MP Police Charge Amazon Executives in Alleged Marijuana Smuggling Case

The police, who had previously summoned and spoken to Amazon executives in the case, estimate that about 1,000 kg of marijuana, worth roughly $148,000, was sold via Amazon.

Lucknow: The police said on Saturday they had charged senior executives of Amazon.com’s local unit under narcotics laws in a case of alleged marijuana smuggling via the online retailer.

Police in Madhya Pradesh arrested two men with 20 kilograms of marijuana on November 14 and found they were using the Amazon India website to order and further smuggle the substance in the guise of stevia leaves, a natural sweetener, to other Indian states.

State police said in a statement that executive directors of Amazon India were being named as accused under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act due to differences in answers in documents provided by the company in response to police questions and facts unearthed by discussion.

Police did not disclose how many executives were charged.

The police, who had previously summoned and spoken to Amazon executives in the case, estimate that about 1,000 kg of marijuana, worth roughly $148,000, was sold via Amazon.

Amazon said in a statement that it does not allow the listing and sale of legally prohibited products, adding that it takes strict action against sellers in case of any contravention.

“The issue was notified to us and we are currently investigating it,” Amazon said of the alleged marijuana smuggling.

Indian authorities have in recent years intensified their efforts to crack down on illicit drugs. Many high-profile Indian actors and TV personalities have been under scrutiny from narcotics officials since last year.

(Reuters)

Bombay HC Imposes 14 Conditions On Aryan Khan For Bail

Among other conditions, the court directed Khan to pay a personal bond of Rs 1 lakh with one or two sureties of the same amount.

Mumbai: The Bombay high court on Friday said Aryan Khan, son of superstar Shah Rukh Khan, shall be released on a personal bond of Rs 1 lakh with one or two sureties of the same amount.

A copy of the five-page operative order was signed by Justice N.W. Sambre on Friday afternoon.

This would help Aryan Khan’s advocates to secure his release from the Arthur Road prison in central Mumbai, where he is lodged, by evening.

Aryan Khan’s advocates will now take the certified copy of the HC order to the special court that is hearing the cases related to the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, along with the requisite documents and sureties.

Also read: Aryan Khan and the Right Wing’s Disdain for Bollywood’s Portrayal of Progressive Ideals

After verification, the special court will issue the release papers which would be handed over to the Arthur Road prison to secure Aryan Khan’s release.

In its order, the high court has imposed 14 conditions on Aryan Khan and co-accused Arbaaz Merchant and Munmun Dhamecha, who were also granted bail.

A single bench of Justice N W Sambre had on Thursday granted bail to Aryan Khan. 25 days after he was arrested during a drug raid on a cruise ship off the Mumbai coast. The high court had said it would provide a copy of its order on Friday.

(PTI)

Aryan Khan Says NCB ‘Misinterpreted’ WhatsApp Chats to Implicate Him in Drugs Case

In his appeal in the HC against the special court order, Aryan Khan said the Narcotics Control Bureau’s (NCB) “interpretation and misinterpretation” of the WhatsApp chats collected from his mobile phone was “wrong and unjustified”.

Mumbai: Aryan Khan, son of Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, in his plea in the Bombay high court seeking bail, has said that the NCB was “misinterpreting” his WhatsApp chats to implicate him in the case of seizure of banned drugs aboard a cruise ship off the Mumbai coast earlier this month.

Aryan Khan, currently in jail, on Wednesday moved the HC after a special court rejected his application for bail. The HC will hear his bail plea on October 26.

In his appeal in the HC against the special court order, Aryan Khan said the Narcotics Control Bureau’s (NCB) “interpretation and misinterpretation” of the WhatsApp chats collected from his mobile phone was “wrong and unjustified”.

Also Read: Aryan Khan Seemed To Be Indulging in Drug Activities Regularly: Court Says, Denying Bail

The 23-year-old claimed no contraband was recovered from him after the NCB raided the ship and maintained he has no connection with any of the other accused in the case except Arbaaz Merchant and Aachit Kumar.

So far, the anti-drugs agency has arrested as many as 20 people in connection with the case.

The appeal further said the WhatsApp chats that are being relied upon by the NCB are “ex-facie (on the face of it) of a period prior to the incident”.

“By no stretch of imagination can those purported messages be linked to any conspiracy for which the secret information was received,” it said.

“The interpretation of the WhatsApp messages is that of the investigating officer and such interpretation is unjustified and wrong,” the appeal said.

Aryan Khan also questioned the special court’s contention, while refusing him bail, that since he is an influential person he may tamper with evidence in the case if released from custody.

“There is no presumption in law that merely because a person is influential, there is likelihood of him tampering with the evidence,” the appeal said.

Aryan Khan was arrested on October 3 by the NCB along with his friend Arbaaz Merchant (26) and fashion model Munmun Dhamecha (28). The trio is presently in judicial custody. While Aryan Khan and Merchant are lodged at the Arthur Road prison in central Mumbai, Dhamecha is at the Byculla women’s prison.

A special court, designated to hear cases related to the Narcotics Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (NDPS), refused to grant them bail noting that “they were part of the conspiracy”.

The lower court had said Aryan Khan had a “nexus with drug peddlers and suppliers and had indulged in illicit drug activities on a regular basis”.

(PTI)

NDPS Act: Should Vices Be Criminalised?

The makeover of vices as offences to be taken cognisance of by law would end up with most of the human population in prison.

Deepika Padukone, Sara Ali Khan, Shraddha Kapoor, Rhea Chakraborty, Rakul Preet Singh the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) is scripting a multi-starrer blockbuster for the small screen. Apparently, we have been getting the full form of NCB wrong as it has been rechristened Naricotics Control Bureau.

Far from being sexist or misogynist, the NCB is dutifully performing its functions and catching the ‘bad’ women of Bollywood, who like the Eve of the ‘Original Sin’ fame may have even lured some of our ‘nice’ boys into temptation.

Principles of criminal jurisprudence

The singling out of women actors apart, an examination of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (NDPS) from the first principles of criminal jurisprudence seems an interesting avenue to explore and may lead to surprising conclusions. In all civilised jurisprudence life and liberty is valued and is curtailed if an individual commits a crime.

Generally, offences are acts which harm the person or property of others like murder, robbery and theft. The liberty of the perpetrator is curtailed by way of imprisonment due to the injury caused to the victim.

An offence is comprised of two elements the actus reus – the acts which make up the ingredients of an offence and the mens rea – the intention to harm or injure the other person or his/her property. The burden of proof of establishing both the actus reus and the mens rea is on the prosecution to prove the commission of an offence.

Laws such as NDPS brought in 1985 in imitation of and under the pressure of the West create ‘victimless crimes’. Sadhus smoking charas and ganja on the banks of the Ganga in Haridwar and Rishikesh or in the Kumbh Mela, officially organised by the government, are a common sight.

However, NDPS under Section 2(iii) (a) defines cannabis (hemp) to mean charas and includes the “separated resin, in whatever form, whether crude or purified, obtained from the cannabis plant”. Subsection (b) includes “ganja, that is, the flowering or fruiting tops of the cannabis plant”. Sections 2(xv) to (xix) define the entire spectrum of opium, opium derivatives and poppy and bring it within the ambit of the Act. Sections 17 to 20 of the law proceeds to prescribe stringent punishments extendable to 10 and 20 years’ imprisonment with respect to use, possession, and sale, purchase of opium, charas and ganja.

Naga Sadhus or Hindu holy men take a dip during the first “Shahi Snan” (grand bath) at “Kumbh Mela” or the Pitcher Festival, in Prayagraj, India, January 15, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Danish Siddiqui

Mens rea or the criminal intention

NDPS dispenses with ‘intention’ to cause injury and Section 35 directs the court to presume the existence of a culpable mental state for all the offences under the Act. In law, if possession is to constitute an offence, it must mean conscious possession. For example, if a thing is put in the hand of a sleeping person A, then it cannot be said that A is in possession of it. Similarly, if something is slipped in the handbag of B, then B cannot be said to be in possession of it.

However, under NDPS, knowledge of the contents is imputed to the accused. Section 54 says that it is to be presumed that a person has committed an offence under the Act, if he fails to account satisfactorily for the possession of any narcotic drug or psychotropic substance or any other incriminating article.

Also read: The Demonisation of Cannabis Users Needs to Stop

Of decoys and entrapment

NDPS and the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act are the two legislations where the modus operandi of sending in decoy customers is employed by the police. It is no coincidence that these two laws have been singled out for the deployment of the methodology. It is the taint of the immoral associated with the offences under the laws and the accused persons being looked upon as the repositories of the all that is ‘bad’ in society, that makes using decoys a methodology acceptable to investigative agencies, the prosecution and the courts.

The Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 does not contain any provision authorising sending in of decoys by the police as part of the investigative steps to be taken in finding out the perpetrators of an offence. The sending in of a person as decoy who offers money for the commission of an act which is an offence would fall within “entrapment”.

It is the conception, planning and execution by a police officer by trickery, persuasion and fraud to get a person to commit an offence. In the context of the offence of theft, enticing a person to burgle a house by offering money would amount to criminal conspiracy and abetment to the offence by the individual.

Denial of bail

The restrictions imposed on grant of bail under NDPS amount to virtual denial and ensure years of incarceration. Section 37(1) declares that an accused person is not to be released on bail unless the court has reasonable grounds to believe that the accused is not guilty and is not likely to commit an offence while on bail. This provision is identical to provisions of the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 and Prevention of Terrorism Act, 2002 which resulted in long periods of incarceration and evoked strong criticism from the human rights movement.

Rhea Chakraborty and her brother Showik. Photo: PTI

The provisions of NDPS possibly due to the ‘sinful immorality’ associated have remained unnoticed on the statute books even by the civil liberties movement. The concomitant requirement of speedy disposal of cases under NDPS to offset the curtailment of liberty by denial of bail to the undertrial, remains a chimera in our clogged justice delivery system.

Also read: Strange and Arbitrary Bail Orders: Are Indian Judges Going Too Far?

Victimless crimes

The possession or recreational use of psychotropic substances lacks the primary ingredient of the intention to harm and the causing of injury to the other. There is no ‘victim’ of the crime. The acts are statutorily created offences under the NDPS and are victimless crimes. The acts can at best fall within the category of vices. At the worst, they can be said to be acts by which a person harms himself or herself.

The premise of making these acts an offence comes from the thirteenth century Latin phrase ‘non compos mentis’ in English law. ‘Compos mentis’ meaning ‘having control of one’s mind’ and prefixing ‘non’ translates into ‘not having control of one’s mind’. The individuals are to be treated as infirm and incapable: the State steps in as a moral guardian to protect them.

That those who practice vices are mentally infirm and need to be protected from self-destruction by incarceration leading to the likely ruin of their lives, appears to be a dubious proposition. Criminalising vices is a pandora’s box with an endless stream emerging in the arena. Acts with the criteria of injury and harm to others as a fulcrum are relatively easier to categorise and agree upon as crimes.

Intrinsically, the qualities, behaviour and acts which are to be categorised as vices are in the realm of the subjective with little possibility of agreement. Greed, avarice, hypocrisy, gluttony and acts like drunkenness, smoking and prizefighting may all fall within the category of vices.  The makeover of vices as offences to be taken cognisance of by law would end up with most of the human population in prison.

Actors Deepika Padukone, Shraddha Kapoor and Sara Ali Khan. Photos: Official Twitter accounts

Under the blanket of drug menace to society, the draconian nature of NDPS has received little critical attention. In the case of a second conviction, even for offences in the nature of abetment or attempt to commit an offence, section 31A of NDPS earlier prescribed mandatory death sentence. In a fortunate turn of events, an amendment in 2014 to the Act leaves room for the court to impose the alternative of enhanced sentence, as an alternative to death penalty, for a second offence.

The legislation with unduly harsh punishments, use of decoys, denial of bail, presumption with regard to intention and knowledge, leads virtually to the burden-of-proof being placed on the accused to establish innocence and needs to be reviewed.

In the context of criminalising vices, about a century and a quarter ago, Lysander Spooner in Vices Are Not Crimes: A Vindication of Moral Liberty argued that government should protect its citizens against crime, but that it is foolish, unjust, and tyrannical to legislate against vice. The larger jurisprudential question whether the state should criminalize vices and the assumption that those who practice vices like recreational drug use are mentally infirm and need to be protected from self-destruction by imprisonment needs to be opened up for debate.

Rakesh Shukla is an advocate and member of the Supreme Court Bar Association.

Narcotics Control Bureau Arrests Rhea Chakraborty; to Remain in Judicial Custody till Sept 22

The NCB had earlier arrested her younger brother Showik, Rajput’s house manager Samuel Miranda and his house staffer Dipesh Sawant.

New Delhi: Actor Rhea Chakraborty was arrested by the Narcotics Control Bureau, after appearing for questioning in the drugs case linked to the death of actor Sushant Singh Rajput for the third consecutive day on Tuesday.

She will be produced before a magistrate through video conferencing by 7.30 pm, ANI has reported.

K.P.S. Malhotra, deputy director of the Narcotics Control Bureau, confirmed her arrest at 4 pm. The NCB did not seek further custody of Rhea, but opposed her bail, Indian Express quoted NCB deputy DG Mutha Ashok Jain as having said. She has been remanded in judicial custody till September 21.

The NCB is headed by Rakesh Asthana, against whom the CBI, under the directorship of Alok Verma, had decided to file an FIR for taking bribes.

Chakraborty’s appearances at the questionings had led to scenes of pitched media attention, which many likened to a witch-hunt. Photographs of journalists shoving mics at her and hounding her on day one of the interrogation have gone viral on social media.

Among the first to react to the news of her arrest was Bihar DGP Gupteshwar Pandey, whose curious attention to the case has been explored in a piece by Umesh Kumar Ray on The Wire.

Chakraborty’s lawyer Satish Maneshinde, according to a tweet by journalist Rajdeep Sardesai, has called her arrest a “travesty of justice”.

Several others have called the arrest the mark of a section of media ‘winning’ in imposing the foregone conclusion of a trial that has been playing out on primetime for a month now.


The current NCB probe began after the ED shared with it a report, after it cloned two mobile phones belonging to the actor, and arrived at the conclusion that her private conversations suggested procurement, transaction and consumption of banned drugs, PTI has reported.

On Tuesday, Chakraborty reached the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) office located at Ballard Estate in south Mumbai, around 10.30 am in a car escorted by a Mumbai Police vehicle.

Earlier, she was questioned by the NCB for about eight hours on Monday and six hours on Sunday.

The agency earlier said it was getting “her cooperation” in the drugs case probe linked to case of death of Rajput (34), who passed away at his apartment in suburban Bandra on June 14.

Also read: Is the BJP Deriving Political Mileage Out of the Sushant Singh Rajput Case?

After the questioning session on Monday, NCB Deputy Director General (south-west region) Mutha Ashok Jain told reporters that the agency was doing a “professionally thorough and systematic job” and it will inform the court about its “findings in detail” in this case.

The NCB had earlier arrested her younger brother Showik Chakraborty (24), Rajput’s house manager Samuel Miranda (33) and his house staffer Dipesh Sawant.

Rhea Chakraborty was earlier questioned by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) that are also probing Rajput’s death.

In her interviews given to multiple TV news channels, the actor had said she has never consumed drugs herself.

A total of nine people have been arrested till now by the NCB with seven directly linked to this probe, while two were arrested when the investigation was launched under criminal sections of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act.

(With agency inputs)

If you know someone – friend or family member – at risk of suicide, please reach out to them. The Suicide Prevention India Foundation maintains a list of telephone numbers (www.spif.in/seek-help/) they can call to speak in confidence. You could also refer or accompany them to the nearest hospital.

Note: This is a developing story.

Sushant Death Case: Narcotics Control Bureau Summons Rhea Chakraborty

Agency officials served her with a notice at her home early on Sunday. She is expected to turn up for questioning later in the day.

Mumbai: A Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) team reached actor Rhea Chakraborty’s home in Mumbai on Sunday morning to serve her summons for joining probe in the drugs case linked to the death of her live-in partner and actor Sushant Singh Rajput, officials said.

The agency has said that it wants to question Rhea, 28, the main accused in the death case, to take the probe forward in the case.

“The team has gone to serve the summons for joining investigation. She(Rhea) can come on her own or she can come with the team,” a senior official of the federal anti-narcotics agency said.

A team led by NCB joint director Sameer Wankhede reached Rhea’s house located in Santa Cruz (west) area accompanied by local police and some women personnel.

The team left after some time and it is expected that Rhea will appear before the agency later in the day, they said.

“We have summoned her. She will come respecting the summons,” Wankhede told reporters outside the NCB office in Ballard Estate after he returned from Rhea’s house.

The agency has said it also wants to confront Rhea with Showik, Miranda and Sawant in order to ascertain their individual roles in this alleged drug racket after it obtained mobile phone chat records and other electronic data that suggested some banned drugs were allegedly being procured by these people.

Also read: Sushant Singh: This Macabre Circus Will Terrorise People Into Covering up Mental Illness

Rhea, in interviews given to multiple TV news channels, has said that she has never consumed drugs herself.

She had, however, claimed that the late actor used to consume marijuana.

The NCB, over the last two days, has arrested her younger brother Showik Chakraborty (24), Rajput’s house manager Samuel Miranda (33) and Dipesh Sawant, a member of the actor’s personal staff, in this case.

It is claimed that Miranda told NCB investigators that he used to procure bud or curated marijuana for the late actor’s household.

Sawant was arrested on Saturday and he is expected to be produced by the agency before a local court on Sunday for seeking his custody.

A total of 8 people have been arrested till now by the NCB with six being directly linked to this probe while two were arrested by it when probe was launched under criminal sections of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act.

When the probe in the case began, the agency had arrested two men, Abbas Lakhani and Karan Arora, for alleged drug peddling and officials have claimed that through them they reached Zaid Vilatra and Abdel Basit Parihar who are allegedly linked to this drugs case as they were in touch with Miranda.

Miranda, they had said, used to allegedly procure drugs from them on the purported instructions of Showik, agency officials said.

Both Lakhani and Arora have been granted bail. The NCB had said it recovered 59 grams of cannabis from them.

The NCB, while seeking remand of one of the accused in this case few days back, had told a local court that it was looking into “the drug citadel in Mumbai, and especially Bollywood” in this probe.

This case has given the NCB an “inkling” into the narcotics network and its penetration in Bollywood or Hindi movie industry, NCB Deputy Director General Mutha Ashok Jain told reporters outside the agency’s office on Saturday.

Various angles surrounding the death of the 34-year-old actor are being probed by three federal agencies, including the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

The NCB initiated a drug angle probe in this case after the ED shared with it a report following the cloning of two mobile phones of Rhea.

Rajput was found dead at his flat in suburban Bandra area on June 14.

Special NIA Court Convicts Sri Lankan for Espionage at Pakistan Behest

Arun Selvarajan has been convicted for all charges against him including under the IPC, the UAPA, the Official Secrets Act, the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, the Foreigners Act and the Passport Act.

Chennai: A special NIA court has jailed a Sri Lankan national for five years and fined Rs 20,000 after convicting him for spying on Indian defence installations at the behest of Pakistan intelligence officers as part of a conspiracy to carry out terrorist attacks in the country.

Arun Selvarajan has been convicted for all charges against him including the IPC, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention)Act, the Official Secrets Act, the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, the Foreigners Act besides the Passport Act, an NIA spokesperson said.

In September 2012, Thameem Ansari, a native of Tamil Nadu’s Thanjavur district, was arrested for conducting espionage at the behest of Pakistan intelligence officers led by Amir Zubair Siddique, who was posted at the Pakistan High Commission in Colombo, as part of a conspiracy to carry out terrorist acts in India, the official said.

A case was registered on September 17, 2012, at Q Branch Police Station in Tamil Nadu’s Trichy city under sections of the Official Secrets Act read with section 120B (criminal conspiracy) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), the agency said.

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) re-registered the case on May 1, 2013, and took over the investigation.

Also read: NIA Files Charge Sheet Against Nine ‘Pro-Khalistan’ Youths in Tarn Taran Blast Case

Later, Sri Lankan national Selvarajan was arrested in the case on September 10, 2014, for engaging in similar espionage activities at the behest of Pakistan Intelligence officers, it said.

Ansari and Selvarajan, pursuant to the conspiracy hatched with Pakistan intelligence officers, had conducted espionage at various defence establishments and sensitive locations in Tamil Nadu besides transmitted classified information to Siddique, thereby threatening the sovereignty and security of India, the NIA said.

On March 6, 2015, a charge sheet was filed against Ansari and Selvarajan under sections of the IPC, the UA(P)Act and the Official Secrets Act. Selvarajan was also charged with sections of the NDPS Act.

A supplementary charge sheet was filed against Selvarajan on March 30, 2016, under sections of the Foreigners Act besides the Passport Act.

Charges were framed against Ansari and Selvarajan in January 2018. Selvarajan has been convicted for all the charges against him. However, a trial against Ansari continues, the NIA said.

The investigation is continuing against the absconding accused Mohammed Anver Mohammed Siraj Ali, a native of Sri Lanka besides the Pakistan intelligence officer Siddique and others, the NIA added.

Reckless Media Coverage Has Ignored Real Problems of Drug Abuse in Punjab

The local and national media has been irresponsible and reckless in reporting the drug situation in Punjab.

The row over Udta Punjab shows how news reports on statistics and political mudslinging have done nothing but sensationalise the issue.

In January 2015, the Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal said that the drug menace was hardly an issue in the upcoming elections. Credit: PTI

The Punjab chief minister Parkash Singh Badal said that the drug menace was hardly an issue in the upcoming elections. Credit: PTI

The tussle between the censor board and the makers of Udta Punjab has highlighted the role of the media in the issue of drug abuse in Punjab.

When the media acts as a public sentinel, it is widely appreciated, but its excesses in that role, which are quite frequent, require further scrutiny. The sudden coming to light of the ‘drug problem’ in Punjab during the 2012 assembly elections illustrates the unintended consequences of excessive media presence influencing policy decisions. By abandoning independent enquiry and relying solely on fodder provided by politicians, the media has blended fact with fiction.

Punjab before 2013

Punjab has traditionally been regarded as the transit point in the trafficking of drugs, especially heroin, from Iran and Afghanistan. But from being a mere trafficking route, the state eventually became a market for local consumption, because of unemployment as well as agricultural and economic failure. Arrests under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act in Punjab have consistently increased since 2004. Between 2011 and 2014, there was a steep increase in the total arrests made, from 6,125 to 17,001 individuals. The arrests were made mostly for the consumption of ‘small and intermediate quantities’, implying that the people in question were individual consumers.

These numbers are a result of years of neglect and indifference on the part of the authorities. Although they are fully aware of the magnitude of the problem, there has been barely any effort by them to proactively address it. The ineffectiveness of existing rehabilitation and de-addiction institutions makes this governmental apathy glaring.

During the campaign for the 2012 Punjab state assembly elections, a stray remark by the Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, that 70% of Punjab’s youth was addicted to drugs, attracted attention for the wrong reasons. This statistic was in fact mis-quoted by him from a study conducted by the Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar. The study said that 73.5% of the sample size of 600 were in the age group of 16-35. Gandhi’s comment and the subsequent mud-slinging by political parties fuelled the imagination of the popular media but did little to portray the actual anomalies in the system. Several political groups used the media platform to rally behind or play down the Akali Dal, which eventually won.

The victory of Parkash Singh Badal’s troupe, however, was not without a substantial loss of reputation. It appeared that the Akali Dal-BJP coalition had inherited a problem state – one waiting for a clear demonstration of political will and for those in power to ensure the immediate redressal of the drug situation.

Ineffective action and media representation

The new Punjab government’s response to the drug problem consisted of issuing internal orders to agencies like the police and the health department to undertake immediate action that was both visible and effective. As several off-the-record, informal interviews with stakeholders testify, the first directive of the state government was to arrest people en masse, irrespective of the nature of their involvement in drug consumption or trade. This led to a large number of arbitrary arrests and prison overcrowding. The police, sources claim, were given a mandate to round up every pedlar, user and, sometimes, even relatives of pedlars.

One result of this was the inflation of the officially-recorded numbers of drug users and pedlars in the state. In public perception, the number of arrests were equated with the scale of the problem. To counter this potentially damaging image, the state government issued further informal instructions to bring down the number of arrests. As the people who were being arrested were largely users and addicts, not traffickers, this did not have any impact on the drug menace in the state, only altering the arrest statistics. The graph below shows that the number of cases registered and persons arrested gradually increased till 2011. Then there was an abrupt rise between 2012 and 2014, and a sudden drop in 2015.

The state government projected these numbers as an indicator of good governance and effective enforcement. The media, which had not cared about the drug problem except for brief periods during elections, easily accepted this. There was no objective enquiry into the nature of the problem, the extent of its decline and the quality of the measures taken by the enforcement authorities. It was surely evident that a public health problem of addiction could not be addressed solely through strict policing. The drastic rise and fall in the numbers produced sensationalised news reports, with the real problem being rendered invisible.

The problem has resurfaced

With the next assembly elections around the corner, the political parties involved continue to use drugs as an instrument of attack against each other. Each party promises an apparently unique solution. The incumbent state government continues to try to overcome adverse publicity by making the problem invisible, instead of working on feasible and effective solutions. This partly explains the anguish and frustration around discussions of reality, in the form of films or other media, as was seen in the case of Udta Punjab.

The media, both local and national, has been irresponsible and reckless in reporting the drug situation in Punjab. What is needed is a thorough study and accurate reporting to channel resources and direct administrative attention towards treating the drug problem as a healthcare issue. Instead, the focus has been on selling half-truths, of beefed-up statistics on the seizures of drugs and arrests, and titillating the public. The police concede that the massive crackdown of 2013 that resulted in the mitigation of drug trade and use was a pyrrhic victory. Effectively, the problem was buried alive instead of being eliminated. The state still sits atop an explosive situation and continues to be blind to the real problem, with the active complicity of an injudicious media.

Sakshi is a research fellow at the Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, New Delhi.

Planning to Die? Don’t Do It in India if At All Possible.

Palliative, or hospice, care is difficult, if not impossible to find and a conspiracy of lies surrounds the deathbed: doctors are afraid to stop treatment for fear of the family’s anger and families hide the truth from their loved one for fear of what it will do to him.

Palliative, or hospice, care is difficult, if not impossible to find and a conspiracy of lies surrounds the deathbed: doctors are afraid to stop treatment for fear of the family’s anger and families hide the truth from their loved one for fear of what it will do to him

On the Ganges. Credit: Eric Parker/Flickr CC BY-NC 2.0

On the Ganges. Credit: Eric Parker/Flickr CC BY-NC 2.0

The conclusion I draw from the recent Economist Intelligence Unit Report on the quality of the death experience in 80 countries is that India is not the place to die in. The country is close to the bottom in the rankings – 67 – but the difference in scores between the bottom 20 is negligible if you are a person in pain at the end of your life and there is no help to be found.

That said, India was at the bottom of the list when the last ranking was done in 2010, so there have been some efforts at improvement (or other countries have simply gotten worse).

Palliative care, or care for the terminally ill, has advanced as a special branch of medicine in many parts of the developing world over the last 75 years. With advances in almost all aspects of medical science, diseases like cancer and AIDS that once killed quickly can now be controlled for many years and better public health systems in general mean that people are living longer world wide.

While both are good things in themselves, they created new challenges. Among them was the creation of a whole new class of patients who were called the terminally ill. They would linger, sometimes for years, in pain and suffering, victims, as it were, of the good nutrition, living conditions and health care the developed world is so justly proud of.

Palliative care was practiced by religious institutions going back to the 11th century, but it only emerged as a separate, scientific approach in the 1960s with the work of Dame Cicely Saunders in the UK. A doctor herself, she questioned the foundation on which medical care for the terminally ill had been based until then: continue to try to cure until the very end.

Dame Cicely introduced the idea of accepting death into the equation and everything changed. Pain management takes on a whole new meaning, for example, if you know the patient is dying. Who cares if she gets addicted? You give what she needs to be comfortable and pain-free. That reduces the fear and anxiety and that is the other equally important pillar upon which palliative care rests: the individual, with all her dignity and humanness intact, must be at the heart of the entire process. If the patient is anxious or afraid, she cannot have a peaceful death. So her emotional and spiritual needs are given as much importance as her physical ones.

Here in India, palliative, or hospice, care is difficult, if not impossible to find. A conspiracy of lies surrounds the deathbed: doctors are afraid to stop treatment for fear of the family’s anger and families hide the truth from their loved one for fear of what it will do to him. In his heart, the patient almost always knows what is happening (even children understand when they are dying) yet, for fear of upsetting their families, they suffer alone in silence.

This is perplexing in a culture which traditionally is open to and accepting of the natural cycles of life. Dr Anju Virmani, a Delhi-based endocrinologist, spoke to me about her experience as a young resident in AIIMS just 25 years ago:

“The tragedy is traditionally we do/did have this spirit: one was not supposed to die in hospital. It was considered inauspicious. In our residency days we have had scores of families say ‘OK Doc if you think death is inevitable, please let us go home.’ They would go LAMA (left against medical advice). The person would be at home, surrounded by loved ones, not go with doctors poking them desperate to find veins, give shots, give intracardiac injections…”

Those days are now gone. Doctors are legally bound to do all that is required to prolong life as long as the patient is in the hospital. This effectively eliminates poor people who can no longer afford treatment anyway and are discharged as soon as their resources give out. The rich are encouraged to do all that they possibly can (“You wouldn’t want to feel you hadn’t tried everything you could to save him,” distraught families are often counselled. “At least you’ll be able to rest knowing you left no option untried.”).

In the end, neither the rich nor the poor are well served. The poor die at home at least, in familiar surroundings and cared for by people they know and (hopefully) love. But they often die in agonising pain and squalid conditions, with people who do not have the skills to help them cope either physically or emotionally.

The rich, on the other hand, may die in clean and hygienic surroundings but they are just as likely to be in extreme pain, at least some of the time. Pain management is a science poorly understood in India and even when drugs are available they may be doled out in doses too small to be helpful or spaced out at arbitrary intervals which seem designed not to relieve suffering but to test endurance. What possible benefit can there be to bearing pain needlessly?

The irony of this particular problem is that India is the world’s leading manufacturer of morphine, the drug of choice for managing excruciating pain. It produces most of the world’s supply, yet exports over 90% of it, callously denying its own people – numbering seven million, according to a Human Rights Watch report – the relief they themselves cultivate, harvest and extract.

Terrified of its addictive properties, which are undisputed, the Indian Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act severely curtailed the medical use of Morphine, making it so difficult to obtain that most doctors never even bothered to apply for the six licenses which were required. Its scarcity meant that no one knew how to administer it; its use is not taught in 80% of the country’s medical schools.

Last year, however, an amendment to the NDPS Act was passed by Parliament, loosening the restrictions on morphine and paving the way for better pain relief for the terminally ill within the country.

Palliative care in Kerala-home visit of the team. Credit: New Delhices/Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Palliative care in Kerala: Home visit by a team of volunteers.
Credit: New Delhices/Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

There are other promising developments. Kerala has pioneered a palliative care movement which is a beacon of hope for India. The Institute of Palliative Medicine is just one such institution in the state – it runs certificate courses for doctors and nurses in hospice care, pain management and emotional support for the dying and it equips community volunteers – after a short, practical training – to provide spiritual, social and physical support to the dying. Local donations pay for more than half the program; the government covers the rest.

Perhaps the movement toward hospice in Kerala is so successful because it taps into that traditional mainspring Dr Anju Virmani referenced – perhaps it has not yet been totally forgotten.

It’s a start. It’s also a reminder that death, done well, can be a beautiful and liberating experience, a chance for families to come together and to heal, to share memories and hope, to embrace both the past and the future and to complete the great circle of life.

This is an issue we all have a terrifyingly total stake in: because not one of us is getting out of here alive.

The author is American by birth and a writer by profession. A mother of three, she has lived in India for the past 34 years with her Indian husband. She is co-founder and director of the Latika Roy Foundation, a voluntary organisation for children with disability in Dehradun. She blogs at www.latikaroy.org/jo