Published On : Mon, Oct 19th, 2015

‘Ban on dance-bars protects cultural values’; says Maha Govt again

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Ban checks character of youth as well as unwanted outflow of money

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Mumbai/ Nagpur: India’s cultural heritage is beyond compare all over the world, and women have dignified position no less than that of ‘devi’ (goddess), and despite the Supreme Court’s recent interim order to lift ban on dance-bars across Maharashtra (order dated Oct 15, 2015), the Maharashtra government has justified its new law to ban dance bars in the state, saying it was done to protect the “culture of Maharashtra, dignity of women and stop the exploitation of poor women for profiteering”, said media reports

In an affidavit filed on October 16, a day after the Supreme Court gave its interim order lifting the ban and paving the way for the comeback of such bars after a decade, the state government said that it reintroduced the law because the existing rules were insufficient to prevent social problems such as indecency, obscenity and exploitation of women there.

Maharashtra Government denied allegations that the promulgation in 2014 was done to evade the top court’s verdict, which in 2013 quashed a similar law.

It said the state can legislate in public interest notwithstanding the Constitutional right that gives freedom to take up any profession.

“It is submitted that the state government was contemplating to ban the dance bars after noticing the negative impact on youngsters, who indulged in selling their ancestral property and showering money in dance bars,” read the official affidavit.

Curtains were brought down on dance bars after Maharashtra amended the law in 2005. However, the ban was restricted to only “eating house, permit room and beer bar”.

Performances continued in three-star and above hotels and “elite establishments.” In 2013, the SC struck down the law, terming it discriminatory.

It upheld the Bombay high court’s verdict where the law was challenged for the first time. The top court held the constitution endowed the freedom to take up a profession. However, a year later, the state under the Congress regime brought the law — this time banning dance bars in all the segments of a restaurant.

The government feels that something which affects the character of an individual as well as moralistic approach to nation-building cannot be treated under the scope of discrimination. Moreover, the youth as strength or energy must be invested for nation-building, and not for ruining or wasting.