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Not states’ business to decide what tourists eat and drink: NITI CEO

At least four states -- Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Kerala and Daman -- have announced plans to bar liquor sales, adding to the list that includes Gujarat, Bihar, Nagaland and Manipur which are already dry.

PTI Reported by: PTI New Delhi Published on: October 06, 2017 16:09 IST
File pic of NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant
File pic of NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant

Several state governments’ decision to ban sale and consumption of alcohol has hit the country's tourism industry. At least four states -- Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Kerala and Daman -- have announced plans to bar liquor sales, adding to the list that includes Gujarat, Bihar, Nagaland and Manipur which are already dry. 

Reacting to this, NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant today said that it is not the states' business to decide what a tourist should eat and drink. He said that ‘states can't get into what a tourist want to eat and drink’. 

“Just not possible...what he wants to eat and drink is his individual business and not the states' business," he said at India Economic Summit of the World Economic Forum (WEF) here. 

"I have been a long term believer on couple of things. Tourism is essentially civilisational in character, you can't have garbage and filth and say that we have great heritage sites. So, India must focus on cleanliness. It is number one. Number-2 it’s about seamless experience," he added. 

Kant said this when was asked whether states banning beef and alcohol have failed to realise what did Dubai do so brilliantly, as the country needs tourists who should be extended every facility they need. 

The proponents of prohibition maintain India has highest whiskey sales in the world leading to a plethora of social ills and needs to be checked. Also, they say, drunk driving is a leading cause of road accidents and binge drinking is a big problem in the country. 

Asked by the moderator if he has told the political leadership about his views on the impact of this prohibition on tourists, he said: "I have said it all the time that for a tourist...it is about creating experiences. In the evening he wants to relax and he wants to chill out and therefore you need to create that evening experience for (him) in terms of Indian culture."

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