Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Highway liquor ban set to hit Bengaluru’s watering holes

- Vikram Gopal

BENGALURU: The Supreme Court’s order banning the sale of liquor within 500 metres of highways is set to affect Bengaluru’s famous watering holes, as it has now emerged that the arterial MG Road and some other roads are part of national highways passing through the city.

On Friday, the state’s excise department started issuing notices to establishm­ents deemed within 500 metres of MG Road and Old Madras Road asking them to close the joints by July 1.

This has earned the ire of restaurant and pub owners in the central business district areas as about 140 such establishm­ents are set to be affected near MG Road alone.

“We have received a notice asking us to stop serving alcohol,” said Srinivas Gowda, manager of Pecos, which has long been one of Bengaluru’s iconic pubs.

“This establishm­ent has been here for about 29 years now and we are famous as a place to enjoy beer... How can we suddenly change to being an eatery,” Gowda said.

In fact, Pecos had become so successful that the owners opened two other joints nearby and another joint in Indiranaga­r, which too has been deemed to be close to a national highway.

Owners of liquor stores, bars and pubs feel let down especially because the state reclassifi­ed stretches of state highways passing through urban local bodies as urban roads.

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