Army to investigate images of armed soldiers drinking beer in Catalan town

Spanish Legion confirms incident in Catalan city that went viral on social media and insists weapons were not loaded

The weapons being with the soldiers while drinking has sparked controversy (from Twitter)
The weapons being with the soldiers while drinking has sparked controversy (from Twitter) / ACN

ACN | Barcelona

September 30, 2019 12:04 PM

A group of Spanish soldiers in uniform shopping in a supermarket and enjoying a drink at a sidewalk café in the town center of Vilafranca del Penedès with their weapons on the ground beside them is an image that went viral on social media over the weekend. 

Sources in the armed forces confirmed that the group of soldiers belong to the Spanish Legion, the equivalent of the French Foreign Legion, who were returning from a training operation in northern France.
The army, which says it will open an investigation into the incident, said the soldiers were returning to Malaga by bus, which stopped in order to change drivers in Vilafranca, the capital of Catalonia's winegrowing Penedès region south of Barcelona.

What caused so much attention about the images is that the soldiers are seen drinking beer and carrying their weapons with them. However, the armed forces said that in such cases they ensure that the weapons are never loaded.

However, that explanation did not satisfy the local authorities in Vilafranca, which have demanded explanations. Meanwhile, the leftwing Esquerra Republicana and CUP parties reacted by demanding that the Spanish armed forces leave Catalonia.

Yet, the unionist Ciutadans party insisted that the army "should not have to ask permission to go where it wants in its own country," referring to the incident as "normal" and expressing surprise that it should cause such "hysteria."

When the images first appeared online, rumors quickly spread that the group were not real soldiers, but rather a bachelor party dressed up in uniform and carrying airsoft or paintball weapons. However, the statements by the Legion later confirmed the group as soldiers.