Liquor Shops Go Off Highways Today; SC Order Exempts Himachal, Sikkim
Liquor Shops Go Off Highways Today; SC Order Exempts Himachal, Sikkim
Liquor vends within 500 metres of national and state highways will have to shut down on Saturday, following the Supreme Court, which exempt hill states of Sikkim, Meghalaya and Himachal Pradesh and areas having population up to 20,000.

New Delhi: Liquor vends within 500 metres of national and state highways will have to shut down on Saturday, following the Supreme Court order, which exempt hill states of Sikkim, Meghalaya and Himachal Pradesh and areas having population up to 20,000.

In a significant order passed on pleas of various states seeking modification of the court's December 15, 2016 verdict, a bench headed by Chief Justice JS Khehar also made it clear that the judgment banning liquor vends along highways would also be applicable to bars, pubs and restaurants as drunken driving leads to fatal road accidents.

The bench, also comprising justices DY Chandrachud and L Nageswara Rao, said that "it is suitably modifying" its December 15 verdict as there has been "some substance" in seeking the relief and exempted Sikkim and Meghalaya from the 500-metre cap on liquor vends alongside highways.

It further modified the 500-metre cap rule for Himachal Pradesh and local areas which are alongside highways with a population up to 20,000, and said that they may have liquor vends at a distance of 220 metres from the highways.

The court, however, did not give relief to Tamil Nadu, represented by Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi, from the 500-metre criteria.

The bench said that the court's direction that no licences for liquor vends on highways would be renewed after March 31 would remain effective for rest of the country.

Rohatgi had said national highways and state highways cannot be compared and what can be considered for the former cannot be considered for the latter.

Besides some liquor vendors' associations, states like Kerala, Punjab and Telangana had approached the apex court seeking modification of the judgment.

The court had ordered a ban on all liquor shops along the national as well as the state highways and had made it clear that licences of existing shops will not be renewed after March 31.

The verdict had come on a PIL alleging that nearly 1.42 lakh people died per year in road accident and that the drunken driving is a major contributor.

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