Manipur News

Manipur government continue to eradicate illicit poppy cultivation

The Manipur government is continuing to destroy illicit poppy cultivation in the state, officials said on Thursday. Chief Minister N. Biren Singh often said that illegal immigrants and drug peddlers, including Myanmar nationals, are involved in mass poppy farming and forest destruction in Manipur.

Sentinel Digital Desk

IMPHAL: The Manipur government is continuing to destroy illicit poppy cultivation in the state, officials said on Thursday. Chief Minister N. Biren Singh often said that illegal immigrants and drug peddlers, including Myanmar nationals, are involved in mass poppy farming and forest destruction in Manipur. Officials said that Manipur Rifles and Forest Department officials, during the past 48 hours, by spraying herbicides, destroyed 31 hectares of illicit poppy fields at Tora Champhung Hill Range under Ukhrul district.

During the joint operations, 45 huts, set up by the poppy cultivators, were burned, and other infrastructure, including pipeline connections, fertilisers, salt, herbicides, and pesticides, was also destroyed. The Chief Minister, while talking to the media, said that the state government is intensifying its war on drugs and will not stop until the drug menace is completely rooted out of the state.

The over-six-month long ethnic violence started after the Manipur government, during March–April, started the destruction of illegal poppy cultivation and launched the eviction drive against the encroachers who illegally occupied the reserve and protected forest lands in the mountainous areas of the state. The Chief Minister earlier stated that encroachment evictions from forest lands were done in the state to preserve forests, considering the deteriorating climatic conditions. He had said that the state government never targeted a particular community.

The enormity of the drug menace has reached such a height that out of the state’s population of 28 lakh, the number of drug-affected youths is around 1.4 lakh. Manipur, which shares around 400 km of unfenced border with Myanmar, has also become a gateway for illegal drug smuggling into India, state government officials said. Since 2017, around hundreds of encroachers have been evicted from forest land in Imphal East, Kangpokpi, Thoubal, and Noney districts.

People belonging to the Meitei, Kuki, Pangal (Manipuri Muslim), and Kabui tribes have been evicted from the forest lands. A Manipur government official said on Thursday that the state government, under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, has arrested around 2,518 people between 2017 and 2023. The arrested people include Kuki-Chin, Muslims, Meiteis, and other communities.

Poppy cultivation in Manipur stood at 15,496.8 acres. The Kuki-Chin community-inhabited area in 2022–23 accounted for 804 acres, and the Naga people-inhabited area was 350 acres. In 2017–18, the Kuki Chin area accounted for 2,001 acres and Nagas’ 229 acres. (IANS)

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