Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Dry Bihar risks lives for its daily fix

The death of four people after drinking hooch in Rohtas district shows the challenges faced by the state govt in curbing the smuggling of foreign and Indianmade liquor

- Arun Kumar and Avinash Kumar letters@hindustant­imes.com

A dry Bihar is a desperate Bihar, willing to risk life for a daily fix of liquor.

The death of four people in the state’s Rohtas district on Saturday after drinking illicit alcohol once again highlights the challenge the Nitish Kumar government faces in stemming the flow of liquor. The sale of was first banned on April 1, 2016, and the government enforced a fresh law on October 2 that year after the Patna high court struck down the previous version.

Eighteen months, 90,000 arrests, 77,000 FIRs, and nearly 500,000 raids later, Bihar is far from liquor-free. For the record, 95% of the arrested people are out on bail.

The Rohtas hooch tragedy is the second since the ban on sale and consumptio­n of liquor kicked in. Eighteen people had died in Gopalganj in August 2016.

The two tragedies have blown the lid off the parallel economy that thrives in a state where smuggling of foreign and Indian-made liquor is rampant.

When Kumar banned liquor in Bihar he was fulfilling a poll promise he made to women, who have believed to have voted for him in large numbers. Since then he has changed political partners but remains steadfast in his support to the liquor ban.

Every day innovative ways are being found to get around the ban, called draconian by critics, which included the BJP, but that was before Kumar joined hands with it.

Former ally and Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad says prohibitio­n is a big failure. “Liquor is home delivered. Those who can afford it, get it at their doorsteps. Those who can’t turn to spurious liquor,” he said on Sunday.

Bihar home secretary Amir Subhani, who is in charge of the department of excise and prohibitio­n, told HT that police and excise officials were going after those flouting the ban. “We are trying our best but criminals will always try to commit a crime. Our job is to catch them,” he said, denying liquor smuggling had gone up.

INNOVATIVE WAYS

When there is demand, there is supply. And bootlegger­s are coming up with new tricks to keep the booze flowing. It is worth the money — a liquor bottle command three to four times the price it costs in the neighbouri­ng states.

Chassis of scooters, leather padding in cars, and covers of spare wheels — liquor bottles have been recovered from everywhere. Police have also seized white alcohol-filled jerrycans from trains. These are usually used for carrying water from the Ganga considered holy by Hindus.

Liquor has been found inside cooking gas cylinders with a specially designed detachable base or hidden in trucks along with grocery items.

“There are specially designed boxes attached to a trucks underbelly to carry liquor. We found liquor in refrigerat­or consignmen­ts. Bottles were hidden in shelves inside the packages,” said a police officer.

Bootlegger­s have even hidden liquor stocks in ponds, wells, ditches and even toilets, he said. The contraband is shipped in parcel vans of trains, including the premier Rajdhani Express.

HOME DELIVERY

Liquor is readily available, provided you are willing to pay a price.

“It is delivered right at the doorstep by unsuspecti­ng kids and women, who are paid ₹300-₹400 an assignment for the risk involved,” said a Patna-based man, a regular of the home-delivery facility.

In some towns, chemists take orders, but only from trusted clients. “Dawai milega (is the medicine available)?” is the code, which keeps changing to stay ahead of the authoritie­s.

“First, the home address is confirmed. Then the delivery is made so that there is minimum risk and no trap. No stranger is entertaine­d,” said another buyer, adding there is no bargaining.

Patna senior superinten­dent of police, Manu Maharaj, confirmed the use of couriers, mostly young boys from poor families. “We must have nabbed around 100 school and college-going students, who were found carrying liquor bottles in bags,” he said.

THOUSANDS ARRESTED

While more than 90,000 people have been arrested, police and excise officials continue to seize consignmen­ts coming from neighbouri­ng Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Haryana, and West Bengal.

“Nobody has data about how much liquor sneaks into the state. Anything that comes to our knowledge is acted upon,” said Subhani.

During a review on the first anniversar­y of the prohibitio­n, the chief minister admitted that stopping the smuggling from other states was a challenge and asked officials to get tough.

Police acted against its own men to make prohibitio­n a success. Twentythre­e policemen were sacked and 220 suspended for derelictio­n of duty, additional director general of police (headquarte­rs) SK Singhal said.

The law is strict and punishment harsh but getting bail is not difficult.

Courts are overworked and taking on the additional load of prohibitio­n cases is not easy.

“To tell you frankly, the law is non-implementa­ble,” senior advocate Vinod Kanth said. Slapping all kinds of charges under the Indian Penal Code and the Excise Act for carrying a bottle or downing a few pegs was strange, he said.

According to a judicial officer, the government set up special courts in each district for cases related to the liquor ban, but it isn’t effective. “They have to see regular trials as well as prohibitio­n cases, which makes it difficult,” he said.

A senior police officer admitted that the rate of conviction was very poor as arresting people for possessing liquor was easy but proving it difficult.

Social analyst Shaibal Gupta says Kumar’s caste- and class-neutral agenda might help him politicall­y but it was the social advantage of prohibitio­n that was at the root of the ban.

Kumar says the poor who used to fritter away hard-earned money on liquor were now spending it on children’s education and family.

But the Rohtas tragedy is a rude reminder that Bihar is far from kicking the bottle.

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