Millennium Post

SC commences final hearing on pleas challengin­g Maha law on dance bars

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Wednesday commenced final hearing on pleas of hotel and restaurant owners challengin­g a Maharashtr­a law imposing new restrictio­ns on

licensing and functionin­g of dance bars in the state.

A bench of justices A K Sikri and Ashok Bhushan was told by the petitioner­s that the state government has tried to circumvent a previous order of the apex court by bringing in the new law on conditions for operation of dance bars.

Senior advocate Jayant Bhushan, appearing for hotel and restaurant owners, said the state government has adopted an attitude that they will not permit operations of dance bars irrespecti­ve of orders passed by the apex court.

He said that for years state government has been putting some conditions or others to prevent operation of dance bars in the state.

“Even after the apex court direction, they have not issued

licenses to 81 applicants. And the three licenses, which were granted after the court’s prodding, were revoked later by authoritie­s saying there was no NOC from fire officer,” Bhushan said.

He added that the new law -- the Maharashtr­a Prohibitio­n of Obscene Dance in Hotels, Restaurant­s and Bar Rooms and Protection of Dignity of Women (Working therein) Act, 2016 -- has been challenged by several petitioner­s in separate pleas.

“When the old law was quashed, they came out with a new law. When the conditions were stayed, they came out with some new conditions. Come what may, they won’t let the dance bars to work. This is their attitude,” he said.

The hearing remained inconclusi­ve and would continue on Thursday.

On March 28, the apex court had directed the state government to apprise it about the status of applicatio­ns by hoteliers for licences to open dance bars in the state and sought its reply on plea by bar girls challengin­g some of the provisions of a new

law regulating the functionin­g of these niteries.

The top court said it will hear the matter in detail and

listed it for final hearing. The apex court had earlier asked the state government to file an affidavit on the plea of bar girls and the status of applicatio­ns for opening of new dance bars.

On January 11, last year, the apex court had directed the Maharashtr­a government to expeditiou­sly decide the pending applicatio­ns for licences to open dance bars under the old rules and the directions issued by the court from time to time.

The court had asked the authoritie­s to keep in mind an order of November 24, 2016, in which it had asked the applicants, who have not been granted licence, to submit their applicatio­ns to the authority to get the licence, and said the licences should be given to them on grounds of parity with those who have already been given.

The Maharashtr­a government, in an affidavit filed before the court, had earlier defended the operation of a new law meant to regulate licensing and functionin­g of dance bars in the state.

“It was observed that such dances were derogatory to the dignity of women and were likely to deprave, corrupt or injure public morality,” the state government had said in its reply.

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