The sale of wine will be allowed in supermarkets and walk-in stores in Maharashtra, the state cabinet decided on Thursday. Opposition BJP slammed the decision, saying that the government was promoting liquor.
The decision was taken to give a boost to fruit-based wineries which provide additional income to farmers, Minister for Skill Development Nawab Malik told reporters. A statement from the Chief Minister's Office said "shelf-in-shop" method will be adopted in supermarkets and walk-in-stores which have an area of 100 sq mt or more and which are registered under the Maharashtra Shops and Establishments Act.
But the supermarkets which are near places of worship or educational institutions can not sell wine. Further, wine sales will not be allowed in the districts where prohibition is in force. Supermarkets will have to pay a fee of Rs 5,000 for selling wine. BJP leader Devendra Fadnavis criticized the decision, saying the government had rolled back prohibition.
"We will not allow Maharashtra to become a Madya-rashtra (`liquor state')," he said. The Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress government did not help people during two years of the pandemic but its "priority is promoting the sale of liquor," the former chief minister said.
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