In a shocking crackdown on corruption within its ranks, the Himachal Pradesh government has dismissed 11 police personnel accused of involvement in drug trafficking. The decision, announced on Wednesday, marks one of the most significant purges in the state’s law enforcement history.
The sacked officers, ranging from constables to sub-inspectors, were allegedly part of a nexus facilitating the smuggling of narcotics across the state’s porous borders. Investigations revealed they accepted bribes to allow consignments of ganja, heroin, and synthetic drugs to pass unchecked through key checkpoints in districts like Kangra, Mandi, and Shimla.
A senior official from the Home Department disclosed that the dismissals followed a six-month internal probe triggered by intelligence inputs from the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB). ‘These individuals betrayed their uniform and oath to protect citizens,’ the official stated, emphasizing the government’s zero-tolerance policy.
Evidence gathered included intercepted communications, financial trails showing unexplained assets, and witness testimonies from low-level smugglers. One sub-inspector was reportedly running a parallel operation from his police outpost, coordinating deliveries to urban markets in Punjab and Delhi.
The scandal has ignited public outrage, with citizens demanding deeper reforms. Local leaders called for a special task force to audit all border postings. Meanwhile, the state police chief vowed to intensify vigilance, introducing random integrity checks and advanced surveillance at trafficking hotspots.
This purge underscores the pervasive challenge of drug infiltration in India’s northern hills, where proximity to international borders exacerbates vulnerabilities. As Himachal grapples with rising addiction rates among youth, such decisive actions signal a renewed commitment to cleansing the force and curbing the menace.
