Mayor says don't air your pants in public
Having spent more than my fair share of time walking the streets of Nicosia's Old Town, I can vouch for the mayor's assessment, although I don't recall ever have been dripped on by someone's drying underwear.
NICOSIA (Reuters) - Drying wet laundry in public will earn residents of Cyprus' capital Nicosia a fine later this year as authorities launch a drive to clean up the city's image, its mayor has said.
The unseemly sight of underwear flapping in the breeze along narrow streets of the medieval city will be punishable with a 50 Cyprus pound (52 pound) fine as of October 1.
"Imagine walking along a road and having wet washing drip all over you... from someone else's underwear," Nicosia Mayor Michalakis Zampelas told Cyprus radio on Tuesday.
In a country which has almost uninterrupted sunshine all year round, most Cypriots hang their washing outside to dry.
Washing wardens will also be responsible for ensuring householders don't beat their carpets or rugs over balconies or throw laundry water into the streets, Zampelas said.
Hey, it could be worse. When I lived in Kosovo, Serbs would throw their garbage over their balconies at Albanians walking on the street below. Given a choice, I'd take the drying underwear any day.