Harish Gupta
National Editor, Lokmat
Wednesday, October 1, 2025
Monday, September 29, 2025
Saturday, September 27, 2025
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
Maharashtra’s ports have become the second-largest gateway for narcotic smuggling into India, trailing only Gujarat. According to data made available, drug seizures worth over Rs 2,367 crore were recorded at Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority (JNPA), Mumbai and Raigarh Container Freight Station between 2020 and 2024, accounting for 20.9% of the national total.
Maharashtra’s rising role is evident from repeated interceptions at JNPA—191 kg of heroin in 2020 and 294 kg in 2021 while jumping in 2022 with heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine. A smaller 29 kg heroin seizure at Raigarh that year reinforced the state’s vulnerability.
Gujarat ports, led by Mundra and Gandhidham, accounted for nearly 65% of narcotics seized, valued at more than Rs 7,300 crore. A single 2,988 kg heroin haul at Mundra in 2021 underlined the state’s emergence as the main entry point for global drug cartels.
Beyond these, Tamil Nadu’s Tuticorin port recorded a cocaine seizure worth Rs 1515 crore in 2021, making it the third major hot spot. In contrast, West Bengal’s Kolkata port reported drugs worth only Rs 78 crore, just 0.7% of the total.
Overall, Gujarat and Maharashtra together accounted for more than 85% of port-based drug seizures. Tamil Nadu followed with 13.4%, while West Bengal remained negligible.
Official data noted that no seizures were recorded at Visakhapatnam, Cochin, Chennai, Mangalore, Paradip, Kandla, or Port Blair in the last five years. However, this does not imply these ports are free from trafficking; it may reflect limited detection or trafficker’s reliance on high-volume western gateways.
It is said that Concentration of seizures in Gujarat and Maharashtra reflects cargo volumes and proximity to global routes. With most cases still under trial, the real challenge remains dismantling the networks behind these consignments.
Drug Seizures at Indian Ports (2020–2024) | |||
State | 2020-2024 - Quantity (KG) | Total Value # | |
Gujarat | 3407 | 94.19 Lakh* | 7,350 |
Maharashtra | 1214 | 2,367 | |
Tamil Nadu | 303 | 1,515 | |
West Bengal | 39 | 1000** | 78 |
Total | 4963 | 11,310 | |
* Tablets, **Injections, #Cr. INR |
Fly on the Wall
Babus Told to Meet ‘Shady’ Folks — And They're Not Amused
In what’s being dubbed the “Open Door, Closed Eyes” policy, Cabinet Secretary Dr. T.V. Somanathan has issued a circular that’s left Delhi’s bureaucratic circles in a cold sweat. His message to all secretaries? Be more accessible. And no, not just to stakeholders or academics—but even to contractors, trade unionists, and yes, people under investigation.
"Don’t judge a book by its FIR,” seems to be the new mantra. The letter encourages babus to engage with all kinds of “non-officials” to gain insights, correct policy misperceptions, and welcome fresh ideas. But there’s a catch: meetings must take place in government offices, not five-star lobbies or golf club lounges. And preferably with a witness—er, colleague—present.
Naturally, the bureaucracy is rattled. “What next? High tea with hawala suspects or liaison queens ?” quipped a senior officer. Many see this as a recipe for administrative indigestion. The fear is simple: one photo, one leak, one dodgy visitor—and poof, the career goes up in smoke. Whispers suggest this letter couldn’t have been penned without a quiet nod from the top. After all, no Cabinet Secretary wakes up one day and asks babus to fraternise with the under-investigation crowd on their own. So now, India's steel frame faces a curious dilemma: serve the people, but don’t get served (with a notice). One thing’s clear—the next time someone shady shows up at a sarkari doorstep, the tea may be hot, but the tension will be ice cold.
From Reels to Deals: ED Nabs Instagram Liaison Queen
Power-brokers never die in India—they just reinvent themselves. If the 2000s had Niira Radia, the Instagram era seems to have thrown up Sandeepa Virk, a Chandigarh-based influencer with over a million followers who is now in the Enforcement Directorate’s net. Behind the gloss of selfies and fashion reels, Virk allegedly operated as a liaison woman, striking deals in the shadows. The ED says she was in constant touch with a top executive of the Anil Ambani -owned Reliance Group, and promised to “manage” things in Delhi’s power corridors.
Her brand, Hyboocare, projected itself as a global beauty startup, even claiming FDA approvals. But investigators allege it was little more than a front for fraud. A Punjab Police case accuses Virk of impersonating enforcement officers and duping a woman of ₹6 crore on the pretext of a film project. She allegedly amassed crores in assets despite reporting meagre income. In her interrogation, sources say, Virk even dropped names of top ED officials, claiming she worked for them. Whether bluster or truth, the revelation has rattled corridors of power.
Her arrest comes as the ED intensifies its probe into Anil Ambani and companies linked to him, in connection with diversion of loans worth thousands of crores. Sethuraman, a key Reliance insider, was recently raided for alleged fund diversion from Reliance Capital and Reliance Commercial Finance Ltd. Her proximity to Sethuraman raises the stakes. He sits on the board of Thales Reliance Defence Systems, a venture tied to the Rafale deal. With Anil Ambani questioned only days ago, Virk’s arrest couldn’t have come at a worse time for the once-mighty empire. Sandeepa Virk is more than an Instagram celebrity gone rogue. She is a reminder that in India’s corporate-political maze, liaison agents never vanish—they simply swap landlines for iPhones, lobbying files for DMs, and power lunches for Insta Lives.
How Modi Govt. Stunned Yasin Malik
For decades, Yasin Malik thrived on the politics of engagement. Successive governments in Delhi—from V.P. Singh to Manmohan Singh—summoned him to the table, treating the JKLF chief as a stakeholder in Kashmir. He boasted of meetings with seven prime ministers (VP Singh, Chandra Shekhar, PV Narsimha Rao, HD Deve Gowda, Inder Kumar Gujral, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh), Sonia Gandhi, Left leaders, even RSS functionaries. At one point, he claimed, Ajit Doval himself met him in jail when serving as IB’s special director. Incidentally, Doval is serving in the Modi PMO as NSA for more than a decade.
But all that changed in 2014. The Modi dispensation broke with the past, shutting its doors on separatists and refusing to grant Malik the legitimacy of dialogue. For the first time in his political life, Malik found himself isolated.
The jolt came in February 2019 when Malik told the Delhi High Court how a seemingly casual coffee invitation from the Inspector-General in Srinagar changed his life. He felt it was an invite for mediation once again. But soon he was whisked to the local police station, kept there for seven days as a “State guest,” then slapped with a Public Safety Act order and packed off to Kot Bhalwal Jail in Jammu. By April, the NIA had brought him to Delhi and booked him in a terror funding case.
For a man accustomed to being courted by Delhi’s power corridors, the silence of the Modi government was deafening. Where earlier regimes sought him as a bridge to Kashmir, Modi chose to make him an example—turning dialogue into detention, and engagement into a dead end.
Congress in Bihar: Cart Before the Horse
Trust Congress to do the unusual. In Bihar, the party has had no state committee for nearly seven years, no Pradesh Election Committee, and no clarity on seats. Yet, it has already held two screening committee meetings to “shortlist” candidates. Ajay Maken, who heads the panel, flew into Patna on August 13, met ticket hopefuls and went back. Finally, the two meetings were held last week. The bigger irony: The last state committee was formed under Ashok Choudhary before he left for JD(U). His successors—Madan Mohan Jha, Akhilesh Prasad Singh, and now Akash Ram—couldn’t put together a new unit or Pradesh Election Committee.
So, without a proper structure, the party is already screening aspirants. A bit like announcing a cricket team without knowing the venue—or the match! No wonder observers are smiling that Congress has once again put the cart smartly before the horse.