Smuggling of hydroponic weed becoming major concern, says Mumbai Customs

Mumbai, Smuggling of hydroponic weed or marijuana has emerged as “one of the biggest menaces” at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport in 2025-26 with Thailand being a major source of the contraband, officials said on Wednesday.

Smuggling of hydroponic weed becoming major concern, says Mumbai Customs
Smuggling of hydroponic weed becoming major concern, says Mumbai Customs

Between April 2025 and January 2026, as many as 200 cases of smuggling of hydroponic weed cannabis grown using a soilless method were registered by the Air Intelligence Unit teams at the airport, and over 1,101 kg of cannabis was seized, they said.

Further, there was a sharp rise in the overall registration of cases under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act during this period, as per the data issued by the AIU for years 2024-25 and 2025-26.

The Customs has registered 207 NDPS cases till January this year against 57 cases in the previous year.

As per the release, 5.09 kg of cocaine valued at 50.9 crore had been seized in 2024-25 with the arrest of five persons. In 2025-26, as much as 11.6 kg of cocaine, almost double the quantity, valued at 116.26 crore was seized as of January.

Drug syndicates in India, in connivance with agents in Bangkok, choose ‘mules’ to carry drugs to India, the release said.

The mules are offered free flight tickets and boarding at hotels in Bangkok plus a “meagre amount to carry packages on their return flight,” it said.

The syndicates were found to have shifted to ‘low risk’ carriers including families with children and senior citizens up to 61 years as these travelers are less likely to be intercepted.

Women mules were used in about 25 percent of the cases.

Drug syndicates also use fake diplomatic pouches of the Ministry of External Affairs to smuggle illegal consignments, the release added.

Packets of chips, shampoo bottles and even vegetables were used for concealment of contraband in some cases.

To smuggle drugs like cocaine, traffickers resorted to dangerous methods such as ingesting drug-filled capsules. Foreign nationals, particularly from African and South American countries, are often recruited as carriers to smuggle cocaine, the release said.

In one case, a 61-year-old Ugandan woman was found to have swallowed 80 capsules containing 866 grams of cocaine.

In another case, an airline crew member was caught smuggling 5.194 kg of cocaine.

The Mumbai Airport Commissionerate also carried out the destruction of over 415 kg of seized narcotics with market value of 486 crore in 2025-26, the release said.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

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