Desperate consumers throng liquor outlets

April 03, 2017 07:54 am | Updated November 11, 2017 12:18 pm IST

Kozhikode, Kerala, 02/04/2017: Heavy turnout was visible even hours before the opening of a Bevco outlet along Mavoor road as court verdict resulted in the closure of several other liquor shops located close to the national and State Highways, in Kozhikode district. by K_Ragesh
 Kozhikode, Kerala, 02/04/2017: Heavy turnout was visible even hours before the opening of a Bevco outlet along Mavoor road as court verdict resulted in the closure of several other liquor shops located close to the national and State Highways, in Kozhikode district. by K_Ragesh
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Kozhikode, Kerala, 02/04/2017: Heavy turnout was visible even hours before the opening of a Bevco outlet along Mavoor road as court verdict resulted in the closure of several other liquor shops located close to the national and State Highways, in Kozhikode district. by K_Ragesh Kozhikode, Kerala, 02/04/2017: Heavy turnout was visible even hours before the opening of a Bevco outlet along Mavoor road as court verdict resulted in the closure of several other liquor shops located close to the national and State Highways, in Kozhikode district. by K_Ragesh -

Thiruvananthapuram:

Consumers were pushed from pillar to post to legally purchase liquor on Sunday.

Resigning themselves to a long wait, hundreds had queued up outside the few remaining liquor shops in the State from 8 a.m.

Resentment brewed when they realised that the shops would open late on account of financial year end stock taking. Many left the queues to try their luck at other far flung outlets only to find the scene was the same everywhere.

The unforgiving sun, kilometre long lines, queue jumping, frayed tempers and traffic blocks did not help matters.

The simmering antipathy against the Government was palpable in the long queues.

R. Sivaraman, a resident of Pettah, blamed the State “for not giving even a passing thought to the plight of the public” in view of the SC order.

Others felt the mandarins in Government treated consumers as milch cows and drinkers as the dirt of society.

They asked why the Government had not anticipated the closure and made remedial measures to protect consumers. Some felt that the Government was lackadaisical in highlighting the State’s interest in the Supreme Court (SC).

Black-marketeers seemed to have anticipated the fallout of the closure of liquor outlets better. In many cities they stepped in to fill the yawning gap between demand and supply.

Deprived of legal liquor, the public paid twice the price for bootleg (contraband smuggled from other States or sourced from ex-servicemen). Illegal hoarders also made a killing charging double rate for legal liquor. Orders were placed on mobile phones and the liquor delivered to homes and hotel rooms.

Many hotels, desperate to retain clients, unlawfully allowed patrons corkage in rooms. Private members clubs, were not keen on insisting that benefactors follow liquor laws in their premises. A 5-star bar hotel in the district sold liquor as unopened bottles at reduced rates. Another offered reduced “happy hour rates” for alcohol.

EOM / G ANAND

Highlights

De-notification of State Highways to preserve shops not on Governmet agenda: Excise Minister G. Sudhakaran

State to seek more time for implementation in Supreme Court

Legal opinion sought on ways to cushion the impact of SC verdict

Government wary of inflow of spurious liquor

Special drives ordered

EOM / G ANAND

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