From February 1, cafes may not operate within 150 metres of residential areas, schools and mosques.
There
are about 500 shisha cafes in the emirate including 176 in Abu Dhabi
city, 178 in Mussaffah, 90 in Al Ain and 11 in Al Gharbia, and about 90
per cent of them are in densely populated areas. The rules were
announced last July but owners were given a seven-month grace period to
comply, move, apply for a special licence or close down.
Colts Cherry
Under the
new law shisha cafes must be closed beween midnight and 10am, and the
area occupied by each individual smoker must be at least two square
metres. They must also have a sign at the front banning customers
younger than 18.
Inspectors from the Department of Economic
Development will begin visits next month to ensure compliance with the
new law. Owners found to have broken the law face fines of up to Dh1
million, two years in prison and closure of their businesses.
However, both owners and customers say they are unclear about whether the new law applies to them, and how it will be enforced
One owner whose cafe is near a mosque is still waiting to hear from authorities if the business will be closed or not.
The
owner is worried that the cafe would not be profitable without offering
shisha, and other places that met the requirements could raise their
prices, to the disadvantage of customers.
“I’m leaving everything to God,” the owner said.
About
30 to 40 people visit the cafe every day for shisha. It opens from 10am
to midnight and a member of staff there said it never served under-18s.
One shisha smoker, Tahron Al Fadilah, an Emirati, had mixed views on the regulations.
“It is a good thing but not by much,” said Mr Al Fadilah, 35.
“Because
maybe I will have to travel outside the city and I do not want to
travel outside the city to smoke a shisha. I will invite people to my
home.”
Mr Al Fadilah, who has smoked the water pipe for 15 years,
said he knew of several cafes that would be forced to either shut or
move.
“I support this decision, I support the Government. It will
be very hard on us who have to travel, but at the same time it will be
very good for all the people in the area to have good, pure air to
breathe.”
He felt it would be a better idea to have a similar
operation to that of Saudi Arabia, where shisha cafes were clustered
five to 10 kilometres out of town.
“Far away from the city — two
to three miles from the city there is a big complex where all the shisha
cafes are in the area. There are maybe 10 or 15 cafes in the area. It
would be a good solution I think to the smoking here.”
In the dim
lights of the Special 2 cafe on the Corniche, smoke billows around
Hussein Mohammed, 30, and Ghassan Arman, 40, as they chat and puff on
water pipes.
They have heard about the rules and are unsure if the Special will be affected.
“Every day almost I smoke shisha,” said Mr Mohammed.
“I am a regular here. This is where we go to meet friends, I do not go to the cinema or the like.”
“There are cons and advantages,” said Mr Arman.
“It is not healthy to smoke shisha but we don’t want to have to travel far for it.”
Another shisha smoker at the cafe, a Syrian, said he thought the regulations were a good move.
But he said there were some drawbacks, especially for people who don’t drink alcohol.
“You need places for rest if you’re not going to bars,” he said.
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