The Asian Age

LOBBY USES POLITICIAN­S TO ARMTWIST POLICE

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Liquor lobbies often unleash immense pressure on Karnataka’s enforcemen­t machinery, especially in rural areas, to get away with their illegal businesses.

The lobbies use their political masters to armtwist the police against acting on tip- offs about the illegal sale of spurious liquor at provision stores and dhabas in villages and on highways.

Take Doddaballa­pura taluk, where the police says it is constantly under pressure not to act against the rampant sale of spurious liquor in 134 of the 154 villages in Madura, Sasalu and Belavangal­a. Although many of the villages’ small hotels, restaurant­s, provision stores, petty shops and dhabas sell this liquor illegally, the police finds it hard to crack down on them.

Says one police officer, “The taluk has over 65 bars and restaurant­s, besides wine shops. We have credible informatio­n that at least three cases of cheap liquor are dispatched to each of them on a regular basis. We have conducted raids on several provision stores, dhabas and even some houses and recovered liquor costing a mere ` 20 to 30 per packet. But after the raids we started getting calls from the local MLA’s office inviting us for ‘ peace talks’. We later got to know that the MLA’s brother was an office- bearer of the Wine Merchants’ Associatio­n and the MLA himself has a stake in the bar and restaurant and wine shop businesses in the taluk.”

Even worse, the MLA and his men made veiled threats to the police officers who conducted the raids, he reveals.

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