Chandigarh: “I have broken the backbone of the drug syndicate in Punjab,” Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh had uttered these words here on Monday while claiming that his government has ‘wiped out drug problem’ from Punjab within four weeks deadline period.
While suspecting the former’s claim of alleviating Punjab of its drug problem, the SAD (Badal) here on Monday asked him to give out figures to support the aforesaid claim. The Congress government answered with a data war on Tuesday. But the figures were half “bluff”, half “goof-up”.
Not only did the government choose a wrong year for comparison —2016 — when no anti-drugs crackdown was launched, it also cited data on NDPS cases, arrests and seizures that are far below those given by the special task force (STF) formed by the CM under ADGP Harpreet Sidhu, said the media sources.
It is pertinent to note that many Badal Dal leaders are them self facing charges of drug trafficking and cases pending against them, the data reportedly made public by the Punjab government is silent on the role of the Badal dal leaders in promoting drug menace in the state.
According to the government statement, the total FIRs registered under the NDPS Act between March 16 and April 26 are 797, with 920 arrests. The data of the STF collected from all police zones, a copy of which is with HT, cites 1,918 cases and 2,205 arrests between March 16 and April 27. Similarly, the government’s data puts total heroin seizures at 2.926 kg while it is 10.225 kg in the STF data, reads a quote from a report published in A English vernacular.
In case of poppy husk, the seizures in the government data are 2,212 kg and 4,405 kg in that of STF. For opium, the total seizures are 50.792 kg in government and 118.7 kg on the STF list. The total number of pills/capsules seized stand at 4,39,063 in government statement and 7,61,595 in the STF data, notes Hindustan Times (HT).
”Either the STF data is exaggerated or the government hiding the truth.”
The Congress government also claimed a whopping increase in OPD visits and indoor patients during this period, over with the average monthly figures of 2016, when no anti-drug crackdown was launched. The statement puts the number of OPD visits between March 16 and April 26 at 18,440, citing a jump of 48%, without giving even the 2016 monthly figure.
The indoor patients in the same period, it claimed, had increased by 103% to 1,446 across the state. Pointing out that these were figures for just the government centres, the spokesperson said huge numbers were also being reported from the private centres and hospitals, said the media reports.
The above statements published in a leading print clearly establishes the fact that the Amarinder Singh lead congress government of Punjab is comparing the data of current year with that of 2016 when no such anti-drug drive was initiated by the then government.
By not revealing the figures of private centres, the government is saying a half-truth. If compared with a similar anti-drug crackdown and de-addiction drive launched by the previous government in June 2014 after a poor show in Lok Sabha polls, the numbers of the OPD and indoor patients show a drastic fall. The figures of the health department from government and private OPDs and indoor patient departments between June 19 and June 30 were 89,616, which shot up to 1,12,265 in July 2014, reads from a copy of the data issued by the Punjab government and published by the media in its print.
But the Congress rightly cited SAD’s demand to release data on the “number of addicts actually weaned away from drugs” as ludicrous. “If they had any understanding of the problem they would have realised that de-addiction requires medical and psychiatric treatment which may span into months,” it said.
Furthermore, the congress government blamed the SAD (Badal) for the drug problems in the state “The SAD government had connived with drugs dealers and the problem spread to rampant and dangerous levels during its tenure,” the statement issued by congress party reportedly said.