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For around two decades, Mumbai's celebrated move bars assumed numerous parts: diversion for the white collar class, work for innumerable vagrant ladies, a meeting point for the city's mafia and a smokescreen for charged prostitution rings. In 2005, there were somewhere in the range of 600 move bars in India's money related capital, before the Maharashtra state government passed a law that restricted them, as they had "an awful impact on society." Some of them kept on working under police support, however most steadily close down. In 2013, after interests by artists, India's preeminent court suppressed the boycott. Be that as it may, the Maharashtra government passed another law in 2014 to boycott move bars. That was later tested by eatery proprietors. On Oct.15, India's incomparable court remained the boycott by the state government, which could possibly permit move bars to work by and by in the state. "We are  with the choice of the court," Bharat Singh Thakur, leader of the Dance Bar Association, told NDTV. "We generally regarded the respect of ladies. We have been running move bars since 1997, and there was no dissension against us on profanity."
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