Antony's liquor ban proves a mega boon for politicians, police and excise officials
D Jose in Thiruvanathapuram
The arrack ban imposed in Kerala since April 1996 is proving to be a virtual gold mine for politicians and enforcement officials.
Records seized during raids in Kottayam, Pathanamthitta and Thrissur
districts in the last six months reveal that politicians,
police and excise officials have been burgeoning their pockets by allowing liquor contractors a free run.
Raids in Kottayam unearthed an illegal distillery churning
out arrack and Indian Made Foreign Liquor. The Pathanamthitta raids
yielded a large quantity of spirit used for manufacturing arrack,
and toddy mixed with arrack. From Thrissur, huge quantities of
toddy and ingredients used for making synthetic toddy was recovered.
Barring the IMFL, the other illicit liquors were being traded
through toddy shops. The law prohibiting raids
in toddy shops came handy to the contractors who offered unearthly
rates for them this year. A toddy shop range
which was auctioned for $ 14,000 last year fetched $ 4 million this time.
The registers and computer floppies maintained by contractors in Pathanamthitta
and Thrissur districts brought the politician-police-contractor nexus to light. The registers seized
from a Pathanamthitta contractor revealed that excise officials -- from
the assistant excise commissioner to drivers -- were receiving
pay offs to the tune of Rs 200,000 every month.
Records from Thrissur revealed that an assistant excise commissioner was receiving Rs 14,000, an excise inspector Rs 7,500,
a preventive officer Rs 4,000, an assistant excise inspector Rs 2,700
and an excise special squad circle inspector Rs 3,500, monthly.
Further, the documents showed these officials were also getting three
'bonuses' a year and 'special allowances' for family functions like
marriages!
Similar payments were recorded to police
officers and political leaders of different
parties including the ruling Left Democratic Front, led by the Communist Party of India-Marxist.
The veracity of the records were corroborated in subsequent raids
conducted at the beneficiaries's homes which revealed that most of the enforcement officials had amassed wealth
far beyond their means.
The practice of recording payments by the contractors was started recently
at the behest of the State Contractors Association to help deal with cases of
official harassment.
Meanwhile, the state government, though it had been quick in ordering the raids, is shying away from probing
the complexity of the matter. Thus, big liquor
contractors as well as politicians involved continue to brew money outside. Worse, certain senior leaders have even tried to justify
the pay offs their colleagues were receiving.
State Congress president Vyalar Ravi, though he claimed that the politician-contractor nexus is a 'serious matter' which should be pursued 'vigorously', maintained there is
nothing wrong in any party collecting money from abkari (liquor) contractors.
"All established parties take hefty amounts from contractors
to run the party. I don't find any harm in it. No political party in the state has the moral right to question
it. If anybody questions, I'll call him a hypocrite," he said.
Opposition leader A K Antony, who enforced the
arrack ban when he was chief minister, said what the raids revealed is only the tip of the iceberg. The liquor lobby, he added, had spread its wings throughout the state.
In Kerala politics, liquor contractors are the major source
of funds as there are no large industrial houses to donate hefty amounts. The arrack ban and the subsequent hike in the IMFL duty have provided ample opportunities for contractors to make money.
Interestingly, the public at large appears to be unimpressed by the ongoing raids in different parts. For them, this is another eye-washing tactic of the government.
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