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Trucks carrying essential goods during lockdown being used to traffick drugs: NCB

The federal agency has seized 60 kg of opium, 574 kg of ‘ganja’ over the last two weeks

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New Delhi, May 8

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The free inter-state movement of trucks and other essential-goods carrying vehicles during the lockdown period is being misused by criminals to traffick drugs in the country, the Narcotics Control Bureau said on Friday after it busted some rackets.

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The federal agency, over the last two weeks, seized 60 kg of opium, a total of 61,638 psychotropic tablets, 840 bottles of codeine-based cough syrup and 574 kgs of ‘ganja’ (cannabis) after conducting operations across the country.

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“It is worrying to note that drug traffickers are using the free inter-state movement of essential commodity vehicles during the lockdown period to aid the trafficking efforts,” K P S Malhotra, Deputy Director (operations), Narcotics Control Bureau, said.

The agency had increased vigil across all state borders in view of these new developments, he added.

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The sleuths of the anti-narcotics agency intercepted a Maharashtra registered truck on the intervening night of May 4-5 in Kodapura area of Surat (Gujarat), and recovered 574 kgs of cannabis that was allegedly concealed under a load of potatoes.

“The consignment had its origin in Odisha and was sourced to Surat. The trafficking network is spread across the states of Gujarat, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra,” Malhotra said.

In a similar seizure, an NCB team seized 60 kgs of opium from a Haryana registered truck from the Fatehpur district of Uttar Pradesh on April 28.

The narcotics was recovered from “under the driver’s seat,” the officer said.

Initial investigation reveals that the opium was sourced from near Chouparan in Jharkhand and was destined to Haryana, another senior official of the agency said.

B Singh, the driver and the owner of the truck, has been arrested.

It is uncommon for opium to be sourced from Jharkhand and all efforts were being made to trace the source of the seized drug, the senior official added.

In another case, the agency seized as many as 61,368 psychotropic tablets and 840 bottles of codeine-based cough syrup from the Patan district of Gujarat on April 26.

A person, J Kumar Patel, was arrested by the agency under the provision of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (NDPS).

These drugs could not be sold by any medical store without a valid medical prescription from a registered medical practitioner, Malhotra said.

Such drugs, he added, usually reached the illegal market by way of diversion from illicit drug manufacturers, wholesalers or retail chemists. PTI

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