Simon Njoroge, National chairman of the National Bar Owners (Left) and Boniface Gachoka Secretary General ( 2nd Right) during a press briefing to protest against the various Alcoholic Amendments Bills being mooted in the counties.
By Our Reporters
Worth Noting:
- The bar owners have also vowed to go to court to protest against the Nairobi County Government’s move to double the license fees to sell alcohol in the capital city introduced via the 2023 Finance Act assented to by Governor Johnson Sakaja.
- The lobby group (Bahlita) argues that the majority of the contentious provisions in the county bills run counter to the existing Alcoholic Drinks Control Act at the national level popularly known as the Mututho Law.
- “We have been angered by Sakaja here in Nairobi because of the increase in license fee despite the public participation. The result will be an increase in the consumption of illicit alcohol because of the restrictions on formal alcohol, and this leads to loss of jobs,” said Bahlita secretary Boniface Gachoka.
The Bar Hotels & Liquor Traders Association Of Kenya (BAHLITA) has raised the alarm over several amendment bills being introduced in counties that they say will kill the alcoholic beverages sector and harm the hospitality sector as a whole.
Addressing members of the press through a joint statement at a Nairobi hotel the lobby group noted that Alcoholic Drinks Control Bills introduced in the county assemblies like Nyeri and Meru so far would negatively affect the sector.
The Bill in Nyeri is titled,The Nyeri County Alcoholic Drinks Control Bill, 2023 and is now undergoing public participation. A similar Bill is set to be introduced in the Meru County Assembly the statement reads.
Both bills are based on a model Bill developed with the backing of Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua, who has been leading the fight against alcoholism in Kenya, with a focus on the Mt Kenya region.
Bar operators however argued that the proposed law is overzealous and overreaching and will kill rather than control a sector that employs thousands of people in the country.
They pointed out that proposed ban on transportation of alcohol using boda-bodas, transportation at night and the further restriction on bar opening times as amounting to an onslaught on the sector.
The bar owners have also vowed to go to court to protest against the Nairobi County Government’s move to double the license fees to sell alcohol in the capital city introduced via the 2023 Finance Act assented to by Governor Johnson Sakaja.
The lobby group (Bahlita) argues that the majority of the contentious provisions in the county bills run counter to the existing Alcoholic Drinks Control Act at the national level popularly known as the Mututho Law.
“We have been angered by Sakaja here in Nairobi because of the increase in license fee despite the public participation. The result will be an increase in the consumption of illicit alcohol because of the restrictions on formal alcohol, and this leads to loss of jobs,” said Bahlita secretary Boniface Gachoka.
Bahlita said it was apprehensive that public participation in the counties could be used to meet the requirement on paper without any real impact on the proposed law.
The bills seek to restrict the sale of alcohol to take home, introduce alcohol-free zones, and restrict the sale of alcohol by wines and spirits shops outside designated areas and in hotels. They also seek to bar the sale of alcohol to “intoxicated persons” but the operators and other players argue that the provision is vague as judging whether a person is intoxicated is not accurate.
The bills also seek to ban advertising of alcohol by painting or decorating buildings on the outside as well as on digital or mobile platforms, both of which are common in the alcoholic beverages sector.
It would also restrict alcohol sales by supermarkets to between 5 pm and 9 pm and in hotels and lodgings and members’ clubs to between 1 pm and 11 pm.
Distributors would also be restricted to making their deliveries to bars between 9 am and 6 pm and will be required to establish depots in every sub-county they are licensed to distribute.
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