Increased drug use and smuggling could pose new difficulties as a result of the Taliban’s comeback in Afghanistan. Examining the connection between the flourishing Taliban and their reliance on the drug trade, provide recommendations for actions to address drug abuse.
With the fall of Kabul, the Taliban is in control over Afghanistan 20 years after US-led forces deposed the organization. This generated a sense of panic, leading to a mass exodus of foreign diplomatic missions and local Afghans and a commiserate return of human rights violations, which the United Nations had warned could become a full-blown “humanitarian catastrophe.”The return of Taliban to power not only bodes ill for the ordinary Afghan population but also threatens the regional and international security architecture in multiple ways.
Link Between Taliban And Drug Business
Challenges In Forms Of Increased Drug Usage Due To Resurgence Of Taliban
Measures To Counter The Issue Of Drug Usage
India began its fight against drugs way back in the 1980s. To meet the obligation as a signatory to international conventions, including those of the United Nations, India enacted the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (NDPS) in 1985 and the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) was established.
India has been enduring the scourge of drug trafficking for several decades. The country’s proximity to two of the world’s largest illicit opium-growing areas as well as various external and internal factors have contributed to it becoming a transit source and a destination for drugs. On the one hand, India has enacted stringent anti-drug laws, co-opted various voluntary organisations and sought to strengthen the physical security of its borders by various means, on the other hand, it has been seeking the cooperation of its neighbours and other countries through several bilateral and multilateral agreements. These efforts need to be complemented with more participative bottoms-up effort to end the criminal nexus while also pushing for behavioural change against drug abuse.