The introduction of 24-hour alcohol licences in notoriously binge-drinking Britain has had mixed results, with little sign of a hoped-for "European cafe-style" attitude to booze, officials
The introduction of 24-hour alcohol licences in notoriously binge-drinking Britain has had mixed results, with little sign of a hoped-for "European cafe-style" attitude to booze, officials said Tuesday.
Drink-fuelled violent crime has increased in the early hours of the morning, although the more flexible hours have eased the rowdiness traditionally stemming from a surge in "last orders" drinking before pubs closed at 11:00 pm.In an official review of the 24-hour drinking legislation, the government insisted that there were none of the "widespread problems" forecast by critics.
"Whilst crimes involving violence may have reduced over the evening and night-time period, the evidence also points to increases in offence(s)... between 3:00 am and 6:00 am," said culture minister Andy Burnham.
Britain has long struggled with the problem of binge-drinking, which routinely turns town and city centres into virtual no-go areas on Friday and Saturday nights when pubs turf out spectacularly drunk revellers.
New laws came into force in 2005 ending the 11:00 pm fixed closing time, letting pubs set their own hours in what ministers hoped would allow Britons to embrace a more moderate attitude to alcohol common in continental Europe.
But describing the results as "mixed," Burnham said it was "clear that the overall reduction in alcohol-related disorder we wanted to see across the country has not materialised consistently in all areas.
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The minister said the proportion of crimes in the early hours as "unacceptable," and called for tougher enforcement of the Licensing Act including a number of new methods of policing it.
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The maximum fine for failing to obey a police instruction to stop drinking will also be raised from 500 pounds to 2,500 pounds.
Source-AFP
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