Dance bars can reopen: SC

The Supreme Court on Tuesday gave the go-ahead to “dance bars” to operate in Maharashtra, over seven years after they were banned by the state government on the ground that the performances by women at such bars were vulgar and derogatory to society.

A bench of Chief Justice Altamas Kabir and Justice S.S. Nijjar upheld the Bombay high court verdict quashing the state government’s order.
The Maharashtra government had in 2005 brought in an amendment in the Bombay Police Act which was challenged in the high court by an association representing restaurants and bars.
The high court in 2006 had quashed the government’s decision. The state government had moved the apex court against the high court’s order that same year.
In its plea, the state government had contended that prostitution rackets were being run under the garb of beer bars and indecent and vulgar performances, “derogatory to the society” were taking place. The government had also contended that while there were only 345 licenced dance bars, about 2500 unlicenced bars were doing business in the state.
On the other hand, various organisations representing dance bars, restaurants and bar girls had argued that the preamble of the Bombay Police (Amendment) Act, 2005, which had been struck down by the high court as unconstitutional, holds that dance performances for public amusement were permissible. These organisations had also submitted that there were over 70,000 women engaged in dance bars and several of them had already committed suicide due to unemployment and financial crunch. They had said that with as many as 72 per cent of the bar girls being married and 68 per cent being sole bread earners of their families, the state government’s order had rendered them jobless and had been rightly struck down as arbitrary and unconstitutional by the high court. They had also contended that the impugned section of the Act was arbitrary and discriminatory as it permitted dance performances at places visited by the rich and well-to-do sections of the society while performances in small dance bars had been banned.

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