Brit holiday rep reveals what REALLY happens at the notoriously wild Sunny Beach party resort in Bulgaria
John Magilton, 23, from Swansea, worked two summer seasons in Sunny Beach, Bulgaria, in 2015 and 2016 and described mass nudity, public brawls and crazy drunken excess
A BRIT who worked at Bulgarian boozy Brit hotspot Sunny Beach has exposed the unbelievably wild antics he witnessed over two summers there.
John Magilton, 23, from Swansea, worked two summer seasons as a club promoter in 2015 and 2016 and described mass nudity, public brawls and crazy drunken excess.
He told : "I’ve seen people falling asleep inside clubs and in weird places, as well as breaking or spraining their ankles, or cutting their feet with glass all the time from walking through the streets with no shoes on.
"You can also dance naked on the bar so sometimes you will get people who are naked falling off, which was quite strange, but it was part of the club I worked for.
"Girls and boys would be naked, they do say as part of their slogan ‘the only place where you are allowed to dance naked on the bar’ - it’s different.
"One minute you would be dancing and the next thing you would look up and there would be someone there naked."
But party-loving Brits banking on a Bulgarian bender for their summer holidays are in for a shock as the country cracks down on public drunkenness.
A leading international DJ festival has been cancelled after the government began a "war on noise" that also saw nightclubs raided.
Bulgaria's deputy prime minister, Valeri Simeonov, led police on a raid of two nightclubs in Sunny Beach.
One DJ was arrested and his sound equipment was seized amid claims the clubs had broken sound regulations.
Internet videos later showed Simeonov in action as the cops were subjected to a barrage of boos from the crowd.
Last year 281,000 Brits visited the country with many of them heading to the Black Sea's answer to Magaluf.
Half a litre of beer can be bought for less than a pound in the resort and a couple can dine out with a bottle of wine for as little as £20.
Mr Simeonov said on Facebook: “In our country there is lawlessness and bacchanalia — we will change it!
“We will attract more solvent tourists, and we will have a better quality of tourism!”
Yesterday the organisers of Sunny Beach's Solar Summer 2017 Festival scrapped the event amid fear of the crackdown disrupting it.
In the past the event has attracted big names like Fatboy Slim and Pete Tong.
Organiser Ivan Donchev said: “We never imagined a situation in which the world’s top artists may be stopped and the equipment confiscated.
“In the times of social networks, the news will spread like lightning around the world, and will have a very negative impact on the image of both Bulgaria and us as organisers.”
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