Drug Abuse Eroding Society's Foundation: J&K L-G Sinha Launches Campaign

Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha launched the 'Drug-Free J&K Campaign' in Reasi, warning that drug abuse is eroding society's foundations. He reported significant achievements, including the arrest of drug smugglers, seizure of narcotics worth Rs 3 crore, and cancellation of 187 driving licenses. Sinha emphasized the need for a people's movement involving mothers, sisters, and community leaders to combat the crisis. He also warned that drug traffickers and terrorists operate hand in hand and will face the harshest consequences under the law.

Key Points: Drug Abuse Eroding Society: J&K L-G Launches Anti-Drug Campaign

  • L-G warns drug abuse is eroding society's foundations
  • Launches 'Drug-Free J&K Campaign' in Reasi
  • Over 187 driving licenses cancelled, properties seized
  • 1,947 women committees formed to fight drug menace
4 min read

Drug abuse eroding very foundation of our society: J&K L-G Sinha

J&K L-G Manoj Sinha warns drug abuse is eroding society's foundation, launches 'Drug-Free J&K Campaign' with arrests, property seizures, and community involvement.

"Drugs are a wound in the heart of our society. To heal this wound, we require a people's movement that mobilises the full strength of society to eradicate drugs at their roots. - Manoj Sinha"

Jammu, April 24

Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor, Manoj Sinha, on Friday asked for a united fight against drug abuse as the crisis is eroding the very foundations of the society.

The L-G has launched 'Drug-Free J&K Campaign' in Reasi, urging communities, institutions, and individuals alike to unite in the fight against drug abuse, a crisis he warned is eroding the very foundations of society from within.

He appealed for a broad‑based people's movement while highlighting that for the past 12 days, a collective force has risen across the Union Territory against drugs and people are resolutely committed to the objective to make this land free from narcotics.

Highlighting the achievement of the campaign in the past 12 days, the L-G said that in Jammu division, between April 11 and 22, large number of cases were registered and several drug smugglers were arrested.

He said that narcotics valued at nearly Rs 3 crore have been seized and about Rs 1 crore worth of movable and immovable properties were attached.

"Properties of drug smugglers have been demolished. As many as 187 driving licenses and four vehicle registrations have also been cancelled. Financial investigations have been initiated against 48 drug peddlers. Drug and chemist shops have been inspected, and 15 drug‑store licenses have been cancelled. Drug users have been referred to de‑addiction and rehabilitation centres and counselling has also been extended to drug users," the L-G noted.

He also said that 1,947 women committees have been established across districts in the Jammu division since the beginning of the campaign on April 11 and with the support of mothers and sisters, this cancer in society will be cured.

"We must build a historic movement, one that rises from homes, schools, mohallas, and communities; a movement that begins with open, honest dialogue in towns and villages. Mothers and sisters are the moral bedrock of our society and with their help we can win this battle," the L-G added.

Speaking on the occasion, L-G Sinha said that more than two dozen drug traffickers have already been identified and they will be tracked down and held accountable.

He added that in the Jammu division, thousands of drug peddlers remain under surveillance, and each one will be relentlessly pursued until they are apprehended and brought into custody.

"Security checks have been stepped up around schools, colleges, and other vulnerable areas. I want to make it absolutely clear that those who engage in the grave crime of poisoning the future of our youth through drug trafficking will face the harshest consequences under the law," the L-G said.

He also drew attention of police and all enforcement agencies to the fact that drug traffickers and terrorists operate hand in hand and they should be treated as allies in crime.

"Our response should be decisive, thorough, and unyielding. Every route drug smuggler exploit should be watched, every financial chain should be dismantled, and every asset stripped away until their networks are completely destroyed," he said.

L-G Sinha added that for more than a decade, Jammu and Kashmir has carried the heavy silence surrounding the menace of drug abuse and this historic people's movement was launched to shatter that silence.

"With collective strength we must raise society's voice against the scourge of narcotics. Drugs are a wound in the heart of our society. To heal this wound, we require a people's movement that mobilises the full strength of society to eradicate drugs at their roots. The "Nasha‑Mukt J&K" campaign also serves to remind us that among the strongest pillars of society are the rule of law, constitutional values, the ethic of duty, and a spirit of 'Jan Bhagidari'," the L-G said.

He asked the NGOs, social workers and spiritual leaders to join the campaign in large number in cities and villages.

"Social organisations, spiritual leaders, and educators are the frontline guardians of this mission. I firmly believe that through their leadership, hope can be rekindled and society renewed. The full strength of the government and the community stands beside them," the L-G said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Impressive numbers – 187 driving licenses cancelled and 15 pharmacy licenses revoked. But I wonder how many of those arrested are big fish vs small-time users. Need to focus on rehabilitation too, not just punishment. The root cause is lack of opportunities for youth.
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Rajesh Q
Reasi is a good starting point – the border areas have become transit routes for heroin from across the border. The L-G's point about drug traffickers and terrorists is spot on. They use the same networks. Dismantle one, you hurt the other. 🇮🇳
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Kavya N
Good initiative but we need more than just arrests. My cousin in Srinagar says the de-addiction centres are overcrowded and understaffed. Also, the "heavy silence" he mentions is real – many families hide their children's addiction out of shame. We need community support groups.
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James A
The link between terrorism and drug money is well-documented globally. Good to see J&K administration acknowledging it. But demolishing properties without due process sounds worrying – hope there's legal oversight. The 1,947 women committees are a great community-level intervention though.
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Varun X
"Wound in the heart of our society" – well said, L-G ji. As someone working with NGOs in Udhampur, I can tell you the problem is deep. Many kids start with prescription drugs from unscrupulous chemists. Cancelling 15 licenses is a start, but need surprise inspections regularly. 🙏

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