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Government may consider lowering drinking age: Delhi minister
By
Prashant KumarNew Delhi, Sep 24
The Delhi government may
"consider lowering" the legal age for drinking, a minister in the Arvind
Kejriwal cabinet said on Wednesday.
"I feel the drinking
age set at 25 years is way too much. It should be reduced," Delhi's
Tourism Minister Kapil Mishra said addressing a gathering of
restaurateurs at the 33rd annual meeting of the National Restaurant
Association of India (NRAI) here.
He also invited the restaurant
and events-governing associations to come up with proposals regarding
the right drinking age in the national capital. "I request you to come
up with a good suggestion, we'll take note of it," the minister said.
"There
are a lot of old laws that need to be changed. We will do our best to
mend them and make Delhi a better place, especially for tourists," he
added.
Asked how soon the review could be expected and what the
reduced age would be, the minister said: "We will have to decide on the
age looking at various factors, so I can't tell you about the exact age
as of now. It will certainly take some time to review and bring into
implementation of the new proposals," Mishra told IANS.
The
minister's response came after a request was made by NRAI president
Riyaaz Amlani for review of the laws regarding the minimum legal age for
drinking in the national capital. "Please do something regarding the
drinking age," he said.
"Even the legal marriage age for boys and girls is fixed at 21 and 18 respectively," he added.
Delhi
is not the only state with 25 as the legal drinking age. Chandigarh,
Punjab, Haryana, Maharashtra and Meghalaya too have the same limit.
The
minister said that the restaurant industry played a pivotal role in
adding to the cultural vibrancy of the city and tourism promotion,
especially for Delhi which had the advantage of having various heritage
sites.
"We need to work together to make Delhi the most sought after place in India for the tourists," he said.
The
minister also assured the hoteliers that licensing and renewal
processes would be simplified and inspector raj eliminated. He said the
aim was to create restaurant-based tourism hubs in Delhi.
On
the complaint that a large number of licences were required for
restaurants, the minister said he was working on the issue and hoped to
solve it soon.
"If the restaurants in a country like Turkey can
operate with three licences, why can't we have that in Delhi. Bring to
our note the licences you feel are not important, we will review and
take a decision," Mishra assured.
According to the NRAI, the food
services industry has grown significantly to Rs.247,680 crore ($48 bn),
contributing about seven times more than the hotel sector to India's
GDP.
The restaurant industry is expected to reach Rs.25,000 cr ($4.8 billion) mark by 2018, an NRAI statement said.
(Prashant Kumar can be contacted at [email protected])