Quantcast
Channel: JUST READ!
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1911

No more beer

$
0
0
FOR locals seeking refreshment on the hot, grimy streets of Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, or for tourists lazing on the beaches of Bali, a chilled brew will soon be harder to come by.

The country is on a moral campaign to protect its young from the dangers of alcohol. This month it will ban the sale of beer and other drinks with an alcohol content of less than 5% at more than 10,000 small retailers across the sprawling archipelago, while only supermarkets will be allowed to stock spirits.

The aim of the regulation is to “protect the morals and culture of society”. Beer-drinking has grown by half in the past decade.

The government of President Joko Widodo (who is known as Jokowi) took the bold measure without consulting foreign brewers with a large Indonesian market, including Britain’s Diageo, Carlsberg of Denmark and Heineken, a Dutch brewer.
Though public drinking is prohibited in Indonesia, in practice local governments have been given leeway in selling alcoholic drinks.
Beer sales at convenience stores are already banned in some Indonesian districts that adopt milder aspects of Islamic sharia law.
But retailers fret that the opaque phrasing of the new law could mean wholesalers are affected as well; that would wipe out more than half of the country’s distribution chain. Indonesia’s thriving tourism sector could suffer.
Some people say that bootlegging will increase.
(NOTE: Why must they always associate alcohol with tourism? The Western media conclusion is so blindly-simple - that Indonesia's tourism could suffer. In Malaysia, not all tourists are 'beer-hunters'. Many still favor Kelantan where selling of alcohol in the open is strictly prohibited. Even 7-Eleven stores do not sell beer. However, tourists keep coming. And why do tourists also go to 'hudud' nations like Iran, Brunei and Sudan? For beer? Muslims are not allowed to consume alcohol, simple. If you drink, you sin, right? So, what has alcohol gotta do with tourism?)

The clampdown underscores a growing social conservatism in the world's most populous Muslim nation. When he entered office in October, Jokowi, though an observant Muslim, was welcomed as a president willing take risks for a more secular, pluralistic Indonesia.

Yet his approach to dealing with social ills has so far been tough. Notably, he has ignored governments’ pleas for clemency for Australian, Brazilian and French drug mules facing execution.

Retail and brewer groups are now pressing the government to reconsider its beer ban and to allow a one-year period for consultations. They too may find Jokowi to be a dogged president.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1911

Trending Articles