According to El Pais, the man made the angsty remarks on the Facebook page belonging to Guimar town mayor Carmen Luisa Dorta. He chastised the city council’s plans to build new police facility, noting that it expected to be bigger than Spain’s Civil Guard Headquarters. He pointed out that such plans would be worthless, as all that police officers do is “rescu[e] pigeons and people trapped in their bathrooms.”
.@EuranetPlus: Franco would be proud of Spain’s new #GagLaw, the EU, not so much http://t.co/wtwFtqhIQz #Múltame pic.twitter.com/zFJKtdbPvJ
— Liz Castro (@lizcastro) 28 июля 2015
After the comments were posted, Eduardo D was visited by policemen who said that he had made “comments on social media that showed a lack of respect and consideration for Güímar’s local police” and ordered him to pay a fine, according to the Local.
Spain’s new legislation, which critics complain allows officials to strictly punish and even deport people without any legal process, was described by UN human rights experts as “unnecessarily and disproportionately restrict[ing] basic freedoms.”
The success of left-wing groups in municipal elections in June has led to the implementation of several controversial new laws, including one that aims to treat animals in towns across the country as “non-human residents,” and one that creates a “Ministry of truth” in Spain’s capital, according to the Independent.