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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You do not say whether she allowed the girl to buy her own alcohol or it was bought for her. There may be serious offences involved by a number of people (see Licensing Act Section 145 onwards at:-
www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2003/30017--h.htm#145
It seems that this was her parent who was being irresponsible but, regrettably, there is nothing to stop a parent giving any child alcohol in their own home at any time at any age.
Certainly not conducive to setting the right example
Did you have a drink at 16? I know I did....I hope I don't sound too harsh!! I have two teenage stepchildren and my husband and I have allowed them to have a drink with us at special occasions (they are 16 and 18) since they were about 15. We have never had a problem with either of them getting really drunk but maybe we have been lucky. I hope I don't sound irresponsible but at 16 I actually think that having a drink on new years eve is probably quite normal for most well rounded 16 year olds....getting blind drunk and stumbling around a nightclub is a totally different matter but at a social event with parents present I personally would think this was okay. My step children have always been very sensible with drink. I think a lot of the problem these days is due to the fact that alcopops are so lovely to drink whereas when I was 16 (I am 33) half a cider and black was as much as I could stomach!! I hope I haven't offended you. I think this is a tough call. Have you teenage children of your own?
It doesn't just depend on the parents attitude. My parents were strict teetotallers and never had any alcohol in the house. My sister and I went in completely different directions. She went a bit haywire as a teenager and used to drink several pints of snakebite a night but now doesn't drink at all apart from Christmas. As a teenager I never touched alcohol and have never had a hangover. I don't drink much now and I don't miss it - my attitude is I can take it or leave it.
My sister believed that her children should have a healthier attitude to booze than we did and has brought her children up so that alcohol isn't a forbidden fruit like it was for us. My nephew and niece have been aware of alcohol from quite a young age having been allowed to try various types at Christmas and new year parties (just a sip here and there to taste). Both of them have a very healthy attitude to alcohol and don't feel the need to get "bladdered" just to have a good time.
In answer to your question - no you're not being unreasonable if this was your own child, but it is your sister's responsibility to watch her daughter's alcohol intake. However, if you make your disapproval known to your sister, you may risk alienating her. I'd keep my own counsel on this one in the interests of maintaining the family relationship.