GABORONE CITY COUNCIL (RETAIL SALES OF TRADITIONAL BEER) BYE-LAWS
(regs 34 and 35)
(19th March, 1971)
ARRANGEMENT OF BYE-LAWS
BYE-LAW
1. Citation
2. Interpretation
3. Traditional beer to be sold or bought only on licensed premises
4. Consumption of traditional beer
5. Applications for licences and renewals
6. Grant and renewal of licences
7. Period and renewal of licences
8. Lapse on change of occupier
9. Duplicate licences
10. Breach of conditions of licence
11. Revocation of licence
12. Fees collected
13. Appeal and review
14. Permitted hours
15. Sanitary conditions to be maintained
16. Restrictions on sale of traditional beer to young persons, etc.
17. Persons to sell on licensed premises
18. Drunkenness, etc., not to be permitted on licensed premises
19. Rights of licensee to refuse admission, etc.
20. Premises not to be a brothel, etc.
21. Structural alterations to licensed premises
22. Inspection of premises by police, etc.
23. Closing of licensed premises on serious breach of peace or danger to public health
24. Criminal responsibility of employer and employee
25. Display of licence and bye-laws
26. Penalties
Schedule - Licence to Use Premises for the Retail Sale of Traditional Beer
S.I. 34, 1971,
S.I. 57, 1971,
S.I. 84, 1972
These Bye-laws may be cited as the Gaborone City Council (Retail Sales of Traditional Beer) Bye-laws*.
*Originally made under the Township Act now repealed, these regulations have been continued under s 94(2) of the Local Government Act, 2013.
In these Bye-laws, unless the context otherwise requires
"city" means the area of jurisdiction of Gaborone City Council;
"council" means the Gaborone City Council;
"licensed" means licensed in terms of these Bye-laws;
"licensee" means the occupier of licensed premises;
"lolwapa" means a customary residential precinct;
"traditional beer" means
(a) beer brewed from sorghum-meal or a mixture of sorghum-meal and mealie-meal by the fermentation of malted sorghum, but excluding the liquors commonly known as "ila", "kabidikama" or "banyana", or any beer brewed as described to which sugar, honey or syrup has been added or which is mixed with or fortified or adulterated by any other liquor or substance, or any other of the liquors commonly known as "khadi"; or
(b) any other liquor which the Minister may by order declare to be traditional beer for the purposes of the Liquor Act (Cap. 43:11).
3. Traditional beer to be sold or bought only on licensed premises
(1) No person shall sell or buy any traditional beer by retail within the city except in a beer hall conducted by the council, or on premises licensed in terms of these Bye-laws:
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