The most popular shacks which used to host three-day and night parties beginning from December 30 till the wee hours on January 1 are wearing deserted look.
The preparations for rave parties which would begin a week in advance are missing.
A visit to the beach belt indicates that there are no fliers distributed inviting people for 'all night parties' which are mostly held on beaches like Anjuna, Vagatore, Morjim, Ashwem in North and Palolem in South.
Goa Tourism Minister Dilip Parulekar himself vouches for 35 per cent less tourists arriving from Russia itself, while tourism industry says that the figure is much more.
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"To conduct rave parties you require foreign tourists. One cannot bank on domestic tourists for that. Also the places which were hosting these parties by paying police have become known. So, no one is willing to take the risk," said a shack owner from Anjuna, who claimed that "drugs do happen, but in smaller ways, not in a rave party manner."
The law enforcement agencies which have come under the scanner for 'failure to curb narcotics trade' have began additional patrolling at suspected places.
"Synthetic drugs that are sold through pharmacies has completely stopped now. We had sent some decoy customers to check whether it is sold in pharmacies across the coastal belt, but it is not available," Superintendent of Police Karthik Kashyap told PTI.
'Rave parties are not going to happen this year. A constant vigil is being maintained," he said.
Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar has also formed special anti-narcotics cell squads to crack down on these parties.