Govt’s new dance bar draft gets stringent
The new draft to allow licences for dance bars will be a stringent one, which suggests imprisonment of six months and/or a penalty of Rs 50,000 to anyone touching bar dancers or throwing money at them. In a meeting led by chief minister Devendra Fadnavis at the Vidhan Bhavan on Tuesday, it was decided that the crime would be considered a cognisable and non-bailable one. The new draft also disallows alcohol in the performance area and bans the use of any narcotic substances on the bar premises.
The CM has already formed a 25-member committee of all-party MLAs to review the draft of the new legislation. The committee was appointed after the Supreme Court rejected the state’s Act to ban dance bars in the state. In the meeting, a few rules were discussed which will be converted into a Bill and will be tabled in the House during the ongoing Budget session for final approval. Once the Bill is approved, it will be converted into an Act and will be applicable across the state, said an official from the Home department.
According to the official, installing CCTVs at the entrance and on the dance floor will be mandatory. The owner will have to keep the CCTV footage for up to 30 days. The draft has suggested that if the bar owner or operator allows a bar dancer to be exploited, he will be penalised Rs 10 lakh or imprisoned for three years or both.
In the new draft, the dance bar will not be allowed to stay open after 11.30 pm. Earlier, it had allowed the dance bar to remain open till 2 am. It has also been suggested that three women security guards be posted and women waiters and bar dancers be asked to stay on after 9.30 pm only with their consent.
It will be mandatory for the bar owner to have a record of all employees including the name, address, age, educational qualification, nationality and Aadhaar number. The new draft also suggests that women under the age of 25 not be allowed to work as a bar dancer. The bar owner will have to sign an agreement specifying the monthly salary including the contribution towards provident fund and other miscellaneous benefits with all employees. The owner will have to maintain register of all employees and their attendance will be recorded through biometric system. Vulgar dances or actions will not be allowed. The bar dancer will not be allowed to be skimpily clad and dace bars will not be permitted within the periphery of one kilometre from educational institutes and places of worship. If an illegal dance bar is found, the owner or operator will be liable for a fine of '25 lakh and/or imprisonment for five years.
The offence will be non-bailable and cognisable. The distance between the dance floor and the seating arrangement should be five feet and no person will be allowed to go at the dance floor, the draft has suggested. People who visit dance bars must be over 25 years and have valid identity proof.