Goa perturbed by Maharashtra's embargo on its liquor
Sandesh Prabhudesai in Goa
Liquor, indigenous or otherwise, is a major source of income for
the sunshine state of Goa. Hundreds of thousands of tourists
visiting Goa return
home with a limited number of liquor bottles, either for personal
use or as a souvenir or gift.
But those who opt to leave Goa by road towards Bombay and Pune
are facing unexpected harassment from Maharashtra excise officials.
Despite the legal permit for personal consumption issued by the
Goa excise department, the bottles are forcibly confiscated and
smashed at the Maharashtra excise check-post at Insuli, Sawantwadi. Over 40
buses and hundreds of private vehicles cross the check-post every
day.
The excise officials have been harassing passengers on the grounds
that Goan liquor cannot enter Maharashtra. But
Goan liquor has been transported through Maharashtra to other
legally permitted states for many years now.
The allegedly illegal practice, which began 25 days ago, does
not quote any legal provision or honour the permits issued by
the Goa government. Investigations revealed that the actual reason
behind this unexpected behaviour was an anti-corruption bureau
raid on Insuli checkpost on December 21 which caught excise officials
forcibly collecting money and liquor bottles from passengers.
In retaliation, excise officials have begun harassing the passengers
by breaking all liquor bottles, instead of taking legal action
or conducting a panchnama. And thousands of tourists returning
from Goa during this peak season are facing the brunt of their
action.
"Is this the way the responsible officials behave?"
fumed former Goa minister Ashok Naik Salgaonkar who operates a number
of buses on this route. "Isn't this dadagiri a violation?"
Salgoankar has filed his protest before the Maharashtra excise
commissioner.
"We expect our neighbours to respect our law. Any problems
they have can be sorted out across the table. Why should innocent
passengers be harassed?" asks Goa's Excise Commissioner J
B Singh. He feels the Maharashtra government should have officially taken
up the matter with its Goan counterpart if it did not want to allow Goan liquor
to pass through its territory. "If you find our law arbitrary,
tell us to amend it," he says. "Aren't we living in
one country?"
Goa Chief Minister Pratapsingh Rane, who also heads
the excise and finance department, says he will take up
the issue with his Maharashtra counterpart.
A spokesman for the Goa government described the harassment
of tourists as illegal and anti-national. He accused the Maharashtra excise
department of undermining Goa's reputation as a major tourist centre. "The
two bottles allowed to each tourist are not meant
for business, trade or commerce. Besides, if the Karnataka government
has no objections to Goan liquor being brought into their state,
why should the excise officials from Maharashtra adopt such a
vindictive attitude?" he asks.
According to the local excise department, Goa received about million
tourists per year. About five per cent purchase liquor permits and the
state thus earns about Rs 2 million by way of excise duty on permits.
The Goan government is also perturbed over complaints that
motorists visiting Goa are harassed by
Maharashtra road transport authorities.
This matter will be taken up with Maharashtra Transport Minister
Pramod Navalkar, the spokesman said.
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