Bulandshahr– In a bold crackdown triggered by recent child deaths from toxic cough syrups in neighboring states, Uttar Pradesh’s Food Safety and Drug Administration (FSDA) raided the bustling Medicine Market here on Sunday afternoon, seizing six samples of suspected narcotic drugs and sending shockwaves through local traders. The two-and-a-half-hour operation, which spiraled into three hours of market chaos, exposed lapses in documentation and prompted several shop owners to shutter their stores and flee, highlighting deepening concerns over the illicit trade of addictive cough remedies.
Under the directives of FSDA Secretary and Commissioner Dr. Roshan Jacob, a team of four drug inspectors from Bulandshahr, Meerut, and Hapur districts descended on the market. Led by Bulandshahr Drug Inspector Anil Kumar Anand, alongside Meerut’s Piyush Kumar and Gaurav Lodhi, and Hapur’s Hemendra Chaudhary, the squad zeroed in on six medical outlets for thorough inspections. The focus: verifying bills and compliance for narcotic cough syrups, which have been repurposed as cheap intoxicants but pose severe health risks when adulterated or mishandled.
Raiders collected samples from Anil Drug Distribution, Cash Chemist, Shri Radhe Medical Agency, Shukla Medical Store, ESR Drug House, and Care India Pharmaceutical. Several operators failed to produce purchase bills on the spot, raising red flags about the provenance and safety of their stockpiles. “These samples of narcotic drugs were taken as per the instructions of the Secretary and Commissioner,” Anand told reporters, emphasizing the collaborative effort to enforce stricter oversight.
Sparked by Tragic Alerts from Neighboring States
The timing of the raid couldn’t be more urgent. Just weeks after reports of children succumbing to poisonous cough syrups in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan—incidents that claimed young lives and ignited a national outcry over substandard pharmaceuticals—Uttar Pradesh authorities have ramped up vigilance. Bulandshahr, a key distribution hub in western UP, has long been suspected as a conduit for such dubious drugs, often sourced from unregulated suppliers and sold without prescriptions to vulnerable addicts.
The operation’s intensity was palpable: as inspectors pored over records, panic spread like wildfire. Eyewitnesses described traders hastily locking up and vanishing into the afternoon haze, leaving behind half-empty shelves and unanswered questions. No arrests were made on-site, but the disruption underscored the market’s fragile underbelly, where legitimate medicine often blurs into black-market vice.
Lab Tests and Lingering Questions
All six seized samples—primarily cough syrups laced with narcotics—are en route to a government laboratory for rigorous chemical analysis. Results could reveal adulteration, expiry violations, or outright fakes, potentially leading to license suspensions, fines, or criminal charges against the implicated firms. Anand assured that the probe would continue, with no leniency for those flouting safety norms.
This Bulandshahr bust is part of a broader FSDA blitz across Uttar Pradesh, echoing recent high-profile raids in Lucknow that dismantled a Gujarat-linked codeine mafia. Public health advocates are calling for nationwide reforms, including mandatory digital tracking of narcotic drugs and harsher penalties for rogue distributors. As lab reports loom, one thing is clear: the era of unchecked cough syrup sales is under siege, and UP’s medicine markets are feeling the full force of regulatory heat. For residents, it’s a stark reminder—reach for relief, but verify the source.






