© Penelope Gan – All Rights Reserved – Naggar, Kullu Valley, Himachal Pradesh, INDIA
Set against picturesque backdrops of high mountain passes, the gushing Beas River, lush apple orchards, bucolic alpine meadows and glacier, in Himachal Pradesh lies secluded hamlets infamous for its world class charas (Hindi for hashish).
Grown wild, traditionally the locals use the hemp fibre for ropes and to weave traditional shoes, with seeds being kept aside for its medicinal properties. However, in the 70s, hippies from the West flocked this pristine valley in search of a cosmic high.
With a perfect micro climate – sun-drenched ridges and healthy soil, Kullu Valley’s cannabis plants grow in abundance and is reputedly the cream of the crop; with ‘Malana Cream’ ranking the best in the International Cannabis Cup event held annually in Amsterdam. Other brands include AK-47, Russian Mist and Space Ball.
Raking in approximately Rs 900 crore per annum, naturally the locals cashed in on the trade, alongside a nexus of expats, local peddlers and international smugglers. With the emergence of a mini-Colombia sort of cartel in the Kullu Valley, comes a host of problems that has spurred aggressive crackdowns by the Indian police and the Narcotics Control Bureau under the supervision of the Inspector General of Police.
However, local and international media attention in particular seems to concentrate only on news of missing foreign nationals in the Kullu Valley such as Israeli-American backpacker Amichai Shtainmetz, British Ian Mogford, Israeli Nadav Mintzer, and Guy Daudi, Canadian Ardavan Taherzadeh, Rotterdam Maarten de Brujin, Russian Alexei Ivanoc, Australian Burfitt Jacqueline Louise, and the perhaps the most notoriously covered is Anna Bartlett a 25-year old British girl whose body was washed up in a river. The fact is almost 50,000 foreign tourists visit the valley every year, with Israelis making the majority of them. As per official records, 57 foreigners have died in the region due to accidents and ‘accidents’, attributed to trekking and drug overdose. Unofficial records suggests that a relatively high percentage of missing foreigners are ‘missing’ or ‘dead’ … having chosen to settle in the valley and join the burgeoning illegal trade that is controlled mostly by the Israelis and Italians.
Nothing worthy is being mentioned about the government’s stance on the issue, its action plans to curb cultivation of cannabis, stricter law enforcement on cultivators and smugglers, and/or preventive measures and assistance to locals who are ‘forced’ into the cartels’ trap. Whilst there are countless of NGOs (both locally and internationally funded) and state-run institutions around the Kullu Valley that assist and educates children who are orphans, handicapped and lately the Rajasthani nomadic community, nothing is done for the children who lives in the hashish hamlets. They not only remain in an intricate web of an international cartel ring of smugglers, but are increasingly driven further into places that are physically inaccessible and by all imagination uninhabited by any sizable population of humans to avoid detection by enforcement agencies.
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For my personal account of this photo story, read HERE {warning: mere rantings}
