Protesters have vandalised a Majorcan palace thought to have been bought by Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary.
Graffiti reading ‘f*** Ryan Air CEO’ has appeared on the side of a mansion in Palma’s Old Town after local papers reported it was snapped up by the controversial tycoon.
One message in large block capitals says: ‘Solidarity with Ryanair workers’ and another underneath says: ‘Michael O’Leary. You’re not Welcome.’
Protesters have vandalised a Majorcan palace thought to have been bought by Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary

Graffiti reading ‘f*** Ryan Air CEO’ has appeared on the side of a mansion in Palma’s Old Town after local papers reported it was snapped up by the controversial tycoon
Spanish papers claimed last month controversial entrepreneur Mr O’Leary had splashed out more than £9million on the Baroque palace boasting three patios and a palm-fringed garden.
One said the Majorcan buyers had put it on the market for £16million but sold to O’Leary through a company he created in March at a knock-down price.
The reports emerged ahead of the first strikes by Ryanair workers.
More walkouts expected to affect thousands of holidaymakers are due to take place on Friday.

Spanish papers claimed last month controversial entrepreneur Mr O’Leary (pictured) had splashed out more than £9million on the Baroque palace
Property records indicate a well-known Irish businessman – not Michael O’Leary – is the new owner of the Palma property.
A Ryanair spokesman said: ‘We don’t comment on Michael’s personal affairs.’
Vandals daubed buildings in the Majorcan capital Palma including a four-star hotel with anti-tourist messages in April 2016.
One on the four-star Palma Suites Aparthotel in Palma old town, written in English like most of the others, said: ‘Tourist Go Home. Refugees Welcome.’
Others carrying the same message had been daubed on walls and waste paper bins in the same area including one on a private tourism school.
‘Guiris Go Home’, the slang word the Spanish use to describe British and other northern European holidaymakers, and the more threatening slogan ‘Tourists, You Are the Terrorist.’ also left visitors with a sour taste in their mouths.

Ryanair has cancelled one in six of its flights for Friday as pilots in Germany, Ireland, Sweden and Belgium get ready to hold a 24-hour strike
More graffiti was daubed around Palma last summer.
Ryanair has cancelled one in six of its flights for Friday, with pilots in Germany, Ireland, Sweden and Belgium set to hold a 24-hour strike at the height of the holiday season.
The Irish airline had already cancelled 146 flights for Friday as a result of stoppages planned in Ireland, Sweden and Belgium.
But with German pilots also opting to walk out, a further 250 services have also been axed taking the total to just under 400 flights, or about 17 per cent of the more than 2,400 flights it has scheduled across Europe for that day.
Although a full list of the cancelled flights has not yet been confirmed, it is believed that services from UK airports including East Midlands, Glasgow, Manchester and Stansted have been affected.
Meanwhile the Dutch pilots’ union VNV is also considering calling a strike on Friday, but has not yet decided, a spokesman said.

Ryanair pilots in the Forsa union form a picket line outside the airline’s headquarters in Swords, County Dublin, during a strike last month
Ryanair is going to court on Thursday to prevent the Dutch pilots from striking over the summer, the union and the airline said.
The walkout by pilots based in Germany will start at 0101 GMT on Friday, the Vereinigung Cockpit (VC) union said in a statement.
Ryanair operates more than 2,000 flights a day, serving 223 airports across 37 countries in Europe and North Africa.
Its low-cost model makes it Europe’s most profitable airline, and executives say they do not want to change that.