Srinagar: The arrest of a youth with high-tech gadgets including drone and encrypted apps has blown the lid off the novel modus operandi espoused by drug peddlers, doubling the challenge for law enforcement agencies to curb the influx of illegal drugs in Kashmir.
The 2004-born, hailing from a business family in Srinagar and a student of Class 12, was caught red-handed with illegal medicinal opioids in large quantities and a high-quality drone, bringing an end to his long journey into the dark world of drug peddling. A senior police official, who had been tracking the drug peddler for some time after getting inputs about his activities, lacked evidence to nab him.
"We could not find how he was dispensing drugs to people. It was very challenging to catch him. But some time ago, we learnt his supplies dried up. During those days, we tirelessly made a breakthrough and got to know about the arrival of a drug consignment for him from Delhi," a senior official told ETV Bharat.
The consignment was booked through encrypted WhatsApp messages to evade the law enforcement agencies and the money was sent to the main supplier in Delhi via a fintech app to remove trails. In this process, what shocked the police was the confiscation of a high-end drone for the first time in the Valley where a drone was deployed to track the movement of police and to keep a close vigil on clients buying drugs from him. The drug peddler would deploy the drone on his premises for a view of the neighbourhood before supplying drugs. He would navigate clients through WhatsApp calls to a spot where the consignment would be kept under drone surveillance.
"He had two drones including a toy drone and a DJI drone with a good camera resolution costing above Rs one lakh to get the aerial view of the neighbourhood. The drone was seized alongside 140 bottles of codeine phosphate and a cash of Rs 38,530, perhaps proceeds of the narcotics," said the official adding that his two associates, hailing from Athwajan and Safa Kadal in Srinagar, were also caught by the Srinagar Police and booked under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (NDPS).
Till now, drones were mainly deployed for smuggling of drugs and ammunition from Pakistan to India via Punjab or Jammu borders. Border Security forces reportedly seized 200 drones at the Punjab border mostly with drug consignments, a departure from previous practice of involving pipes placed across the border or items flung over the fence.
According to a survey by the J&K administration in 2019, some six lakh people—over 4.5 per cent of the total population of the Union territory (as per Census 2011)—are addicted to drugs. Of them, 90 per cent were found to be in the 17-33 age group. The substances consumed range from pharmaceutical opioids to heroin and brown sugar. With the consumption of opioids, J&K is estimated to be among the highest in the country.
But over the years, heroin has emerged as the 'drug of choice' with a survey by the department of Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (IMHANS) with 70 per cent of 67,468 drug addicts in the Valley’s 10 districts found to be addicted to heroin. The number is more likely to be higher but experts say almost 80-90 per cent of the population of drug addicts are in the 'harmful stage' and do not come forward due to social stigma. In August 2023, a parliamentary standing committee estimated that the union territory had around 1.35 million drug users. The survey also suggested that young males between the ages of 15 and 28 are more prone to drug use compared to elders. The survey showed a person addicted to opioids spent over Rs 88,000 a month on procurement.
Kashmir has been the preferred route for trafficking illicit narcotics from countries of the Golden Crescent comprising Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan. In the past, Kashmir saw only 12 heroin addicts hailing from tourist hubs. But the contraband trafficked from Pakistan either through porous mountains stretching over the 700-kilometre LoC or international borders in Jammu and Kashmir sparked an 'epidemic'.