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More Indian states ban alcohol, but the booze still flows

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An employee takes stock at an alcohol shop in Hyderabad. Photo: AFP
Associated Press

They are a common sight even well before noon: groups of men huddled around plastic tables at canteens along the highway north of Mumbai, guzzling beers.

Then they get back in their cars and drive on for a few miles into Gujarat, an Indian state where alcohol is prohibited.

As the beer-soaked travellers near the Gujarat state line demonstrate, it is difficult to get determined tipplers to stop drinking in India. Yet a growing number of states are clamping down on the consumption of booze in an effort to stop social ills officials say come with it.

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The southern state of Tamil Nadu this month became the latest to impose at least a partial ban on alcohol, with recently re-elected chief minister J. Jayalalithaa closing 500 state-run off-licences and restricting the operating hours of others.

The closures represented just 7 per cent of the estimated 7,000 such shops in the state, but more could follow. Jayalalithaa made phasing out the sale of alcohol a campaign promise and blamed her rival party for lifting the state’s prohibition laws in 1971.

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Three other major states have similar laws, meaning about one-fifth of India’s 1.2 billion people live in places where alcohol consumption is banned or restricted.

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