Bollywood
Film Highlights Need for Indian Drug Law Reform
The
Bollywood film, Udta
Punjab, has consumed the public sphere in
India. The film provides a sobering exploration of drug use and addiction
within the context of poverty, development, politics, and corruption.
Udta Punjab depicts characters who have severe
addictions to drugs, while boldly illustrating the role of politicians and law
enforcement in creating and perpetuating the problem. The setting of Punjab - a
state in the north-west of India - is contemporarily pertinent, as the state’s
population has suffered considerably due to detrimental drug policies.
The film’s
potential for success was almost halted by India’s Central Board of Film
Certification (CBFC) who sought the removal of many scenes - including all
references to Punjab, the upcoming state election, and Punjabi politicians. As
well as being a gross infringement upon free expression, the attempted
censorship may be linked to political corruption; the former Director General
of Police in Punjab, Shashi Kant, has alleged that several of the state's politicians are complicit in the
illegal drug trade. The filmmakers took their case to the Bombay High Court,
which ruled against
the proposed cuts.
Punjab is
currently at a crossroads; drug misuse is rampant, addiction rates are soaring,
thousands are incarcerated for drug offences, and elections are right around
the corner. Poised to be the single biggest issue in the 2017 state election,
drug policy has gained considerable importance in both politics and public
discourse.
Of the
26,000 inmates in Punjab’s prisons, 47 per cent have been charged or convicted under
the national government’s Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act. Over 30 per cent of people in India incarcerated
under this Act are in Punjab, despite the state accounting for less than three
per cent of the national population. Further, a 2015 study estimates
that there are 230,000 opioid-dependant people living in Punjab; drug misuse
and addiction are rife in the state.
Udta Punjab portrays
addiction as a biopsychosocial condition - a result of the complex biological,
psychological, and social factors that an individual experiences or is
predisposed to – not a moral failing. The film uses engaging and diverse
characters, from a range of socioeconomic groupings, to depict such factors;
people suffering from identity conflict, the trauma of rape, enduring poverty,
as well as peer pressure.
The
ideological shift presented - viewing addiction as a health issue, rather than
a moral one – is, perhaps, the most valuable impact of Udta Punjab on the future of Indian drug policy.
When
citizens consider drugs to be an issue of morality or criminality, politicians
are incentivised to follow a heavy handed approach on drugs. If more people
begin to view addiction as a health issue, politicians will have greater incentives
to design drug policies that improve people’s wellbeing. Rather than measuring
the success of policies by the quantity of drugs interdicted or offenders
incarcerated, policies can be judged by the quantity of people being referred
to treatment, or provided with opportunities to integrate into, and contribute
to, society.
Udta Punjab has demonstrated the power of the
arts to affect social change; the film is spurring public scrutiny of drug
policy, enlightening people to the issue's many layers.
An
informed electorate is essential for incentivising politicians to bring
awareness, education, and deliberation to policy considerations. We must thank
the makers of Udta
Punjab for presenting such complex problems
in an accessible manner; encouraging the public to think, question, and demand
change.
Source:
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