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Home Opinion Ideas

Kashmir’s Drug Crisis: A Fight for Future

Mohd Rafique Rather by Mohd Rafique Rather
October 1, 2025
in Ideas
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Int’l Day Against Drug Abuse, Illicit Trafficking
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By Mohd Rafique Rather

The recent report by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment should awaken every conscience in Jammu and Kashmir. As per the report over one million people in the Union Territory are affected by drug abuse. This grim figure demands more than routine rhetoric. If militancy consumed a generation, drugs now threaten to devour the next. This is not a private tragedy, it is a social emergency. In a rare political intervention, three senior PDP leaders Iqbal Tramboo, Arif Laigaroo, and Zuhaib Yousuf Mir, met the Director General of Police in Srinagar to press the point. Their effort deserves appreciation. It broke a dangerous silence and pushed the crisis into mainstream political discourse. The drug ecosystem that sustains supply, trafficking, and profit must be dismantled—not through extrajudicial means, but through relentless, lawful action. Law enforcement agencies must coordinate, trace money trails, target kingpins, and move cases quickly. Arrests must not end in routine releases on technicalities. If bail provisions are being misused, the law must be applied more robustly, trials fast-tracked, and legal reforms advanced so the powerful cannot exploit loopholes.Yet enforcement alone is not enough. Addiction is also a health and social crisis. Kashmir urgently needs large-scale rehabilitation infrastructure, psychological support, and community-based programs that offer recovery.

“The government’s current inaction on a crisis impacting a million lives is a moral failure. It urgently calls for the immediate publication of a coherent action plan that includes specific transparent targets for Rehabilitation beds, Funding for mental health professionals, Continuous public awareness campaigns and a transparent monitoring mechanism with public progress reports. Treating the symptoms solely with policing will fail unless hope is restored through provisions for jobs, education, and recreation.”

Schools, colleges, religious institutions, and civil society must step forward to provide early intervention, counselling, and pathways back to education and work. The administration’s response so far has been patchy and inadequate. There is no clear statewide de-addiction policy, rehabilitation capacity is limited, and preventive work remains sporadic. With a million lives at stake, bureaucratic and political inaction borders on moral failure. The government must immediately publish a coherent action plan with targets for rehabilitation beds, funds for mental health professionals, continuous awareness campaigns, and a transparent monitoring mechanism that reports progress publicly. We must also address root causes—unemployment, alienation, trauma, and lack of opportunity. Without jobs, education, and recreation to restore hope, policing will treat only the symptoms while the disease spreads. The PDP’s intervention has sounded the alarm. Now, every stakeholder, political parties, administrators, police, teachers, religious leaders, health professionals, families, and communities must respond with clarity and unity, just as we confronted militancy. If militancy stole our past, drugs threaten our future. We owe it to our youth to act with law, compassion, and urgency. Anything less would be surrender and that surrender could destroy our society.

(The author is a former trade union leader, educationist, writer, and J&K PDP’s District President Baramulla. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)

[email protected]

Mohd Rafique Rather

Mohd Rafique Rather

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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