Sindh issues 22 permits for wine shops

The Sindh government has issued more licences for liquor shops during the last 2 years than issued by successive governments.


Gm Jamali July 10, 2010
Sindh issues 22 permits for wine shops

KARACHI: The Sindh government has issued more licences for liquor shops during the last two years than were issued by successive governments over the past 50 years. Reliable sources in the office of the director general excise and taxation told Daily Express that the Sindh government has issued 22 licences while two shops have already opened in the Defence area.

When contacted to get his comments, the director general excise and taxation Qurban Khoso only said, “Be fearful of God!” and then declined to offer any comments.

The liquor licences had not been issued since the dismissal of the Liaquat Ali Jatoi government 11 years ago and there had been a ban on opening of the new wine shops. Jatoi had issued two licences during his tenure, but once his administration was sent packing more than a dozen licences were cancelled.

However, the sources said, the present government has started issuing these licences to favour influential provincial ministers and important personalities. In the past, new permits had been used as a powerful tool to buy political loyalties of MPAs, mostly during the periods of former chief ministers Jam Sadiq Ali and Syed Abdullah Shah.

The sources said former provincial ministers for excise and taxation, Shabbir Ahmad Qaimkhani and Rauf Siddiqui, refused to issue new licences despite heavy pressure. But sitting minister Mukesh Chawla succumbed to the pressure and has started issuing the permits.

According to the sources, the final authority to issue a new permit for liquor lies with the chief minister. Licences for two shops have been issued formally while the approval process for another 20 is held up for mere formalities.

The Daily Express also tried to contact the provincial minister Mukesh Chawla to learn his point of view on the subject, but his cell-phone was powered off.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 10th, 2010.

COMMENTS (6)

Taimur | 14 years ago | Reply selling of liquor is not a problem. It is individual choice to consume it or not. let everybody free whatever he/she want to drink it or not. Probably we have to create space for everyone in order to b part of civilized and independent world by allowing free society. We have the example of Turkey, where you see some people drink alcohol on the road side and some ppl offering prayers on the other side. Live and Let live
MikeG | 14 years ago | Reply To Zeeshan, Grow up Zeeshan granting a liquor licence has nothing to do with the floods, it is nature and you are in the monsoon season. We in the UK are sending millions in aid and we raised £25,000,000 in just one day. we wish you all well. The Indus valley will continue to flood for millions of years and these floods will continue once every hundred years so you need to build cities surrounded by massive flood prevention walls or move to higher ground.
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