India’s top court has ordered all liquor shops to shut down along state and national highways in an attempt to reduce drink driving and road accidents.
The court told the government to stop issuing new licenses and not renew the existing ones after 31 March.More than 146,000 people died last year in traffic accidents in the country.
About 5% – or 6,755 – deaths were due to cases where the driver was either drunk or had taken drugs.
Can India really halve its road deaths?
India crashes kill 146,133 in 2015
What Al Capone can teach India about prohibition”
(There should be) no liquor vends on national and state highways,” news agency AFP quoted Chief Justice TS Thakur, who headed the three-judge bench, as saying in his order on Thursday.The court also said that all liquor advertisements should be removed from the highways and shops selling alcohol must be located at least 500 metres (1,640 feet) away from them.
Campaigners say the large number of liquor shops located along the highways are “a great temptation and a distraction for road users”.
Alcohol is banned in four Indian states (Gujarat, Bihar, Manipur, Nagaland) and the union territory of Lakshadweep. There’s a partial ban on sale of alcohol in the south Indian state of Kerala.
Source: India court bans liquor shops on highways – BBC News







