Sunday, January 18, 2026
ADVT 
India

'Drugs Replacing AK-47s As New Weapon Among Punjab's Youth'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 May, 2017 12:54 PM
  • 'Drugs Replacing AK-47s As New Weapon Among Punjab's Youth'
Having undergone the blood-soaked and emotionally-scarring era of partition and the turbulent 15 years of terrorism -- during which over 25,000 lives were lost -- as well as other upheavals, Punjab is now grappling with a major problem: Drugs. 
 
An author who lived through the turbulent times in the 1980s has now warned that the state could be headed for another downward spiral if corrective measures are not immediately taken.
 
"One cannot help compare Punjab then and now; the difference, if any, is not much. Yes, the major difference is that it is a new weapon -- drugs -- that attract the youth, not the AK rifles.
 
The former is more deadly and ruinous than the latter," senior journalist and a former State Information Commissioner (2007-2012), P.P.S. Gill, has pointed out in his book "Blood on the Green - Punjab's Tryst with Terror" (Bookwell Publishers; 262 pages; Rs 895).
 
 
Gill, who was witness to the torment of Punjab's terrorism days from the hotbed of Amritsar and Gurdaspur districts from 1983 to 1990 as the Amritsar-based correspondent of a leading English daily, told IANS: "The problems and situations that led to the birth of terrorism in Punjab continue to exist, and the worst part is that no one seems to be addressing these issues."
 
"In fact, the same or similar strains of persistent disaffection are still at work, gnawing at the Punjabi ethos; religio-political and socio-economic. Prevalent corruption, joblessness, criminalised countryside, societal divisions and disparities are yet to be effectively tackled," Gill, who has been highly regarded in Punjab for his work as a reporter and an opinion-maker, has pointed out in the book.
 
 
"The same political dispensations, barring change of several characters and actors, are still at play," writes the author, who is unforgiving in his assessment of the roles played by leaders of the Congress, the Shiromani Akali Dal, the separatists and radicals in the past seven decades.
 
"I too have been through the same tormenting, torturous and scary times, watching and wondering about why and how of eruption of insurgency, emergence of religio-political tsunami and why these issues, by and large, keep occurring time and again and have remained unresolved so far," he writes in the book.
 
The book details Operation Bluestar (June 1984), Operation Black Thunder-I (April-May 1986) and Operation Black Thunder-II (May 1988), Operation Woodrose (in Punjab's countryside in 1984), the gory and chilling scenes of Hindus and Sikhs being killed by terrorists, the police and security forces going berserk, the Golden Temple complex in the aftermath of the 1984 Army operation and, subsequently, the unholy acts of various people in the name of religion and security, the killing fields of Green Revolution state and Punjab emerging as a theatre of atrocities.
 
 
Having been posted in different parts of Punjab since 1975, Gill has been able to report and analyse the situation in the state from his first hand experience.

MORE India ARTICLES

120 Crores Hidden Income Detected With Karnataka Legislator

120 Crores Hidden Income Detected With Karnataka Legislator
The searches were conducted in Bengaluru and in Hoskote, and have now ended.

120 Crores Hidden Income Detected With Karnataka Legislator

1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Case: Jagdish Tytler Says No Reason By CBI For Lie Detection Test

1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Case: Jagdish Tytler Says No Reason By CBI For Lie Detection Test
Arms dealer Abhishek Verma, who was also issued notice by the court on the CBI plea, appeared before the court and said he stands by his statement given to the probe agency earlier and was ready to join investigation.

1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Case: Jagdish Tytler Says No Reason By CBI For Lie Detection Test

Two Kashmiris Arrested For Disrespecting National Anthem

The Jammu and Kashmir Police arrested two Kashmiri youths for "disrespecting" the national anthem.

Two Kashmiris Arrested For Disrespecting National Anthem

Delhi Man Owns 20-Year-Old Rolls Royce, Says 'Please Let Me Drive It'

A Delhi resident has approached the National Green Tribunal to be allowed to drive his 20-year-old Rolls Royce car. 

Delhi Man Owns 20-Year-Old Rolls Royce, Says 'Please Let Me Drive It'

Indian-Origin Boys To Get Payout Over Toy Gun Episode In UK

Indian-Origin Boys To Get Payout Over Toy Gun Episode In UK
A family of mixed Indian and Middle Eastern heritage has won compensation after two brothers, aged seven and five, were questioned by police over the toy guns they were playing with at a school in the East of England.

Indian-Origin Boys To Get Payout Over Toy Gun Episode In UK

Sania Mirza Summoned By Service Tax Department Over Alleged Tax Evasion

HYDERABAD:  Tennis player Sania Mirza has been issued notice by the Service Tax department over alleged non-payment or tax evasion.

Sania Mirza Summoned By Service Tax Department Over Alleged Tax Evasion