MADRID - Cities throughout Spain are bracing themselves this week for the biggest exhibition of mass binge drinking the country has ever seen.
Youngsters from Seville to Bilbao, from Madrid and Barcelona to Vigo and Santiago de Compostela, plan to take over the centres of more than 15 cities this Friday night in an unprecedented nation-wide drinking contest, in defiance of Spaniards' supposedly moderate "Mediterranean" drinking habits.
It is the latest, and by far the most ambitious, example of el botellon - or "big bottle" - when under-age drinkers laden with plastic bags of bottles of spirits and cola take over Spanish town centres for an all-night drinking session.
After hours of revelry, the youngsters totter off at dawn, leaving neighbours sleepless and city squares and parks awash with broken glass, discarded plastic and body fluids.
News of Fridays impromptu marathon - dubbed the macro-botellon - has spread nation-wide via internet chat forums and a blizzard of emails and text messages.
The aim of the contest is not to establish who can drink the most, but which city can mobilise the largest number of young swiggers on to the street.
The authorities are looking on aghast as the day approaches, dithering over how to deal with the unprecedented threat to public order, and public health.
Meanwhile, parents wonder why their children - some as young as 13 - choose to spend all night getting drunk on the boulevard.
Botellones have become common throughout Spain in recent years.
Youngsters complain that bars are too expensive, that they have a right to enjoy themselves, and theres nothing else for them to do.
In an effort to control the phenomenon, some regional authorities have clamped down on off-sales of alcohol to minors, and on bar sales of drinks out of doors after 10pm.
Police try to clear drinkers from residential areas with hoses, but they decamp somewhere else.
The momentum for Fridays mega-session began on 16 February when students from Seville University decided to celebrate the end of their exams with a botellon.
(The practice is particularly well entrenched in Andalusia).
They alerted their friends by the usual electronic bush telegraph, and up to 5,000 young Sevillians flocked to the university campus clinking their carrier bags.
The rival university city of Granada saw television footage of Sevilles drinking multitudes as a challenge, and within days called their own botellon for next Friday (17th).
Other cities signed up to what they called "a spring fiesta": Bilbao, Murcia, Barcelona, Huelva, Valencia, Madrid, Zaragoza, Santander, Burgos, Badajoz...
Vigo and Santiago de Compostela even held a dress rehearsal last Saturday, to ensure they could drum up sufficient numbers.
The Health Minister, Elena Salgado, has warned would-be participants that macro-botellones were a danger to their health, and urged parents to keep their teenagers at home on Friday.
A spokesman for the region of Madrid asked youngsters "to reflect on the leisure alternatives on offer to them".
City councils have warned they will not permit Fridays display, but have not specified what, if any, actions they will take.
Some have local laws imposing fines on under-age street drinkers.
But otherwise the authorities' hands are tied unless the young drinkers engage in acts of disorder - which they rarely do.
Teenage drinking is a big problem in Spain.
A national drugs survey found in 2004 that 38 per cent of 14-year-olds drank alcohol regularly.
It found that 18 per cent of those aged 18 to 25 in Madrid took part in botellones at least once a month.
In Galicia, the figure was 40 per cent, with 36 per cent of those between 12 and 18 expressing a liking for cheap booze.
Parents have demanded that local authorities offer more leisure activities.
But many acknowledge they have little control over their adolescent offspring at weekends between dusk and dawn, and fear they are creating a generation of heavy drinkers.
- INDEPENDENT
Spanish cities braced for mass binge drinking
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