Highway Liquor Ban: Supreme Court Reduces Area To 220 Metres For Areas With 20,000 Population

The Supreme Court's ban on highway liquor vends will come into effect from April 1 covering shops, restaurants and bars that serve alcohol and fall within a 500 metres distance from state and national highways. However, for areas with a population of 20,000, this distance has been reduced to 220 metres

PTI | April 07, 2017 9:19 AM | News

New Delhi: The Supreme Court modified today its order banning liquor vends within 500 metres on national and state highways, reducing the distance to 220 metres in areas having a population of up to 20,000. A bench headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar, however, made it clear that its December 15, 2016 order banning such vends within 500 metres of highways shall remain operative for areas other than specified in today’s order.

The bench, also comprising Justices D.Y. Chandrachud and L.N. Rao, said that the verdict was given keeping in mind road accidents owing to drink driving.

Also Read: Meet The Man Behind The Ban On Highway Liquor Shops

It clarified that licences given to liquor vendors prior to the December 15 judgement would be valid up to September 30 this year.

The other liquor vends will have to be shut down from tomorrow (April 1) as per the December 15 judgement.

The 220-metre criterion for allowing liquor vends along highways will also be made applicable to hill states like Sikkim, Meghalaya and Himachal Pradesh.

The apex court’s decision came on pleas seeking a relook at its verdict banning liquor vends within 500 metres of national and state highways from April 1 with Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi having said that the judgement needs rectification as the “budget of the states will go for a six”.