Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

Dope Test Must For Punjab Jail Inmates

IANS, 18 Jan, 2018 12:27 PM
    Now on, all undertrials and convicts will have to undergo a dope test on their arrival at any of the Central or district jails in Punjab.
     
     
    They would be re-tested after six months of incarceration to know if they had access to drugs in the jail or not. The dope test would also be carried out on those already serving time or undertrials.
     
     
    There have been allegations that drugs are easily available in Punjab jails and the addiction level of inmates worsens inside prisons. Officials hope the mandatory dope test will provide a clear data.
     
     
    ADGP (Prisons) IPS Sahota has issued an order for the mandatory blood and urine tests of inmates with immediate effect. 
     
     
    On an average, traces of an intoxicant can be detected about 10 days after consumption. The Prison Department has asked jail authorities to provide immediate de-addiction and rehabilitation facilities to addicts. The treatment is free of cost.
     
     
    The test results would be known on the spot. Sahota said the department already had dope test kits. 
     
    “We have also collaborated with the state Health Department for the use of test kits,” he added. The Prison Department would need around 1.25 lakh blood-testing kits annually. It had written to the state Home Department for funds.  
     
     
    Sahota said the testing would be done at nine central and 11 district jails. Six sub-jails don’t have the infrastructure to carry out the test at the moment. He said the department had an adequate number of doctors, but they might need more lab technicians.
     
     
    As per a 2015 study, around 47 per cent of the 26,000 inmates in Punjab jails were either addicts or drug smugglers/peddlers.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Iraq violence: Indians' evacuation from Mosul, Tikrit possible

    Iraq violence: Indians' evacuation from Mosul, Tikrit possible
    As the situation in Iraq worsened, the Indian government called in the Iraqi envoy here to discuss ways of helping Indian nationals trapped in the affected areas of Mosul and Tikrit and also held a crisis management meeting.

    Iraq violence: Indians' evacuation from Mosul, Tikrit possible

    Delhi's beautification plan ready

    Wide roads, greener parks, cleaner water bodies and more toilets figure in the urban development ministry's action plan to "beautify" Delhi, an official said Monday.

    Delhi's beautification plan ready

    Year after flash floods, has Uttarakhand bounced back to normalcy?

    Year after  flash floods, has Uttarakhand bounced back to normalcy?
    On June 16, 2013, there was unusually heavy rain in Uttarakhand. In the catchment area of the upper Ganga tributaries, rain water flooded the valleys, washing away huge rocks and trees with it, and caused a huge loss to life and property. More than 5,000 people were dead and missing in the state.

    Year after flash floods, has Uttarakhand bounced back to normalcy?

    Modi receives rousing welcome in Bhutan, stresses on B2B ties

    Modi receives rousing welcome in Bhutan, stresses on B2B ties
    Bharat to Bhutan ties got a major fillip as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared his intent to expand "B2B" relations on his maiden visit abroad to the neighbouring Himalayan country with which India shares long-standing close and friendly ties.

    Modi receives rousing welcome in Bhutan, stresses on B2B ties

    Modi dedicates powerful warship to India, calls it historic

    Modi dedicates powerful warship to India, calls it historic
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Saturday dedicated to the nation INS Vikramaditya, India's largest and most powerful aircraft carrier which significantly enhances blue water capabilities of the Indian Navy.

    Modi dedicates powerful warship to India, calls it historic

    Time to punish those behind 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Sukhbir Badal

    Time to punish those behind 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Sukhbir Badal
    Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal Friday said that the time had come to punish the perpetrators of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.  

    Time to punish those behind 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Sukhbir Badal