Samba Under Siege: Drug Mafia Attacks Police, Reclaims Encroached State Land Despite Eviction Drives
As synthetic drugs claim young lives daily, a shocking lack of coordination between civil administration and police leaves Samba’s future at the mercy of narco-smugglers operating from encroached government land
||Black and White Digital News ||
||Parvinder Singh April 14,2025 ||
A disturbing incident in Samba district has once again exposed the growing power of drug syndicates and the deep-rooted systemic failure in tackling the drug menace in Jammu and Kashmir. In a brazen act of defiance, criminals—allegedly drug smugglers—attacked police officers near areas previously cleared of encroachments. Two officers were critically injured and had to be referred to a hospital in Amritsar for specialized treatment.
The attackers are said to be operating from illegal settlements built on state land from kathua to samba district along Magar Khud Balole Nallah, Sarore and other vulnerable spots in Samba. These areas, which have long been flagged as hotspots for drug trafficking and illegal activities, continue to witness the reoccupation of government land by the very elements who were once evicted by police.
The New Drug War Zone: Encroached State Land
Local sources confirm that these lands were previously cleared during police-led eviction drives. However, in the absence of sustained administrative support, the vacated areas were soon reoccupied. The criminals not only returned but reportedly re-established laboratories producing synthetic Chitta—a lethal narcotic responsible for a sharp rise in overdose deaths across the district.
Synthetic Chitta, unlike traditional drugs, is lab-made and often laced with toxic chemicals that cause instant addiction and irreversible damage to the body. With drug overdose deaths showing an alarming upward trend, especially among the youth, Samba is on the brink of a full-blown narcotic crisis.
Youth Dying, Administration Divided:
The ground reality is chilling. Every day, families mourn young lives lost to drug overdose, while drug smugglers operate with impunity. Despite regular NACORD (Narco Coordination) meetings between police and civil administration, there is little to show on the ground.
The core issue lies in a disturbing lack of synchronization between the police and the civil administration. Officials from the police department, during a recent high-level internal meeting, expressed frustration over the civil administration’s hesitancy—particularly the district’s Deputy Commissioners (DCs)—in giving consent for evictions, fearing potential law and order challenges.
This bureaucratic deadlock has emboldened the drug mafia. While the police risk their lives to conduct anti-encroachment operations, the administration’s reluctance to follow through has turned state land into criminal strongholds.
Key Questions That Remain Unanswered
1. Why are Deputy Commissioners not supporting eviction drives?
Fear of unrest cannot justify inaction in the face of a clear and present danger to public safety and the future of the youth.
2. Who is accountable for the deaths of innocent youth?
As synthetic drugs continue to flood the district, the failure to dismantle local labs and evict drug dens raises serious concerns about administrative accountability.
3. How did drug smugglers gain control of state land?
Was it negligence, collusion, or absence of monitoring that allowed these encroachments to flourish in the first place?
Public Anger and Demand for Action:
The people of Samba are angry and afraid. Their youth are falling prey to addiction, and law enforcement is under attack. There is growing public pressure for the administration and police to work in unison and take decisive action.
The public is demanding:
• Immediate eviction of all illegal encroachments on state land, especially those known to be involved in drug trade.
• Protection and rehabilitation for affected youth.
• Accountability for officers failing to act despite repeated warnings.
• Crackdown on synthetic drug labs with the help of intelligence agencies and forensic support.
Samba district is facing a crisis that combines lawlessness, administrative paralysis, and a deepening drug epidemic. The recent attack on police personnel is not just an isolated act of violence; it is a grim reminder of how emboldened criminals have become in the absence of a unified and consistent approach.
Unless urgent and coordinated action is taken, more young lives will be lost, and the region could slip into a cycle of violence, addiction, and despair that will take generations to undo.
