The ongoing campaign against drug abuse in Jammu and Kashmir has emerged as one of the most ambitious social interventions in recent years, reflecting a determined resolve to confront a crisis that has silently eroded communities. The sheer scale of outreach; over two lakh awareness events engaging more than a crore participants signals a recognition that the battle against addiction cannot be confined to enforcement alone. It must be fought in classrooms, village squares, sports fields, and cultural spaces where young minds can be sensitized and empowered to resist the lure of narcotics. The sight of padyatras, rallies, and community interactions across the region has infused a sense of collective responsibility, reminding society that awareness is the first line of defence.
Equally significant is the strengthening of counselling and rehabilitation mechanisms. The growing reliance on Tele-MANAS, with thousands of calls received, reflects a shift in public trust towards institutional mental health support. Addiction Treatment Facilities treating tens of thousands of patients, alongside recoveries recorded at rehabilitation centres, underscore the importance of sustained medical and psychological care. These numbers are not mere statistics; they represent lives reclaimed, families restored, and futures reimagined. The integration of counselling, treatment, and rehabilitation into the campaign ensures that those trapped in cycles of abuse are not abandoned but guided towards recovery.
Yet, awareness and rehabilitation are only half the battle. The intensified crackdown on narcotics networks has added a deterrent edge to the campaign. Hundreds of FIRs, arrests, and the identification of drug hotspots reveal a systematic effort to dismantle the supply chain. The sealing of houses, attachment of properties worth crores, and cancellation of transport and pharmaceutical licenses send a clear message that profiteering from addiction will not be tolerated. The destruction of illegal cultivation and seizures of heroin, charas, and ganja further highlight the scale of enforcement. These measures, though stringent, are necessary to choke the economic lifelines of those who thrive on human misery.
Preventive vigilance has also expanded, with inspections of chemist shops, installation of CCTV cameras, and monitoring of schools and hospitals. Such steps reflect an understanding that drug abuse often festers in overlooked corners, exploiting gaps in regulation and surveillance. By tightening these spaces, the campaign seeks to deny narcotics networks the anonymity they rely upon. Intelligence-based action, including identification of suspects and preventive detentions, adds another layer of precision to enforcement, ensuring that the fight is not reactive but anticipatory.
The campaign’s strength lies in its whole-of-society approach. It is not merely an administrative exercise but a collective movement that blends awareness, treatment, enforcement, and vigilance. The figures of recoveries, counselling sessions, and seizures are milestones, but the true measure of success will be seen in the resilience of communities, the confidence of youth, and the decline in addiction’s grip on households. Drug abuse is not just a law-and-order issue; it is a social malaise that corrodes the moral and economic fabric of society. Confronting it requires both compassion and firmness, both outreach and deterrence.
As the campaign progresses, the challenge will be to sustain momentum beyond the symbolic 100 days. Addiction is a long-term battle, and its eradication demands continuity, innovation, and unwavering commitment. The foundations laid through this initiative; awareness, rehabilitation, enforcement, and vigilance; must evolve into permanent structures of resistance. Only then can the vision of a drug-free Jammu and Kashmir move from aspiration to reality. In this struggle, every recovered patient, every sensitized student, and every dismantled network is a step towards reclaiming the dignity of a society determined to heal itself.
