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Decision follows seizure of three tonnes of heroin from two containers at Mundra port off India’s western coast in Gujarat state last month.
A general view of a container terminal at Mundra, one of the ports operated by India's Adani Ports [File: Amit Dave/Reuters]
India’s largest port operator has said it will not handle cargo from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran from next month following the seizure of almost three tonnes of heroin.
Adani Ports, part of the Adani Group conglomerate, said on Monday that its “trade advisory” will apply to all the terminals it operates including third-party terminals from November 15.
It did not give a reason but the decision follows the seizure of almost three tonnes (6,600 pounds) of heroin from two containers at the Mundra port off India’s western coast in Gujarat state last month.
The consignment, which authorities said originated from Afghanistan, was worth an estimated $2.65bn, one of the biggest such hauls ever in the country.
Indian authorities had also seized heroin worth over $20m and arrested six Iranian men in a deep-sea drug bust off the Gujarat coast in September.
In response to the seizures, Adani Ports had said it did not have the authority to examine the millions of tonnes of cargo that pass through its terminals.
Mundra port, a major economic and logistics gateway in India, handled 130 million tonnes of cargo last year and also has the country’s largest coal import terminal.
Most of the world’s opium and heroin comes from Afghanistan, despite major efforts by the United States to combat the drugs trade.
Russia, Iran, Pakistan and China are major smuggling routes and huge markets for Afghan drugs.
A general view of a container terminal at Mundra, one of the ports operated by India's Adani Ports [File: Amit Dave/Reuters]
India’s largest port operator has said it will not handle cargo from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran from next month following the seizure of almost three tonnes of heroin.
Adani Ports, part of the Adani Group conglomerate, said on Monday that its “trade advisory” will apply to all the terminals it operates including third-party terminals from November 15.
It did not give a reason but the decision follows the seizure of almost three tonnes (6,600 pounds) of heroin from two containers at the Mundra port off India’s western coast in Gujarat state last month.
The consignment, which authorities said originated from Afghanistan, was worth an estimated $2.65bn, one of the biggest such hauls ever in the country.
Indian authorities had also seized heroin worth over $20m and arrested six Iranian men in a deep-sea drug bust off the Gujarat coast in September.
In response to the seizures, Adani Ports had said it did not have the authority to examine the millions of tonnes of cargo that pass through its terminals.
Mundra port, a major economic and logistics gateway in India, handled 130 million tonnes of cargo last year and also has the country’s largest coal import terminal.
Most of the world’s opium and heroin comes from Afghanistan, despite major efforts by the United States to combat the drugs trade.
Russia, Iran, Pakistan and China are major smuggling routes and huge markets for Afghan drugs.
India: Adani Ports to shun cargo from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran
Decision follows seizure of three tonnes of heroin at Mundra port off India’s western coast in Gujarat state last month.
www.aljazeera.com