Adani port will not handle containerised cargo originating from Iran, Pakistan, and Afghanistan

After security agencies found nearly 3,000 kilograms of heroin, Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ) on Monday (11 October) issued a trade advisory declaring the company will will not be handling any containerised cargo originating from Iran, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, reports Indian Express.

“Please be informed that with effect from November 15, 2021, APSEZ will not handle EXIM containerised cargo originating from Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan. This trade advisory will apply to all terminals operated by APSEZ and including third party terminals at any APSEZ port till further notice,” stated the statement issued by Chief Executive Officer Subrat Tripathy.

This advisory from Adani port comes almost a month after 3,000 kilograms of heroin was seized from two containers at Mundra port when the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) on 13 September, intercepted a consignment said to have originated from Kandahar in Afghanistan and landed at Mundra port in Kutch district via Bandar Abbas port in Iran.

After the news broke, Adani was targeted on social media and was forced to release a statement that read: “APSEZ is a port operator providing services to shipping lines. We have no policing authority over the containers or the millions of tonnes of cargo that pass through the terminal in Mundra or any of our ports.”

As of now, a joint task force is investigating who are the recipients of this drugs in India.

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