Assam to intensify anti-drug crackdown over next 5 years: CM Himanta Sarma
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Sunday, 12 July pledged to sharply escalate the state's war on drug trafficking over the next five years, stating that coordinated action among northeastern states could permanently end Assam's role as a transit corridor for narcotics. The declaration came as the state launched a sweeping Drugs Disposal Campaign, destroying seized contraband worth ₹472.51 crore in a single exercise spanning all districts.
Campaign Launch and Destruction Drive
Chief Minister Sarma inaugurated the campaign at the 14th Assam Police Battalion campus at Doulashal in Nalbari district, formally launching the destruction process by crushing seized narcotics with a road roller. A specialised drug disposal machine — installed with assistance from the Central government — was pressed into service for the first time in Assam. Similar disposal drives were conducted simultaneously across all districts of the state.
Sarma said the destruction process would take approximately 10 days to complete, given the scale of the stockpile accumulated from operations across the state.
Scale of Seized Contraband
According to official figures, the disposal exercise covers 58.88 kg of heroin, nearly 38,000 kg of ganja, around 2.29 lakh bottles of cough syrup, 39 kg of morphine, approximately 18.71 lakh methamphetamine and Yaba tablets, and nearly 4.97 lakh tablets and capsules. The destroyed substances also include opium and other banned materials.
Five Years of Enforcement: The Numbers
Sarma highlighted that Assam Police has registered 3,300 cases under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act over the past five years, with total seizures valued at ₹3,227 crore. The Chief Minister said the government would now adopt even more stringent measures against traffickers while urging citizens to actively support the anti-narcotics drive.
Assam as a Transit Corridor: The Larger Threat
Sarma described Assam as a key transit route for heroin, methamphetamine, and Yaba tablets smuggled from Myanmar into other parts of the country. He stressed the need for stronger intelligence gathering, greater use of technology, and enhanced inter-state coordination to disrupt these supply chains.
He specifically called for sustained cooperation among Assam, Manipur, Mizoram, and West Bengal, arguing that collective action combined with stringent punishment for offenders could significantly curb the regional drug trade. Notably, this push comes as the Myanmar-origin narcotics pipeline — routed through India's northeast — has drawn increasing attention from central security agencies.
What Comes Next
With the specialised disposal machine now operational and district-level drives underway, Assam's enforcement framework is set to be reinforced with technology and inter-state intelligence-sharing mechanisms. The next five years will test whether the state's record seizure numbers translate into a durable reduction in narcotics flow through the northeast corridor.