Medicine - Drugs > Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission, 1894-1895 > Volume I
(370) Page 335
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CH. XVI.] REPORT OF THE INDIAN HEMP DRUGS COMMISSION, 1893-94. 335
between classes is such
that there is no homogeneous public opinion, if I may
use the phrase." Mr. Gupta says local "opinion is not formally
consulted, but
attention is paid to any reasonable objection raised against
particular sites, though
most of the sites being old ones, it is seldom that they are
objected to. More-
over, shops for the sale of hemp drugs are not considered a
nuisance, and are
often accommodated in the same room where other busins is carried
on." In
the North-Western Provinces, Mr. Cadell says: "I have never heard
of any objec-
tions to drug shops. I have heard such objection regarding spirit
shops. The
wishes of the community should be consulted. Hitherto the objection
to drug
shops has always come from above, viz., from the Board, the
Commissioner, or
the Collector." Mr. Stoker's evidence is to a similar effect. In
the Punjab, Mr.
Gordon Walker says: "There is nothing in the nature of 'local
option.' In
practice the shop sites remain as they have been established for a
long time, and
the necessity for a change in the way of adding new shops or
closing existing
ones seldom arises." It may, however, be noted that there is
special provision
in the Punjab for inviting the opinion of the residents of a
locality regarding the
opening of a new liquor shop and holding a local inquiry if
necessary. Similarly
in the Central Provinces, there is a modified system of local
option as regards
liquor shops, which are more than six times as numerous as ganja
shops, but not in
regard to the latter. Mr. Drake-Brockman says that the
administration has all along
shaped its policy on the assumption that the drug is extremely
deleterious, and it
is a standing order that no more should be licensed than are
necessary to meet the
demands of consumers, who, if a licit supply were not available,
would probably
supply themselves illicitly. Mr. Laurie says: "In an agricultural
province like this,
the people are not given to formulating their views in speech or
writing; and
'public opinion' can only be arrived at by laborious research." In
Madras "it has
been directed that in cases of alterations in the number or sites
of shops in muni-
cipalities, a list of the proposed shops with their sites should be
forwarded to the
Council in sufficient time to admit of its remarks being received
and con-
sidered; and though in the rural tracts the location of shops is at
the discretion of
Revenue officers, representations from District or Taluk Boards or
Taluk Unions
would invariably be received with attention." In Bombay, Mr.
Mackenzie says:
"There is no fixed rule as to local option. In some districts it is
attended to
carefully; in others the Collector uses his discretion according to
the information
he possesses as to the demand; but in all any representation by the
inhabitants
for or against the establishment of a shop would have full
consideration. Such
representations, however, have seldom been made." The same is the
case in
Sind. Mr. James, the Commissioner, says: "No concession of local
option in the
matter of hemp drug shops has been made, nor is it necessary. Where
there is
sufficient demand, the farmer applies for a shop, and retailers are
all grocers, and
the drug forms an addition
to their ordinary stock of groceries......A farmer
does
not, like a publican at
home, stimulate sales by accessories calculated to make his
shops attractive. He simply depends on the demand. The Collector
and District
Magistrate, after consulting the local officials, is able to judge
whether a shop
should be opened or not, and local residents other than the
consumers of the drug
take no more interest in the matter than a tailor in an English
country town in the
question whether a particular grocer down the street should have a
license to sell
claret or not. The subordinate officials whom the Collector would
consult before
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India Papers > Medicine - Drugs > Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission, 1894-1895 > Volume I > (370) Page 335 |
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Permanent URL | https://digital.nls.uk/74574806 |
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Description | Chapter XVI, cont. |
Description | [Volume 1]: Report. |
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