In an abrupt change, beer is now regulated as an alcoholic beverage in Russia. |
In
a desperate effort to control runaway alcoholism, the government of Russia has
officially declared beer is an alcoholic beverage. While this may sound obvious
to many, beer and other beverages containing less than 10 percent alcohol were
previously categorized as food, according to the British newspaper the Daily
Telegraph. As such, it was as readily available as juice from street kiosks and
24-hour shops, and Russians often enjoyed a brew on their way to work in the
morning. The Russians even have a saying: "Beer without vodka is like
throwing money to the wind," reports the Telegraph.
But
in 2011, President Dmitry Medvedev, who called alcohol abuse a "national
calamity," signed off on the tough new restrictions, which took effect
Jan. 1. Beer is no longer available at bus stops, train stations or gas
stations, and cannot be purchased between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m. The average
Russian, according to the Daily Telegraph, consumes the equivalent of 32 pints
of pure alcohol each year, and about 500,000 alcohol-related deaths occur in
the country annually, including some 30,000 drunk-driving accidents and several
thousand cases of drowning.
Critics
charge the stiff new rules may backfire and increase alcohol consumption.
"Stocking beer is more problematic than stocking vodka," Isaac Sheps,
the chairman of the Union of Russian Brewers, told the Daily Telegraph.
"It's bulky, it's big, there's no room for it in small homes. It's much
easier to buy two bottles of vodka and manage for your instant need for
alcohol. "So it's quite ironic that this attempt to improve health and
lower alcoholism could have the opposite effect and cause people to drink more
harmful spirits," Sheps said.
Source: Live Science
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