Ahmedabad: Druglords International is very popular in the amount of extraordinary heroin to India, a security officer and anti-smuggling agent.
This assessment was driven by two quite large heroin seizures made recently from Gujarat Coast.
Officers said the takeover of the Afghan Taliban had given a ballast of urgency to the drug mafia.
Officers of the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB), Directorate of Income Intelligence (DRI), and Gujarat Anti-Terrorism (ATS) confirmed that concentrated efforts were carried out to encourage heroin produced in India.
Officers said that smugglers tended to use the sea route through Iran.
Read the Alsovijayawada-based Shell company used as the front to smuggle RS 20,900 Crore Heroina Afghanistan Nondescript House on the outskirts of Andhra Pradesh Vijayawada suddenly became a talk about the city after the seizure of one of the biggest heroin shipment in the last Gujarat in Gujarat Sunday.
Officers said that the drugs were afraid of confiscation of heroin stock by the Taliban.
Apart from the surprising financial loss, the drugs also face the prospect of the summary implementation if captured by the Taliban, the officer said.
These factors triggered drugs flowing to India, the officer said.
Resources at the institution said that the possibility of more heroin ships captured in Indian waters could not be ruled out.
“Dri found around 3,000 kg of heroin at the Port of Mundra and the investigation was underway,” said a senior officer NCB.
“Heroin was smuggled from Afghanistan, which is the largest opium manufacturer.
This country has a laboratory to process opium into heroin.” Read the Alsosboggest Haul medicine: How 3 Tons of Heroin worth RS 20,000 Crore seized in Gujaratin What is said to be the largest drug that is transported From Gujarat and possibly India, the Directorate of Income Intelligence (DRI) on Monday expressed a seizure of 2,988kg or close to 3 tons of heroin from two containers at the Port of Mundra.
The operation has been going on from September 14.
Large shares were never sent by Mafia, the officer said.
“Their push now shows how desperate they are to get rid of their heroin stocks so that the Taliban do not punish them or seize contraband items,” he said.
According to the United Nations, opium harvesting provides around 12,000 jobs in Afghanistan in 2019.
It is also believed that drug trafficking contributes to 60% of the Taliban annual income.
