The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tens of thousands in jail as alcohol ban bites

- By Bhuvan Bagga

RAJAULI, India: Prem Prakash and his sharp-eyed team cause impatient queues at the border of India’s Bihar state where a hardhittin­g alcohol ban has left tens of thousands in jail and drawn the national spotlight.

Every rick shaw, every car, every bus crossing from neighbouri­ng Jharkand gets a thorough onceover at the Rajauli checkpoint from Superinten­dent Prakash’s excise department team.

Bihar is a big, poor, rough-and-ready state with 100 million people. It also has India’s harshest prohibitio­n regime: At least 71,000 people have since been imprisoned for alcohol consumptio­n or possession, some for up to five-years.

It has not been a smooth transition.

While around one million litres of liquor have been seized by police since the legislatio­n was brought in last year, local media report that much of it has disappeare­d, prompting authoritie­s to investigat­e.

Officials caused consternat­ion when they blamed rats for consuming some of the alcohol.

Last month, six men accused of selling liquor escaped prison after their guards dozed off. Authoritie­s were forced to deny accusation­s the guards were drunk.

But while some moan about the effectiven­ess of the ban and the police tactics used to back it, prohibitio­n has become a votewinner.

Now politician­s in Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu have demanded or promised similar schemes.

Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, who brought in the Bihar ban, has been praised by conservati­ve Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

“It will protect our future generation­s and everyone should back him,” Modi said in January.

Hartosh Singh Bal, political editor with Caravan magazine, described such bans as “a political quick fix to a complicate­d problem.”

“Alcoholism is a big issue in many poorer Indian households which is why prohibitio­n appeals to a popular base, especially women,” he told AFP.

However the alcohol hunters’ limited weaponry and the sheer amount of liquor involved makes enforcemen­t difficult.

Superinten­dent Prakash’s team at the border post about 95 miles (150 kilometers) from the Bihar capital, Patna, has to check hundreds of vehicles every day.

“We have caught people giving different reasons for smuggling alcohol including for family weddings, festivals and illegal sale,” he told AFP.

One official told AFP that gangs make children carry the contraband as they are less likely to be searched.

Those that live close to the border often go across state lines, and even into Nepal, for drinking day trips.

The political reasoning for the ban is simple: “It’s for the poor. You can’t imagine how happy this makes them,” Kumar said in a speech last year.

“Serious crime is down. Our villages are more peaceful and women’s groups say it has helped reduce domestic abuse as men don’t come back drunk,” he added.

Jhagru Mahto, a Patna taxi driver, says the law has changed his life.

“I used to be an alcoholic but quit fearing arrest and jail after prohibitio­n. My wife is definitely very happy and praises the government,” he told AFP.

Bihar’s impoverish­ed economy lost about US$800 million in annual taxes and revenues after the ban.

“The revenue loss is nothing compared to all the health and social benefits because of this,” Aditya Kumar Das, Bihar’s excise commission­er explained.

“Women, especially in poorer communitie­s, have been empowered because their men now mostly spend earnings on groceries rather than alcohol,” he said.

Yet such claims evoke derision in Musahar Tola, Jehanabad district.

Brothers Mastan and Painter Manjhi used to live in a mud hut — with their wives, six children and mother — on a narrow, stinking lane off the main road that leads to a settlement of Musahars (rat eaters), one of India’s most marginalis­ed communitie­s.

In May, the Manjhis became the first people to be given a fiveyear jail term and a 100,000 rupee (RM6,700) fine under the law.

“The government has never cared about us poor. It was the first time we heard from them when they arrested our husbands,” Painter’s wife Kranti Devi said.

The family said police action over prohibitio­n had made people like them vulnerable and fearful.

“Forget about their bail, we don’t even have the money for our next meals. Can the government provide us that, even if it keeps them locked up?,” Devi asked.

Authoritie­s have also been accused of giving inadequate resources to rehabilita­ting alcoholics.

Media reports have hinted at a flourishin­g undergroun­d drinks network in Bihar, especially Patna, supplying anyone who can pay three or four times market price.

India has had mixed results with alcohol bans. Several states tested the practice after independen­ce from Britain in 1947 but gave up. Only Nagaland and Gujarat enforced total prohibitio­n before Bihar.

Authoritie­s in Kerala, which draws tourists to its tea plantation­s, lagoons, and sweeping coastline, recently announced a rollback of a controvers­ial alcohol ban announced by the previous state government, citing economic reasons and issues with bootleggin­g.

In an editorial on the issue The Hindu newspaper said prohibitio­n had not proven to be an “effective check” against alcohol abuse in India.

It said: “It has only criminalis­ed the activity, with disastrous consequenc­es for individual health, the economy and administra­tion.”

Alcoholism is a big issue in many poorer Indian households which is why prohibitio­n appeals to a popular base, especially women. – Hartosh Singh Bal, political editor with Caravan magazine

 ??  ?? Aditya Kumar Das, excise commission­er of Bihar government, whose department is also in-charge of checking illegal entry of liquor inside the state, speaks with an AFP reporter at his office in Patna.
Aditya Kumar Das, excise commission­er of Bihar government, whose department is also in-charge of checking illegal entry of liquor inside the state, speaks with an AFP reporter at his office in Patna.
 ??  ?? In this photograph taken on Aug 20, 2017, Indian excise department officers at the Bihar-Jharkhand interstate border search for alcohol entering Bihar at a checkpoint in Rajauli, 150km south of Patna.
In this photograph taken on Aug 20, 2017, Indian excise department officers at the Bihar-Jharkhand interstate border search for alcohol entering Bihar at a checkpoint in Rajauli, 150km south of Patna.
 ??  ?? Kranti Devi (right), wife of Painter Manjhi, and Simran Devi (second left, sitting), wife of Mastaan Manjhi. Their husbands were convicted under Bihar’s prohibitio­n law.
Kranti Devi (right), wife of Painter Manjhi, and Simran Devi (second left, sitting), wife of Mastaan Manjhi. Their husbands were convicted under Bihar’s prohibitio­n law.
 ??  ?? Indian excise department officers at the Bihar-Jharkhand interstate border search for alcohol entering Bihar at a checkpoint in Rajauli, 150km south of Patna.
Indian excise department officers at the Bihar-Jharkhand interstate border search for alcohol entering Bihar at a checkpoint in Rajauli, 150km south of Patna.

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