IMPIMP

Pune Hinjawadi: Skewers hotel owner Ganesh Dalbhanjan booked for illegal sale of liquor, violating COVID19 norms

by salil123
Pune Hinjawadi Skewers Hotel

Pune: Pimpri-Chinchwad police have booked Ganesh Dalbhanjan along with two other employees on charges of illegal sale of liquor at his hotel Skewers located on the Maan Road in Hinjawadi while going towards Paud. Police have seized cash, mobiles, tab and some liquor bottles from the hotel, all worth Rs 28 thousand.

The three persons booked have been identified as Ganesh Narsingsa Dalbhanjan (40), a resident of Rohan Kritika on Sinhagad Road; Nipesh Indraprakash Roy (35), originally from Darjeeling in West Bengal and Suresh Govind Thapa (30), residing in Hinjawadi. Police said, Dalbhanjan owns and operates the hotel while Roy works as a manager and Thapa works as a cashier at the hotel.

Police constable Marutrao Shyamrao Jadhav (32) posted at the Social Security Cell of Pimpri-Chinchwad Police Commissionerate has filed the complaint against the trio. The FIR has been registered on December 28 while the action was taken on December 27 night 8.30pm. The trio has been booked on charges of violating COVID19 norms

According to police, Dalbhanjan and his staff served liquor including wine and beer to their customers without obtaining any license and permission for the same. Also, the hotel owner and its staff did not follow the COVID19 guidelines at the establishment and put human lives at risk by acting irresponsibly about spreading the coronavirus infection.

The trio has been charged under Disaster Management Act, 2005 section 51(b) (refusing to comply with any directions given by government or district authority) Maharashtra Covid-19 Act 2020 section 11, Epidemic Diseases Act section 3 and Maharashtra Prohibition Act, 1949 section 65 (e) (sell or buy or possess any intoxicant) and 83 (Penalty for conspiracy) and section 188 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant), 269 (negligent act likely to spread infection of any dangerous disease) and 34 (common intention) of the Indian Penal Code.

Related Posts