Seventy bags of banned chewing tobacco products worth Rs.10 lakh were
seized from the parcel van of Sampark Kranti Express in an early morning
raid conducted by the Food Safety Wing officials at Madurai Railway
Junction on Saturday.
Acting on specific information received from Punjab, the team reached
the railway station by 3.30 a.m. and waited for the train.
As soon as the Nizamuddin-Madurai Sampark Kranti Express arrived, the
team, led by J. Suguna, Designated Officer for Food Safety, Madurai
district, began searching for the parcel bags in the luggage coach and
found the chewing tobacco products.
“There were no names of persons who sent them or to whom they were
supposed to be delivered in Madurai. We are enquiring about it with the
help of Railway Police,” she said.
Four Food Safety Officers — V. Raja, S. Ramesh, L. K. Muralidharan and
K. Saravanan — carried out the search along with the Railway Police and
police personnel from Karimedu station.
Dr. Suguna said the Food Safety and Drug Administration Department had
been conducting inspections ever since the State Government had banned
chewing tobacco products.
“This was the first time that we had conducted raid on a train in
Madurai. The seizure gave us suspicion that some bulk purchases are
happening here despite the ban,” she said.
Collector and top railway officials were informed of the seizure of
tobacco products. Railway police are investigating the matter.
Virudhunagar
Similarly, 10 parcels of chewing tobacco products, weighing over 500 kg
and worth about Rs.6 lakh, were found unclaimed at the railway station
in Virudhunagar on Saturday.
M. Kavikumar, Designated Officer, District Food Safety Wing, told The Hindu that the Railway Police alerted that 10 bags containing sachets of the banned product arrived by the Mysore-Tuticorin Express.
The parcels were addressed to one Mani of Mahatma Gandhi Road in Madurai.
He said the consignee must have found the situation not conducive for
collecting the parcels in Madurai and let them go to Virudhunagar.
Investigation was on to check the veracity of the address, he said.
Samples would be sent to the laboratory in Tirunelveli district to check
whether the consignment was free from tobacco and nicotine, as stated
on the parcels. If the claim was true, it would be handed over to the
claimant. Otherwise, action would be taken as per rules, said Mr.
Kavikumar.
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