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Drug addiction is a bigger challenge than militancy in Jammu & Kashmir today, the state’s director general of police, Shesh Paul Vaid, told a news agency on 16 November, 2017.
Drug seizures have increased and the number of cases being registered under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, 1985, for peddling and smuggling of banned substances are rising, said Vaid.
Despite the seizure, “the problem has not received due attention of investigators and the prosecutors,” the order said. “As a result the number of acquittals in such cases greatly outnumbered the convictions, as for every conviction there are about nine acquittals.”
The numbers may not seem alarming for a region with a population of 7 million, but only a small percentage of those who are addicted land up for treatment, Muzaffar Khan, director of the DDC, pointed out.
Hussain treats mental health patients at the two GMC hospitals in Srinagar. He pointed out how in the 1980s when the subcontinent was dealing with an opioids boom in the 1980s, Kashmir stayed trouble-free. Now, he and his colleagues are witnessing a very different situation, he added.
Vaid’s statement did not elicit any response from political parties, civil society groups or citizens. This could imply widespread knowledge of the problem. It could be also because of the general cynicism with which citizens here greet statements made by security agencies, often accused of twisting Kashmir’s political narrative.
But the state’s judiciary and civil administration have expressed concern over the growing drug menace. On 20 August 2017, the Jammu & Kashmir high court directed the state government to “revisit the issue relating to control of drugs as per the experience gathered from other states and various international forums dealing with the control of drug addiction.”
The most important reason for growing drug addiction is the easy availability of drugs, said Hussain.
That poppy and cannabis cultivation is spreading is confirmed by official agencies as well. “Some years ago, poppy cultivation was restricted to Kashmir’s southern parts. But, poppy cultivation has now spread to the northern and central parts of the region as well,” said Shamim Ahmad, an officer with the state’s excise department. He leads a team that is tasked with destroying poppy and cannabis crops.
Law enforcement agencies have been taking action, even destroying crops, but they haven’t been able to prevent the spread of poppy cultivation in the state.
Ahmad and his seniors at the excise department have built an extensive network of informers, many of them volunteers. Since 2008, the team has destroyed poppy crops over 2,080 acres and cannabis crops over 5,365 acres, mostly in south Kashmir.
But farmers manage to conceal poppy or cannabis among other crops and in tree plantations.
But even then, the researchers had warned that “urgent steps must be taken to curb” the problem “before it is too late”.
Hussain is also troubled by the number of children who are seeking treatment for solvent addiction. There were more than 200 children addicted to solvents, mostly under 18 years of age, who had come to the two GMC centres over the last two years. Some of them had also switched over to drugs, he added.
“The most active component in solvents is toluene which is highly intoxicative,” Hussain said. Toluene is routinely used in stationary material such as correction fluids. “Students who use solvent-containing products should be monitored by teachers.”
Relentless conflict, stress and collapsing governance can often lead to rising levels of drug addiction in a population, as IndiaSpend had reported in this 12 November, 2016, article on Manipuri women.
All these problems, from conflict to unemployment, are prevalent in Jammu & Kashmir. Political and armed conflict has had an adverse impact on the state’s economic growth and infrastructure development, according to the 2016 Economic Survey of Jammu & Kashmir.
“[The conflict] has affected the important sources of livelihood of local people such as tourism, horticulture, handicrafts and industries,” the survey said.
“Conflict has reduced Per capita GDP [gross domestic product] growth in J&K State. It has reduced FDI [foreign direct investment] inflows, exports, trade flows. It has reduced domestic investment and savings. It has redirected public expenditure to security related expenditure. It has reduced tourist inflow and tourism receipts and reduced demand for transportation,” the survey said.
The survey showed that nearly 1.8 million adults (45 percent of the adult population) in Kashmir are experiencing symptoms of mental distress, with 41 percent exhibiting signs of probable depression, 26 percent probable anxiety and 19 percent probable post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Three years ago, Waleem (name changed to protect identity), a university law student in Jammu & Kashmir, took to drugs to deal with a broken relationship. Today, Waleem, who once aspired to become a top lawyer, has not completed his degree, and his family is in distress. His expensive drug habit, which includes heroin and brown sugar, have eaten into his mother’s savings.
Waleem is being treated by psychologists, and his mother said that she is hoping that her son will soon recover.
At the DDC in Srinagar, we met Rustum (name changed to protect identity), a 15-year-old lean boy with sunken and bloodshot eyes. He started using drugs when he was in grade five, he said.
Rustum’s descent began when a classmate took him home when the family was out.
“Since then, I have taken charas regularly and sometimes alcohol and heroin as well,” Rustum said, but added that he is now keen to recover. “I know it has given a lot of pain to my parents.,” he said. “Now I want to give up drugs and study.”
Rustum’s father, a class-four government employee, said that his wife is depressed by her son’s addiction. “She often doesn’t sleep at night and has almost stopped talking to others,” he said. She has started showing signs of recovery after the boy was admitted at DDC, he added.
A police officer, who spoke with IndiaSpend on the condition of anonymity, acknowledged police failure to address the drug problem and attributed it to the force’s preoccupation with law and order.
“Why the police are not able to restrict the circulation of drugs has a lot to do with their constant involvement in the law and order problems that Kashmir has no dearth of,” he said.
Umar Trumboo, general secretary of Civil Society Forum of Kashmir (CSFK), an NGO, agreed. “It is a fact that the political and security situation keeps changing here frequently,” said Trumboo.
The NDPS Act provides stringent provisions for offences related to drug abuse and trafficking.
“[But] despite the fact that major offences under the aforesaid Act are non-bailable, it has been observed that in several cases the drug offenders secure acquittal on technical grounds,” read the home department’s order we previously cited. “A large number of offenders in NDPS cases are acquitted due to non-compliance of mandatory provisions and the prescribed procedure.”
A police official who did not wish to be named told IndiaSpend that the police force needed an exclusive anti-drug cell active in every district.
Speedy acquittals of drug peddlers is another issue. “In other north Indian states, a person arrested under NDPS Act doesn’t get bail for months,” said the officer. “But here in Kashmir, such arrestees secure release within 10 days.”
The CSFK’s Trumboo suggested coordination between various government agencies. “We need proper education, rehabilitation and corrective measures,” said Trumboo. “It isn’t rocket science.”
(This article was originally published on IndiaSpend and has been republished with permission.)
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