NIA probe
into Handwara drug case has found that the accused were smuggling drugs
through LoC
|
New Delhi(Agencies):Amid
fresh security threats from across the western borders ahead of the August 5
Ayodhya ground-breaking event and the Independence Day, senior officials in the
security establishment feel that activities of Pakistani drug syndicates in
Jammu & Kashmir is a matter of major concern.
Noting that heroin and other
psychotropic substances are being smuggled into India to fund terror
activities, the officials said, the recent arrest of bank manager Afaq Ahmad
Wani from Handwara in Srinagar in connection with a case of seizure of 21 kg of
heroin and cash from the members of a drug syndicate operating in the UT is
“just the crust of the deep rooted malaise”.
The NIA in its investigation
into the Handwara drug case has found that the accused were smuggling drugs and
psychotropic substances in huge quantities through the Line of Control (LoC)
and the proceeds of the sale were used to finance terror activities in the
Kashmir Valley, the officials said.
A senior security officer,
however, said, “The narco-terror modules operating from Pakistan are gradually
expanding their tentacles in India and they are/will be posing a major threat,
as evidence is there that in past few years they are moving from land to sea
routes.”
The officials said, the
threats from these narco-terror syndicates are not limited only to India, but
to its neighborhood too, as several Pakistanis have been arrested on charges of
narcotics trade in Sri Lanka and Maldives. “In March, eight Pakistani nationals
were arrested after 400-kg heroin was recovered from two foreign vessels by the
Sri Lankan navy,” said a senior Intelligence Bureau official.
Intelligence officials said
the routing of banned substances is quite “worrisome”, as the raw opium is
sourced from Afghanistan and then transported to Faisalabad and Lahore for
processing. The processed stuff is then sent to Karachi or Gwadar for
transporting them into India through sea route, they said, adding that the
proceeds of smuggled stuff are used for sponsoring terror activities of groups
including the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and a few other outfits.
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