Young
Indian drug addicts take heroin in an abandoned building in Jalandhar, Punjab ©Shammi
Mehra (AFP)
|
Opium addict Rajendar
usually has to beg, steal or borrow to get his fix but at election season in
India's Punjab province, a packet is delivered to his home in a bid to win his
vote.
Indian
police recover equipment used to make raw alcohol during a search at Dhole Wal
village in Dharamkot, Punjab province ©Shammi Mehra (AFP)
|
AFP
report continues:
"Like
all addicts, I love elections and wish we had them every month," the
38-year-old says with a twinkle in his eye.
"It's
the easiest time to get hold of what you need and everyone gets what they want.
Normally we have to go out and find a dealer but at election time it gets
delivered to your home for free."
Rajendar,
a farm labourer who is married with two children, is one of tens of thousands
of addicts in Punjab who have earned the northern state an unwelcome reputation
as India's drugs capital.
While
inducing voters with household appliances, alcohol or cash is widespread in
some parts, electoral officials say candidates in Punjab try to woo addicts
with free drugs.
Punjab
is one of five states holding elections in the next few weeks, with the first
round beginning on February 4.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi and opposition leader Rahul Gandhi have addressed
rallies in major towns and cities across the state, trying to sway voters with
their oratory.
But,
as a former chief election commissioner explained, the appeal to voters in
rural villages is often at a baser level.
-
Heroin seizures -
"In
2012, when we conducted the Punjab state elections, we suspected the use of
drugs during polls... and found drugs were in fact a very serious issue,"
SY Quraishi, chief commissioner from 2010-12, told AFP.
"In
one month alone, we recovered around 55 kilograms of heroin, around 430
kilograms of poppy husk (the raw ingredient of opium) and found almost every
psychotropic substance in circulation."
The
results of a government-commissioned survey in 2015 estimated there could be as
many as 320,000 "opioid dependent individuals" in the state which has
a population of 27 million.
Heroin
was the most commonly-used drug, followed by opium which is legally grown in
parts of India under government licence for medical use.
In
the four weeks since the date of this year's polls was announced at the
beginning of January, the commission says more than 2.63 tonnes of drugs,
including heroin and opium, have been seized.
That
compares with a figure of 2.03 tonnes in Uttar Pradesh which has a population
of around 205 million and is also holding state elections.
Drugs
have become a hot button election issue, with opposition parties blaming the
current state administration -- an ally of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party -- of
looking the other way at the crisis.
Candidates
promise new laws or heavier sentences for drug offences, their tough-talking
pledges warmly cheered at rallies.
But
Romesh Mahajan, project director of a addiction rehabilitation centre, says
campaigners for parties or independent candidates prey on villages by offering
them the same drugs they pledge to eradicate.
Mahajan
said the problem was particularly acute in the period before the date was set
for the polls which is when the commission's monitors start trying to enforce a
code of conduct with flying visits.
Some
voters, particularly women, are identified as wanting money and are
subsequently handed cash. Others however are identified as wanting their
various addictions fed.
"There
are people who want alcohol and then there are people who want opium or heroin
or pills," Mahajan told AFP at his centre in Gurdaspur district.
-
'Enjoy while it lasts' -
Rajendar,
who attends Mahajan's clinic but asked that his surname not be used, said
addicts were more than happy to promise their vote to a particular candidate,
regardless of policies.
"You
never care about who's going to win. As long as they give you your fix, you
promise to vote for them. You make the same promise to whoever comes
along," said Rajender who is trying to wean himself off opium.
"We
know that after the elections, we won't see them again so you have to enjoy it
while it lasts."
Another
addict called Indarjeet, who is trying to kick a heroin habit, said it was
"very common" to be offered drugs in return for backing a candidate.
"When
they get to the village they say 'take whatever you want, as long as you vote
for our guy' and then they send someone back later" with drugs or alcohol,
he said.
"When
you're offered something for free then of course, you'll take it. You don't
care about the election, only about feeding your habit."
Police
are carrying out spot checks on vehicles at election time to make sure they are
not loaded with freebies, including cash, alcohol and drugs.
"We are committed to controlling this menace in this area and our officers our working tirelessly," M. F. Farooqui, an inspector general of Punjab police, told AFP.
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