The Hindu
The lorry driver claimed the consignment was from Delhi.
3 tonnes of contraband may have been headed to A&N islands via Port
A patrol team of the R.K. Nagar police seized three
tonnes of banned chewable tobacco products from a lorry near
Vaidiyanathan bridge on Ennore High Road in Korukkupet on Tuesday.
Investigations
revealed the consignment might have been heading to Andaman and Nicobar
Islands, where there is no ban in place, via Chennai port.
Police
personnel said that as part of security checks conducted before
Independence Day celebrations, a five-member patrol team was inspecting
vehicles along Ennore High Road early on Tuesday, and stopped the lorry
that had Tamil Nadu registration plates (TN 18 Q 5107).
The team found gutka packed in 100 gunny bags, each containing 30 kg of the banned product.
The
police immediately detained the vehicle and questioned the driver, S.
Akilesh Tiwari (32) from Jharkhand, and the lorry cleaner, Manoj Kumar
(20) from Himachal Pradesh.
During the
interrogation, the driver stated that the consignment was from New Delhi
and was on its way to Bangalore. But since the police officers doubted
that the route from New Delhi to Bangalore would pass through Chennai,
they investigated further and established that the consignment was
headed to the Islands.
The police then informed
officials of the Food Safety and Drug Administration department. A team
of food safety inspectors led by S. Elagovan, took possession of the
banned products and the vehicle.
“The seized products
will be destroyed at the Kodungaiyur dumping yard along with a previous
seizure of one tonne of gutka from Sowcarpet last week,” said an
official.
The Tamil Nadu government banned the
manufacture, storage, distribution and sale of carcinogenic chewable
forms of tobacco in May this year.
However, ever
since the ban came into effect, the contraband has been smuggled into
the city through various means. On August 3, food safety officials
seized over 16 tonnes of chewable tobacco products at Central Railways
station on a train that had come in from Nizamuddin.
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