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| Sri Lanka president restores ban on women buying alcohol |
Sri Lanka
has lifted a 39-year ban on women buying alcohol or working in places that sell
or manufacture liquor, an official said Sunday.
The 1979
law prohibiting the sale of any type of alcohol to women on the island of 21
million people was overturned in an effort to strike sexist bills from the
statute books, said a spokesman for the finance ministry.
"The
idea was to restore gender neutrality," Ali Hassen told AFP of the
decision Wednesday to roll back the ban.
The move
also repeals a ban on women working in places where alcoholic drinks are made
or sold, like bars.
Liquor
vendors are still forbidden to sell spirits to police or members of the armed
forces in uniform, Hassen said.
Sri Lanka
in its November budget unveiled steep tax rises on hard liquor, but greatly
reduced tariffs on wine and beer.
Under new
measures also passed by Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera, bars and pubs can
remain open longer.
It was
unclear why the ban on women was imposed in the first place, but a finance
ministry official said he believed it was intended to appease the conservative
Buddhist hierarchy at the time.
The relaxed
laws on alcohol have provoked a backlash in some quarters of the majority-Buddhist
nation.
The
National Movement for Consumer Rights Protection accused the finance minister
of encouraging drinking, and urged President Maithripala Sirisena to intervene
and restore the restrictions.
Samaraweera
has said that strict curbs on Sri Lanka's licenced liquor manufacturers only
encourage a black market for spirits, and deprive the state of much-needed
revenue.
Sri Lanka has lifted a 39-year ban on women buying alcohol or working in places that sell or manufacture liquor https://t.co/aXbUN9nmnN pic.twitter.com/HV4gFGly0p— AFP news agency (@AFP) January 14, 2018

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