Lewd adult antics at a notorious ‘sex beach’ have upset Bryon Bay locals
Despite extra cops and thousands being spent on CCTV, locals say a picturesque beach is still attracting hordes of lewd ‘sex pests’.
For the third time in three months, a NSW council has voted to keep one of its most beautiful beaches clothing optional despite it becoming infamous for being a “sex pest hot spot”.
Police have tried for years to crack down on adult antics along the stretch of Byron Bay’s coastline that includes Tyagarah Beach, following frequent reports of lewd behaviour, public sex and masturbation.
But locals say the only answer is to change the rules and make it illegal to be nude there.
Byron Shire Council upheld Tyagarah Beach’s “clothes optional” status yesterday but did pass a resolution to install $10,000 worth of close-circuit security cameras at the car park as a preventive measure.
Before installing the cameras, the council will liaise with local police regarding their position.
Councillor Alan Hunter put forward the CCTV camera idea despite privacy concerns from some nudists.
He said it was a good step forward to “cleaning up the beach” and anyone who didn’t want to be captured on camera shouldn’t be there.
“It’s about making the beach more transparent and making people more accountable,” Mr Hunter told the AAP.
“People just can’t hide in the bushes and think they can get away with it.”
In September, dozens of naturists protested to keep Tyagarah Beach permanently nudist. The “clothing optional” stretch is the last remaining of its kind in northern NSW.
The protesters, from Byron Naturists Group, staged the Nude Not Lewd Rally on September 16.
On Australia Day, a couple were caught having sex just metres away from the “clothing optional” part of Tyagarah Beach and six months before that, a woman was sexually assaulted in a nearby spot.
The beach has a reputation for being “creepy”, with at least one Google reviewer slamming how people behave and giving Tyagarah a one-star rating.
“A beautiful place, but it can be quite creepy at times with naked men touching themselves. I suggest come in the morning,” he wrote.
Colleen Graham, a local who lives in Tyagarah, told the ABC in September last year she doesn’t go to the beach or nature reserve anymore.
“I’ve had a range of encounters. The most common one is lying on my towel reading a book and a naked man moving his towel very close to me and masturbating,” she told the publication.
“I’ve also seen oral sex, group sex, I’ve had a man physically block my way, men standing really close to my face when I’m on a towel, totally naked and trying to interact with me.
“Pretty much every time I visit the beach, especially if it’s a busy period on the weekend, in the middle of the day, I can almost guarantee I’ll have some sort of experience down at the beach.”
Members of the Tyagarah Community Association, who have been campaigning for months to revoke the beach’s status, are devastated they lost the fight again.
“We are left feeling incredulous that public safety has again been dismissed by councillors,” spokesman Richard Burford said in a statement.
“We cannot believe it. Anywhere else this would not happen. We are just very sad.”
Mr Burford told the AAP the “clothes optional” part of the beach had become a “sex pest hot spot”.
“Unfortunately, nude beaches attract these sorts of people, sex pests, perverts and (people from) sex destination websites,” he said.
The council previously upheld the beach’s “clothes optional” status in October and November.
— With wires