail
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