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Mumbai Dance bars to reopen as Supreme Court puts ban on hold

By FnF Correspondent | PUBLISHED: 15, Oct 2015, 13:17 pm IST | UPDATED: 15, Oct 2015, 13:17 pm IST

Mumbai Dance bars to reopen as Supreme Court puts ban on hold New Delhi:  The controversial law banning dance bars in Maharashtra, which provided employment to thousands of women, was put on hold by the Supreme Court today.

The court said the Maharashtra police will ensure that dignity of women was not affected by the dance performance.

Dance bars have been a contentious issue in the state, where the government branded them as fronts for prostitution.

In 2005, the police cracked down on dance performances in bars. Elite establishments, including five star hotels, were exempted.

After the top court ruled that dance bars would be allowed to operate in 2013, the Maharashtra assembly passed a law in June 2014 banning dance bars. All political parties were on the same page on the issue and the law was passed unanimously without a debate.

But restaurant owners had challenged the law, arguing that the state had brought a new law to ban bars when the court, the year before, had quashed a law which banned dance performances.

The court agreed that although it had set aside a similar provision, the law had been brought in a new manner. The court will hear the case again on November 5.

The bench of justice Dipak Misra and justice Prafulla C Pant said it is “appropriate to stay the provision” that prohibits the dance performances and noted the said provision was brought back in the Maharashtra police act in 2014 after being held ultra vires in 2013 by the top court.

The Maharashtra government had reintroduced the law in 2014 to bypass an SC judgment which had struck down a similar law a year ago. The SC had in April 2013 upheld the right of women bar dancers to follow their profession and dismissed the state government’s appeal to ban them.

News agency ANI had tweeted that Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis stated that his government would abide by the Supreme Court’s decision.
 
There were around 700 establishments across Maharashtra, which employed more than 75,000 women who performed Bollywood-style dance routines. Apart from salaries, they received cash tips from the people in the bar.

The dancers' union had opposed the ban, saying many of its members would be forced into prostitution if the state refused to allow dance performances.

"We are happy with the decision of court," Bharat Singh Thakur, president of the Dance Bar Association, told NDTV today. "We always respected the dignity of women. We have been running dance bars since 1997 and there was no complaint against us on obscenity."
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