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The Royal Caribbean Sea Symphony during its presentation in Malaga, Spain, earlier this year (2018).
The Royal Caribbean Sea Symphony during its presentation in Malaga, Spain, earlier this year (2018).
Photo: Daniel Perez Garcia-Santos / Getty Images
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A man rides a pool aboard the Royal Caribbean Symphony of the Seas.
A man rides a pool aboard the Royal Caribbean Symphony of the Seas.
Photo: Jorge Guerrero / AFP / Getty Images
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A woman slides along a zip line aboard the Royal Caribbean Symphony of the Seas.
A woman slides along a zip line aboard the Royal Caribbean Symphony of the Seas.
Photo: Jorge Guerrero / AFP / Getty Images
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An image shows a playground aboard the Royal Caribbean Symphony of the Seas during its presentation in Malaga on March 27, 2018.
An image shows a playground aboard the Royal Caribbean Symphony of the Seas during its presentation in Malaga on March 27, 2018.
Photo: Jorge Guerrero / AFP / Getty Images
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A photo shows the Royal Caribbean Sea Symphony during its presentation in Malaga on March 27, 2018.
A photo shows the Royal Caribbean Sea Symphony during its presentation in Malaga on March 27, 2018.
Photo: Jorge Guerrero / AFP / Getty Images
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Slot machines in the cruise ship casino Symphony of the Seas.
Slot machines in the cruise ship casino Symphony of the Seas.
Photo: LOIC VENANCE / AFP / Getty Images
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The Royal Caribbean International cruise ship, Explorer of the Seas, is lit by the sunrise as it passes the New London Ledge Lighthouse in Groton, Connecticut, in the 2007 photo.
The Royal Caribbean International cruise ship, Explorer of the Seas, is lit by the sunrise as it passes the New London Ledge Lighthouse in Groton, Connecticut, in the 2007 photo.
Photo: Tim Cook, AP
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Photo: Daniel Perez Garcia-Santos / Getty Images
The Royal Caribbean Sea Symphony during its presentation in Malaga, Spain, earlier this year (2018).
The Royal Caribbean Sea Symphony during its presentation in Malaga, Spain, earlier this year (2018).
Photo: Daniel Perez Garcia-Santos / Getty Images
Bawdy, 1,300 men & # 39; bachelor party boy & # 39; take the cruise ship
Last month, more than a thousand men went wild on a cruise ship after bringing burlesque dancers on board for a series of poolside parties, Newsweek announced.
The cruise from Sydney was presented as a family adventure, but it looked more like the bacchanalia on a boat – a huge floating deer party.
Voyager of the Seas' mostly Australian passengers complained that the men – 1,300 workers of an Indian tobacco company who came on board for a conference – had blocked the decks of the pool, the bars and the main buffet.
Some of the lightly dressed dancers would have worn Playboy Bunny costumes as they swayed and turned to music. Empty groups chased families into the interior, but some passengers seemed more interested in the shows than in the activities allowed by the cruises.
For example, bingo – a favorite of cruises – was canceled due to lack of interest.
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Royal Caribbean International, which operates the ship, said the passengers would receive a full refund, news.com reported. It was not clear if the holiday workers would also be reimbursed.
"It was almost like a huge dollar [bachelor] Cassandra Riini, a Sydney passenger, told Australia's A Current Affair network of Australia's Nine Network.
"Their doors would be open and you would pass by and look like I'm going to look when I pass that door?" It's hard to forget after seeing all the flashbacks of these men all the time, 24 hours a day, as if we could not escape. "
The young girls of some passengers and their friends reported being harassed by the men, who filmed them on their mobile phones.
Indian company Kamla Pasand manufactures gutka, a mixture of crushed Areca nuts, tobacco, catechu and other substances that, when mixed with saliva, can give the user a more intense sensation than chewing tobacco or smoking.