Indian state launches assault on drugs as U.N. warns of Bangladesh-like
crisis
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[August 12, 2021]
By Krishna N. Das
GUWAHATI, India (Reuters) - A northeastern
Indian state that has for years been a big transit point for illicit
drugs originating in neighbouring Myanmar has launched a massive
crackdown on the trade, seizing record amounts and arresting nearly
2,000 people since May.
Assam, four of whose neighbouring states have open and rugged borders
with Myanmar, connects the northeast to the rest of India. It has
received praise for the drug clampdown from ruling and opposition
politicians but been criticised for alleged human rights abuses,
including the shooting of suspected traffickers.
Assam's ties with one of the states, Mizoram, has frayed too after Assam
linked the drugs fight to a recent territorial clash between the
two states in which police forces fired at each other.
Police say Assam, the most populous northeastern state, is where
traffickers gather or store drugs such as heroin and methamphetamine.
They estimate about a fifth is sold locally and the rest in India's
richer towns and cities.
Myanmar is one of Asia's main sources of illegal production of
methamphetamine, or "crazy drug" yaba, as well as heroin, according to
the International Narcotics Control Board and the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
"I hope I'm wrong, but the drug trafficking situation in Northeast India
looks somewhat like it did in Bangladesh a few years ago before
methamphetamine really took off," said Jeremy Douglas, UNODC's regional
representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
"We've seen a pattern of small intermittent seizures of yaba becoming
slightly larger and more frequent, and scattered reports of local use -
very similar."
Bangladesh, which reported the world's largest seizures of prescription
opioids in 2019, has become South Asia's biggest destination for yaba,
with a market estimated at more than $3 billion. Police there have
killed hundreds of suspected drug dealers since 2018 .
In a sign of how India's trade has flourished, last week the junior home
minister presented to parliament data on drugs and arms smugglers
that showed many more arrests happened on its border with Myanmar than
other neighbours such as Pakistan and Bangladesh between 2018 and 2020.
Assam this year has already made more drug seizures and related arrests
than it did in any previous full year.
Much of the action has happened since an ambitious party colleague of
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Himanta Biswa Sarma, became chief minister
of Assam in May and said he had given police a free hand to act on
drugs, including to shoot suspects when needed.
"The Assam government has adopted a zero-tolerance policy against
drugs," Sarma said in a speech at a public burning of seized drugs in
July. "I have asked the police to take the most extreme step allowed by
law against drug peddlers and the kingpins when needed."
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Assam Police personnel burn seized drugs during a ceremony at a
playground in Karbi Anglong district of the northeastern state of
Assam, India, July 17, 2021. Picture taken July 17, 2021. REUTERS/Anuwar
Hazarika
Sarma, who estimates the trade in his state is
worth hundreds of millions of dollars, said he could not immediately
speak with Reuters for this story.
TENSIONS FLY
In the past three months, police in Assam have arrested 1,783
people, killed two, wounded five, and seized drugs worth tens of
millions of dollars, according to data shared by the state's police.
Assam is the only point of exit for drugs smuggled into India from
Myanmar, said the state's special director general of police
Gyanendra Pratap Singh.
"No crime can ever be stopped, but our goal is to ensure that we
make it as difficult as lawfully possible for anybody to carry drugs
through Assam, and make the availability of drugs to the youngsters
of Assam almost impossible," he told Reuters at his residence
secured by many young policemen.
Singh, who is also leading an investigation into the deadly July
clashes with Mizoram, said a nexus that facilitates the passage of
drugs through Mizoram had a role in the violence to divert attention
from the fight on narcotics.
Mizoram denied the charge and said it made record seizures of
methamphetamine this year itself. It has also objected to Assam's
new policy of inspecting all vehicles coming from Mizoram to "check
trafficking of illicit drugs .
"We support the crackdown on drugs, it's a menace to society" said
David Lalthangliana, officer on special duty at Mizoram's Home
Department. "But let it be a joint effort, let it not be
discriminatory where you check vehicles coming in from only one
state."
Opposition leaders in Assam have also accused the state government
of human rights violations in dealing with criminals, including drug
peddlers, and have demanded a judicial enquiry into police
encounters that have killed or injured suspects. Police say shots
are only fired in self defence or when suspects try to flee.
(Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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